Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle Council Candidates Adopt Firm Stands : ' Give Public Views Plein] On Sport, Hospital f Although the Sunday sports by-law was not the main issue of the Jaycee Town Hall Meeting in.the CCI auditorium last night, Alderman F. N. McCallum had a few words to "You're just helping to put an- {other boy in the reform school if say about it. He was still against it. "Whether we have Sunday sports or not," said the may-- 00 pass dis Sungey Short by oralty candidate, "it won't affect my way of life." audience of the Jaycee Town Hall ) THE 'LITTLE GUY' > A meeting in Central Collegiate last The Oshawa industrialist, who night. He was speaking on behalf . ' candidate for mayor introduced b of the Oshawa Citizens' Commit- has served the city for 10 years, Jaycee Jack Hak ayiosiuce id tee Opposed to a Commercialized | seven as alderman and three as Bak Sr hk Sunday. mayor, was more concerned about | Ompetent cha nan of Town Hall, Invited to present the commit- Joe Doakes, the little guy *'who caught up the M.C. for his speak- Joes Sager by joayeee president has no car," and would like to get |g of "morality" rather than election | , " Idi x Te THE reer og out en a Sunday afternoon and see | mayoralty vandidates: bis thought Smith stated that some 2,790 citi- some sport. (it not so far off the beaten track. zens had signed the petition on be- "Why shouldnt he have an op-| He quoted the apocryphal Vol- half of commercialized sports on portunity to go to a Sunday ball [faire tag about '"'disagreeinz with Sunday, and wanted to know how game?" the mayoralty candidate What his opponent had to say, but many were in the hall last night. wanted to know. He was disap-|defending to the death his right {There was a scattered show of | pointed in the enforcement of the fo say it," and dewcribed local gives his conception of the ad- | ors. In the centre of the picture | rear. The tall wing to the left i ae Fishy Were prepare hands, several going up on the Lord's Day Act. "If it can't be Sovernmen: 35 ne Ee ogi ditions which will be made to the | is the present hospital. The new | will provide accommodation for Kaminker, Langley and Keenley- | pation, th Hasina that th Canadian Legion. He succeds G. SA it cided, let's AE i Ba Soma] ey Oshawa Hospital under the plans | wings proposed are shown to the | M0 beds, and also for extension of | loslow i se oe Frank Grant who hfs headed | "Mr. McCallum was about tor night, the individual would be bet- |from 1.30 to 6 p.m. on Sundays the loca) Legion {or the past (wo |launch into a comparison of hos-|ter able to vote intelligently on the | would be the opening wedge for | Yrs pital costs in cities comparable to [issues before him, said Mr. Nay- an open Sunday in Oshawa. He 4 Oshawa, such as Peterborough, lor. | ° Brantford and Kitchener, when he | IMPORTANCE OF VOTING 'Planning, Not Crisi At Parley Dying Baby's Screams Fill Air roo venroness ss ahd 8 cn FE roars on vor, As F ire U ps Cra sh T oll T oO 36 SHOW THEIR YOUTI. alarm clock arrangement rigged out and vote on Monday. "If we jin sponsuicd, and the public m clock emen ge ! Mods t we a : _ |sport which had already existed in up by the Jaycees eep e | were conscious of e travail an | ne iy Speman: speakers within their allotted time, | sacrifiven that have brought us i wealth conference delegates settled down today for their 10-day delib- {this city since 1906. He was not |sacritices that ha TACOMA, Wash. (AP) -- A four- as it "whooshed" down to'a tree-|at Elmendorf base at Anchorage, | F¢2dy to tasté an unfamiliar The mayoralty candidates were | this ght of exercising our erations in search of a course to | against that, he said, but against 1 gined military plane from Alaska |flanked field about a mile from its | then flew the 1.400 miles to Mo. ish, show a youthful spirit, say [the increasing invasion of private rng ve pans Shlese 24 | [renchise frou 4 on t won iw est oy n'a field south | destination at MeCliord air force Chord : psychologists, e aldermani candidates got three ghtly," he declared. cure the ailing pound sterling and give new life to world trade. |rights in forcing people to work $ lderinall 7 ; fe iy uy ees i | a , minutes eir message to the e mayoralty candidate - spoke of here shortly after midnight and And folks who readily take COUNCIL, CANDIDATES = /=- The prime ministers or finance |on the Lord's Day. He urged his in to Times-Gazette Classified {listeners to come out on Monday voters. 