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Daily Times-Gazette, 10 Jul 1953, p. 1

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Daily Average Circulation for June, 1953 12300 THE D AILY TIMES-GAZETTE Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle Weather Forecast Pleasant, sunny Saturday; a bit warmer. morrow, 80. Maybe Low, 60; high toe Authorized os Second-Cless Mail, Post Office Department, Ottawo OSHAWA-WHITBY, FRIDAY, JULY 10, 1953 Price Net Over 3 Cents Per Copy TWENTY PAGES VOL. 12--No. 160 IOSPITAL PLANS REVISED * YOUNG DIANAS GET PRACTICE IN the children who spend short vacations. at the health-giving centre. Supervising. the bow- drawing, at the left, is Louise Bushman, a councillor. The two Wielding longbows which are as big as 'themselves. are two budding 'Miss Robin Hoods" at the Kiwanis Camp at Kedron. Classes are given in archery to archers are Janic Boivan and Irene Johnston and they are be- ing watched by, from left to right, Elice Beauregard, Kay- leen Bittorf and Pauline Hiller. Times-Gazette Staff Photo | TOP HATCHET MAN Beria, Feared Police Chief Fired, Branded As Traitor . By THOMAS P. WHITNEY MOSCOW (AP) -- Lavrenti P. Beria, longtime head of Russia's police forces and first deputy to Premier Malenkov, has been fired from the Soviet government, ex- pelled from the Communist party and turned over to his nation's | highest tribunal as a traitor. The party newspaper Pravda de- nounced him today as an agent of international imperialism and an 'enemy of the Communist party and the Soviet people." OUT OF OFFICE A party communique said Malen- kov himself outlined the case against Beria at a recent meeting of the party central committee, which took away party member- ship and office from the 53-year- old veteran Red. A separate communique said the presidium of the Supreme Soviet (Parliament) had removed Beria from his posts as first ' deputy premier of the Soviet Union and minister of internal affairs. "It was decided also by the presidium that the case .on the criminal actions of L. P. Beria should be turned over to the Su- preme Court of the USSR," the announcement added. THREE LEFT His downfall left Malenkov with three deputy ministers: Foreign Minister Molotov, War Minister Nikolai Bulg anin and Lazarus Kaganovich. The party accused Beria of "criminal activities designed at subverting the Soviet state in the | interests of foreign capitalism" and of trying to put his internal affairs ministry "higher than the government and Communist party of the Soviet Union." SOUGHT CAPITALISM Pravda said he had planned sec- retly to 'seize the leadership of the party and the country" in order to restore capitalism. (In Western capitals, non-Com- munist observers speculated that Beria is the first victim of the power struggle within the Krem- in following Stalin's death, and also that he possibly is being made the scapegoat for the recent East German uprisings and other unrest in the Soviet satellites). The charge that Beria acted in the interests of foreign imperialism was viewed here as a clear rofer- ence to the recent riots in Berlin and the release o fNorth Korean Session PANMUNJOM (AP)--Allied and Communist negotiators held a brief | . : meeting today and apparently ran | Tax reductions and a contribu- into no snags in their efforts to tory health insurance scheme are clear the final obstacles to a Kor- back in the forefront of the elec- ean truce despite South Korea's |tion campaign. Prime Minister St. opposition. J Announcement that the top-level |titude to these and other matters delegates will meet again at 11|Thursday night in Vancouver. a. m. Friday (10 p. m. EDT today) | Of the former, Mr. St. Laurent indicated that today's 29-minute Said the Liberals will continue to secret session, the first in 20 days, | reduce taxes if the national income encountered no major difficulties. keeps rising and other circum- Liberals Finally Win One |also was ready to help in a | "sensible and practical" contribu- tory health scheme if "satisfac- tory" arrangements can be made with the provinces. NOT READY Meanwhile, Hon. George Drew, Progressive Conservative leader, charged that the Liberal govern- {Laurent outlined his party's at- | stances warrant, His government | ST. LAURENT SAYS: Health Insurance Plan If Provinces Agree (ment of the late 1920s aggravated {the depression of the 1930s by not | preparing for it despite warnings | that depression was imminent. { He said neither Liberal nor Con- | |servative governments could be | blamed for the depression. But a| Liberal government was in power | when depression came in 1929. And |it was made more severe because | the Liberals did not prepare for it. | _ Mr. St. Laurent said his party | is committed to a policy of con-| tributory health insurance to be | | administered by the provinces. He | |was convinced 'this is a field | | which should, as far as practicable | pe left to provincial administra- | ion." | In an obvious reference