36 of the 39 aboard were believed a es oii ed ans Alderman W, J, Naylor, the next ministers ' of eight Commonwealth countries, plus representatives of |and vote down the Sunday Sports rece a he oy a " Mayoralty Nominee * For Hospital By-Law the eclonies, are here ofr the fis nancial alld. economic conference. » TURN SOD FOR PLANT tragedy, coroner Larry Amundsen They're the Oshawans who As a candidate for the mayoralty of Oshawa, I have been Prime Minister Churchill, In a ZETTE FORTY-FOUR PAGES VOL. 11--No. 279 Ae . @ Price Not Over $5 Cents Per Copy Authorized es Second-Class Mail, Post Office Department, Ottowe { | | | PS LEGION PRESIDENT William Beaton last night was elected president of Branch 43, ARCHITECT'S DRAWING OF OSHAWA GENERAL HOSPITAL ADDITION The above architect's drawing | proposed by the Board of Govern- | left of the Sykes wing and in the | some of the essential hospital base. |. Only the fog kept the plane's | All but a section of the tail was |occupants from seeing the lights destroyed in the resulting fire and | and safety of the big McChord | explosion. Bodies were scattered field before the crash. | jover. 200 feet from the wreckage.| The plane landed about a block | First witnesses at the scene said away from a transplanted housing they could hear the heart-rending yproject--one that had been moved | cries of a baby in the burning to the McChord area and set up | wreckage. They were helpless to do (as 35 four-family units. Most of | (Continued on Page 9) Fs = WALKERTON (CP)--First sod for the $1,000,000 National Carbon Ltd. plant on the southern outskirts of Walkerton was turned Thurs- day. Immigration Minister Walter {Harris attended and paid tribute [to the town for its efforts in ob- taining such an industry. Chile's Septuplets don't believe in doing things Bald 9 Jere giad or HUSSNE, the hard way, but Io Wantags and dependents, The bodies of four get. them what they're. after babies were among those found |anything about it. them are occupied. quieEly ' iin, 13 Sconumieally. scattered at the scene of the dis-| Many of the passengers were | The crash also was about three- | n oN ou Fin Spiny vf pion. aster. '| returning to the States for the year- (quarters of a mile from a business | I02 Tr an at-wrile At east two witnesses to the |end holidays. The C-54 left Fair- area along the south Tacoma high- | > tragedy said the plane was afire 'bgnks yesterday marning, stopped way, | Tories Gain uple 'KDEQUATE HOSPITAL SERVICE ile's § MAKES BETTER COMMUNITY Best Margin Said Vulgar Hoax In Steel Vote | SANTIAGO, Chile (AP)--The fed- clinic said they planned to protest As a citizen of Oshawa and a member of the Hospital Board I am definitely and sincerely on favor of the Hospital By-Law Asa citizen I realize that the provision of adequate hospital a i s | , i and health facilities makes my community a more desirable | eral police today announced the re {to Chile's new president, Gen. Car place to live and improves the value of my property. ported birth of septuplets to a Chil- los Ibanez, because Salamanca As a member of the Hospital Board I am in a position to LONDON (CP)--The Conservat- | ean woman was a '"'vulgar hoax." both released the information as see the need of more adequate facilities than we are now able lve government easily won the de-| The announcement of the fraud |true and denounced it. bs .to provide. During three years voluntary service on the Board cisive stage of its long battle to re- | was made by Luis Salamanca, head | Salamanca said the authors of this Problem has been constantly before us. The medical staff, turn Britain's nationalized iron and | of the fifth federal police section |the hoax had sought to gain pub- steel industry--the third largest In | the same police official who late |licity for a spring festival. They the world--to private owners, but | Thursday night had told a reporter |picked the figure seven to rep- with some state control. | for the daily newspaper El Mer- resent seven candidates for queen By a vote of 305 to 269 the House ; Curio that seven girls had been born of Commons Thursday night gave |!0 # woman Salamanca identified at the Hospital, who have to cope with the crowded conditions and inadequate facilities have been most insistent that the Board of the festival, he said. Salamanca did not immediately second reading--approval in prin- p> Mrs, Soman Voline, sivended ciple--to a bill that would dissolve | solve this problem by providing the much needed facilities. The citizens of Oshawa have been most fortunate in having announce the identity of the cul- prits. The report of the births caused the 1949 steel nationalization law of [great excitement in the Chilean 8 Hospital such as they now have which has heen built up. over Some newspaper men said that Clement Attlee's former Labor gov- capital. All but one newspaper the years through the generosity of public-spirited citizens. Unfortunately the rapid growth of the community has outpaced police "aided the perpetrators of the hoax, which