to Mr. |Drew's promise of $500,000,000 in tax cuts, Mr. St. Laurent said he makes no promise of reductions 'regardless of circumstances." No party should promise that unless prepared to borrow money and in- crease the national debt. "And that would be, as Mr. (Finance Minister) Abbott said, trying to buy votes with our chil- dren's earnings." He referred to the Progressive Conservative challenge to say whether the Liberals will retain farm price support and whether he will remain Liberal leader if elected. If returned Aug. 10, he would '"'carry on as prime minister just as long as I feel I am capable of performing the duties of that office effectively." QUEBEC (CP)--Quebec Liberals wearily Swamp Is Combed For Missing Child ture seat for their leader, George Lapalme, who has remained out- side the Quebec House since he pas chosen to head the party in 950. While carrying the traditionally-:".MINAKI, Ont. (CP)--Police of- Liberal constituency of Montreal- |ficials said Thursday night they Outremont Thursday the Liberals | were baffled by the disappearance saw the Union Nationale govern- of a five-year-old Winnipeg girl ment retain the constituencies of | who has been missing five days in Matapedia and Portneuf. | swampy bush land near this north- Called to fill vacancies caused western Ontario resort area. by deaths, the by-elections left the | . standing in the 'legislative assem. | , Geraldine Hoggan, ySaughter of bly unchanged from July 16, 1952, || T. anc Mrs, Jared Huggan, was when general elections were held. [13st seen playing with her three Standing in the 92-seat assembly: | Sisters near her grandfather's cot- Union Nationale 68; Liberal 23; tage, six miles west of here. Independent 15. Officials: in charge of the search Mr. Lapalme, 46-yearold Joli- said there have been no indica- ette, Que., lawyer, became the |tions of foul play, but the possibil- first Quebec Liberal leader to oc- |ity of such an explanation has not pipy.a Fat in the legi Jats since | entirely been ruled out. 48. is predecessor, Senator | i a Adelard Godbout, was defeated -er- | beganvbile, searchers Ranks dave senally in general elections that | riya] from Winnipeg Thursday year, {night of 65 volunteers from ums |of the Royal Canadian Horse Ar- PLANES CRASH IN NORWAY |tillery. The soldiers were proviged OSLO (Reuters)--A U. S. Air |With walkie-talkies. Force C-47 transport and a Nor-| Police, holidayers, railway men wegian jet fighter plane collided | Indian guides and forestry officials in mid-a'r today near an airbase have joined in the hung for the in southwestern Norway. missing child. Newcomers included Ike Hands Slap | To McCarthy By G. MILTON KELLY WASHINGTON (AP)--A vigorous munist apparatus" in this country. blast from President Eisenhower, | McCarthy promptly accepted the Hast fron : us * | resignation of Matthews, whom he fired over the head of Senator Jos- | has called "'a star-spangled Amer- eph McCarthy (Rep.-Wis.), has ican," as executive staff director blown J. B. Mathews out of the |of the Senate investigations sub- investigating job in which McCar- { committee which the Wisconsin thy had sought to keep him. senator heads. "Alien to America," the pres-| The fast-breaking developments ident said in obvious reference to!which marked Matthews' departure the statement in a magazine art- under-scored seemingly strained icle by Matthews that 7.000 Prot- relations between Eisenhower and estant clergymen are "the largest ' McCarthy. 16 volunteers from Redditt, Ont., and 11 Indians from Minaki. So far, not a single clue has been uncovered. Two airplanes, one from the lands and forests department and the other from a private airways, shuttled back and forth from Ken- ora most of the day ferrying sup- plies and men. The hunt is expected to widen today to include nearby Fox, Myr- tle and Catastrophy lakes. One group of searchers Thursday morning picked up a rusty pail on the edge of a swamp southwest of Wade, six miles west of here. The old berry picking pail may be a clue to the disappearance of an aged man here several years ago. George Warren, the missing man, went out picking berries in July 1946 and was never heard from. Fire Traps Fifteen Men WILLOWS, Calif. (AP) As many as 15 men may have burned to death during the night when a small forest fire burst into explos- ive action and trapped a fire-fight- ing party near this northern Cal- ifornia 'community, The report came by field radio from men trying to control the blaze in Mendocino national forest. The forest service and the Glenn county sheriff's "office said they had no exact information. The blaze, which started inno- Princess Margaret Stays Home UMTALI, Southern Rhodesia (Reuters)--Princess Margaret has withdrawn temporarily from her tour of Rhodesia with the Queen Mother because of a persistent cold and slight temperature, it was an- nounced today. The announcement came only an hour before the royal couple was scheduled to leave a mountain re- sort hotel near here