took in even ernment, !brought out banner headlines in extra editions to tell their readers asked to express my opinion regarding the by-law to be sub- mitted to the ratepayers on December 1st for the: purpose of aiding the Oshawa Geéneral Hospital in its plans for a+100-bed extension to its present building. .The pressing need for addi- tional accommodation is generally admitted. The only question involved is how that need can best be met. In my opinion, the extending of the present hospital is the logical and certainly the most economical solution. The ratepayers of Oshawa are very fortunate in having at their disposal the present modern hospital which has been made possible through the generous gifts of public-spirited citizens. Now the time has come when some public financing is essenrial if the hospital is to continue to adequately serve our growing community, The amount being asked for from the ratepayers, $850,000, need not all be provided at one time, The first instalment would probably be required in 1954 and the balance spread over the next couple of years as the building progresses, Therefore, the burden would not fall too heavily in any one year and much new property is becoming available each year for assessment, reflecting the city's phenomenal growth. I am heartily in favor of the hospital by-law and hope it will receive the endorsement of the ratepayers on Dezember 1st. i « ALD. FRANK N. McCALLUM brief welcome address Thursday night, said they are about to start a planning conference -- not a crisis meeting. Prime Minister Louis St. Lau- rept of Canada said the meeting should provide a "most valuable and comprehensive opportunity" to explore ways of expanding trade. "lI am sure all the countries of the Commonwealth are vitally in- terested in world trade. It nourish- es our prosperity and strengthens our inter-dependence. "We from Canada hope we shall be able to agree on ideas that will commend themselves to other nat- jons and lead the way to greater volume of world trade and to a higher prosperity for us all." \ School Trustee Irked he Treasury Building to draw up a ee ey to strengthen the pound 'Sterling sufficiently to make it freely exchangeable 'with the dollar. It is hoped the new program will help stem dollar-draining wounds. this gap. The comparatively small amount that will be added to our taxes on the present basis of our assessment will diminish h of thé community. s of Oshawa vote the possibility of expanding the facilities on this basis. The Property Owners now have the opportunity of helping to bridge Senator Salvador Allende, presi- dent of the Chilean medical coll- favorably on this By-law and continué a's reputation as a health centre. I consider this"project as excellent insurance. for the health of our rapidly growing community. A. E. MeGILVRAY, Member, Oshawa Hospital Board. Unable To Cope 'With Emergency "A really serious situation could Oshawa people had some form of Pointed iron and steel board. It! gq The majority of 36 votes was the | Conservatives' biggest at this ses- | sion on a major issue. Six liberals | voted with the Tories. : Under the Conservative legis-' | lation the securities of the nation- | alized steel companies will be | transferred to a government "hold- | ing and realization agency." This agency will arrange to sell 'the | securities to private owners and | will also see that the companies (are run efficiently during the tran- | sition period, ! | The state will maintain control | | through a 12-man government-ap- | ege and vice-president of the na- tional Senate. Allende rushed to | the hospital and told newspaper men outside that only medical per- the story. High government offi- cials hurried to the clinic where the mother and her babies sup- posedly had been taken. A conference with U.S. represen- tatives to facilitate world trade is expevted to follow thé present con- ference. sonnel would be allowed to see the Angry newspaper men who had 'babies' to prevent infection. spent the night in front of the U.S: Navy Falsified Pilotless Plane Story WASHINGTON (AP) Presi-| He said the U, S. Air Force used ent Arthur F. Kelly of the U. S. unpiloted radio-controlled bombers Fight Looms Over CIO Presidency ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) -- Delegates to the 14th CIO conven- At Secret Meetings "The essence of democracy is |mittee meetings was-brought up in that public business should be pub- | board meetings, which were open lic knowledge," Mrs. W.:R. Elliott suggested to the audience of Jaycee Town Hall meeting in-€entral Col- who is rypning for re-election to the Board of Education, was reply- ing to a question abot closed com- | mittee meetings of the board, dur- |ing the question-and-answer forum conducted by Jaycee Gord Baker after the council and mayoralty candidates had spoken, "I want people to vote for me because they agree with me," de- to the press ard public. All the board members were on each com- | mittee, with each member acting |as a chairman of a particular com- | mittee, Any taxpayer could on re- | Quest see any bids on tenders for | school buildings or other projects | at anytime. Nothing of importance was being kept from the public, urged Mr, Granik., °* * | Asked from the floor how soon & | start would be made on construc. tion of the four new schools, Mrs, Colpus said that the contractors clared Mrs. Elliott, who was the were waiting for city officials to will govern all branches of policy | Air Force Association charged to- |against German targets during the only one of the five Board candi- build a road to give access to the arise at th | " | at the hospital if an indus- hospital insurance, he asked, "How from labor relations to technologi- day the navy pulled off the *'pub-|Second World War and flew them {tion gathered here today for a trial accident should" swamp the [valuable are these schemes if Jopita) with cases." Ernest there are not enough beds?" Marks, chairman of the hospital board, told the audience at the |Peal, which was for the voters to Jaycee Town Hall meeting in Cen- Write "Yes" on their ballots for tral Collegiate last night. {the hospital by-law on Monday, Speaking of the train accident I ns said Shag So Jaise the on the outskirts of Oshawa 4 few |$1.500, necessary u e Jeeks ago, "which might have ew hospital wing with Re 100 beds en very serious," Mr. Marks |and corresponding services, the stressed the need of having enough | city would have to raise debentures beds to cope with any and all | for 3750. 000. Iederal sud provincial . emergencies. | grants were expec to amount to According to the best hospital $200,000, and the remaining $450, standards, there should be six becs 000 would be raised by public sub- per. 1,000 people. In Oshawa the !sCription. » ratio was three in a thousand. Ma-| The speaker pointed out the ternity Sages had lo be Placed in | practical impossibility of staffing corridors and cared for in operat- ia second hospital in the city, a ing rooms rather than in the regu- | solution that some people had pro- lar delivery rooms, said Mr. | posed. He urged the voters to come Marks. 5 |out on Monday and support the im- Estimating that 80 per cent of portant hospital by-law. PRESS TIME FLASHES Rail Unions Decide : : MONTREAL ((CP)--Railway unions reached a decision on con- ciliation board's 16-cent pay increase recommendation at noon but declined to reveal what it was. Probe $3,000,000 Gas Theft MONTREAL (CP)--Herald said today police are investigating theft since 1940 of $3,000,000 worth of gasoline from Montreal oil company, Four employees are said to have admitted taking part in elaborate theft ring, of ~ Coming to the point of his ap- cal research. It will even'be able to fix maximum selling prices. Railways OK licity stunt of the year" last Sep- twice as far with nine times the tember in reporting the combat bombload as the navy did in its use of guided missiles. | launching Sept. 5 from the U, 8. 'Writing in Air Force magazine, Carrier Boxer. | an unofficial publication, Kelly| Kelly said the navy censored cited news stories he said de-|from the original news report, de- scribed as "the first take-off of a [layed until "Sept. {showdown on selection ! president. | of a new The task of picking .a new chief to fill the. post left vacant: by the death of Philip Murray might lead 17 the desig-/to an open and public fight, Top » guided missile jn actual combat' | nation of the aircraft used, an out- | CIO leaders have been meeting New Pa Rate {the etl AD Korean tar- | moded Grumman Hellcat, and sub- | this week in New York and Wash- ' |gets by unmanned, electronically stituted the term "guided missile." [ington in an attempt to make a MONTREAL (CP) -- The Cana- | |dian Pacific and Canadian Na- | tional Railways announced today acceptance «of federal concilia- | {tion board report recommending | fan average wage increase of 16] [cents an hour for non-operating | | railway workers, @, | ly At the same time, "they an-| nounced they are filing an 'applica- | {tion with the board of transport | {commissioners for a boost in! freight rates to cover that portion | {cf the cof of the wage increases that would go to freight and pas- |senger employees. | As the railways issued their |statement, more than 100 union representatives went for the sec- | ond day into closed sessipns here | to study the report, made public yesterday in Ottawa. THE WEATHER Mitts and mufflers today swherever you go. Low tonight and high Saturday, 15 and 35; | & year ago it was 32 and 45. | 'Outlook for Saturday: Sunny | and eold. | & N " Air Force magazine's managing ontrolled fighter-planes. ® 1 2 A ditor, John F. Loosbrook, writing | 1 Kelly called this a "cruel hoax e choice. So far, they have remained dead. to play on the American family" in the same issue, said "Exercise locked. The only avowed conten- {and said it raised false hopes that Mainbrace' last September cast | ders for the organization's top spot the age of pushbutton warfare had grave doubts on the effectiveness are Walter P. Reuther, president arrived.' 'of aircraft carriers. Trunk Murderess Escapes 6th Time PHOENIX, Ari. (AP)--The out- again-in-again trunk murderess, Winnie Ruth Judd, led searchers a baffling chase today after her sixth escape from the state hospital or the insane, e was. sentenced to:be hanged but | before she was scheduled to the gallows, Dr. Conway said this is how Win- nie got out: : | About 7:30 p. m. she complained will ceedings. Reports "have circulated | that Reuther would be willing to | Argued In House favors a national health plan, But icf the 'Auto Workers Union and. {Allan §. Haywood, who has the | support of the Steel Workers Un- _|ion, Selectiofi of the new president overshadow |carry. his fight for the post to the! {convention floor was to Los Angeles as baggage. She fairly Haywood's major strength, the has heard two doctor-members de- | it must retain the if he certain of victory. only no indication of ons are reported supporting d - haired Winnie squirmed ut through a sawed window screen Thursday night, of a headache and said she was going to take a bath. She went into the bath room, carrying .a With her customary ctaftiness, robe. Fifteen minutes later, an at- she left nothing to show iust how |tendant lanked She circumvented the many precau- I'gone. tions taken to keep her in. | A hole 15 inches square gaped It was her second escape this in the heavy mesh window screen. year from the hospital where she The glass window had been cranked has been confined since 1933. In |outward. . 3 1931 she killed two girl friends and | The window was near shipped their dismembered bodies from the ground, : 3 i are] -te aaa on nana sne-was ly six feet M.S EEL ANNO IEA APPOINTED SECRETARY REGINA (CP)--Lorne W. J. Hurd | Saskatchewan, irfra4 dates to speak in favor of commit- | College Hill site, and that they had tee meetings being open to the promised to have the four new press. She disagreed with Mrs. [schools ready for occupancy by B. C. Colpus, anothed candidate for | September ¥, 1953. Meanwhile the re-election to the Board, who board is buying the furniture, and "didn't think that anything was other equipment required for the lost to the public through closed |new institutions. The Board had convention pro-| committee meetings. Any really | contentious question that comes | up very soon gets known." | _ Albert Granik, standing again for | Board duties, said shat the term "secret" as applied to board meet- {ings was unwarranted. 'All ti matter that was discussed in co -- [to allow six months or more for delivery, due to the dilatory me- ithods of some firms, said Mrs, ! Colpus." { Other Board candidates" intro- | duced from the platform were Cecil | Bint, Wilfred Duffield, Alfred Per- 'fect and Dr, Claude Vipond. OTTAWA (CP)--The Commons 80 101,000,000-strong Steel Workers Un- bate one of the major topics of ion also gave ) weakening. A number of small health insurance. One, an indepen- uni Haywood. (Parliament's new session--national ident, opposed it; the other, a Lib- -eral, favored it, . Dr. Raoul Poulin, a physician from St. Martin, Que., and inde- pendent member for the constitu- of Regina hass been appéinted gen-ency of Beauce, said he is ."op- eral secretary of tne Agricultural [posed to control of health by the [for immediate hospital of riediecal | Institute of @anada and editor of state." the Agricultural Institute Review, might encourage private, prepaid | effective May. 1, He will' succeed medical and hospital plans. Rupert D, Ramsay who has been | |appointed director of the extension surgeon at St. |department of 'the * University of General Hospital and Liberal Instead the government Dr. William H. McMillan, chief Catharines, Ont., member for Welland, said he Health Scheme present day relationship between doctor and patient, He said he "resents'" the impli- cation of some CCF members that many Canadians die because of lack of hospital or medical care, In 30 years of practice he said he does not know of a case where a patient'died 'because of the need |care, Another independent; Hector Dus= | puis from Montreal's St. Mary con. |stituency, "satd he agrees with - {those who feel Canada should not {rush into health insurance before | facilities "are -available, : b