for a day-long drive. It said the 22-year-old Prin- cess will return by air today to Salisbury, the Southern Rhodesia capital, while the Queen Mother maintains the timetable of the tour. Margaret had not been due to return to Salisbury until Sunday. The schedule called for the Queen Mother and Princess to remain in Salisbury until next Thursday when they were to have flown back to London. No mention was made in the announcement of Margaret's re- turning to London where the news- papers are openly commenting on her reported romance with RAF Group Capt. Peter Townsend, 38. Margaret spent most of Thurs- day in bed. The cold was thought to have been better Thursday night. The day dawned warm and clear here with bright sunshine across the. distant mountain ranges. But it was felt the Princess could not |§ risk a drive of six or seven hours. . /prisoners of war by South orean President Syngman Rhee. The Rus- sian press has charged that these events were related parts of a Western plan to prevent peace. SUCCESSOR NAMED The government announced Ser- the ministry until Stalin's death, when it was combined with Beria"s | ministry of state security and Beria | took over. Pravda gave these details of Ber- ia's offences: He advanced officials in his min- istry on the basis of their personal loyalty to him. He. "put the brake by every {most important and urgent ques- tions in the field of agriculture . . . in order to undermine the collect- gei N. Kruglov had been named in- ternal affairs chief. He had headed | | | {a Communist, | transformed into a bourgeois de- | generate, that he became in fact an | agent of international imperialism. means possible on decisions of the | $2,070,000 New Wing To Provide 131 Beds At a recent special meeting of the Board of Direc- tors of the Oshawa General Hospital a revised plan for the new addition to the hospital was accepted and instruc= ive farms and create difficulties | tions given the Planning Committee, under the chairman- in our country's food supply." SABOTAGE § Ma tried to ow Samy between e peoples of the U. S. S. R. and | to encourage nationalist tendencies Associates. in the individual Soviet republics,! The plan as now approved by at the expense of all-Soviet unity. |the Board has also been approved He "intentionally held up the rea | by the Building Committee of the ization" of party and goverument | Medical Staff. directives and '"'in a series of cases | 131 ADDITIONAL BEDS attempted to distort them." At the recent meeting of the Pravda continued: Board, William Holland, the Sup- "The incontrovertible facts show | erintendent, reviewed the latest that Beria lost the character of | submission of the architeet, which that he became |phe referred to as Plan: "'C." This | plan would provide for a total of 131 additional beds instead of the original 100-bed addition previous- ly discussed. The plan adopted al- so includes necessary enlarge- ment of all the service depart- ments such as laundry, heating, "This adventurer and hireling of foreign imperialist forces gave BERIA (Continued on Page 2) By EDDY GILMORE munist party and Soviet govern- ment means that Premier Malen- | kov--and perhaps others--now feel | strong enough or desperate enough {to doom the supreme policeman | to utter disgrace. In this mighty struggle for Stal- in's power, which s not neces- sarily appear to haVe ended, the sensational was a natural development: Like so many other mysterious things about that mysterious coun- | try, Russia, when did it all take | place? Has Beria just now been kicked out of the party and government or did all this happen some time ago? Just before I left Moscow 10 days ago, high members of the party and government .on June 27 | watched the - premiere of a new | opera at the Bolshoi theatre. | Oddly, Beria's name was not | | isted among those present. "Do you suppose that it's already HAD IT (Continued on Page 2) action , 'against . Beria | He Has Had It; Maybe Already | | STOCKHOLM (AP) -- Lavrenti | # Beria"s expulsion from the Com- | kitchens, x-ray, laboratory, etec., to correspond with the incerased bed capacity. The extra space for the addi- tional beds will be gained by ex- tending the new wing westward to a uniform distance on all floors instead of having the ground floor rojecting and the upper floors set ih a certain distance. The plan for an addition to the the kitchen to increase extension of the Sykes accommodate approxi- mately 10 additional beds. The new west wing would be six stories in height and would ac- commodate the laboratory, supply room, and pharmacy on the fifth also calls floor over the north Wing to ship of J. A. Morphy, to proceed to work out the detailed plan with the architects, Govan, Ferguson, Lindsay and & |floor instead of in the basement | as originally planned. ESTIMATED COST $2,070,000 The total estimated cost of the plan now adopted approximates on- ly $2,070,000. While this is some- what more than the original es- timate, the plan provides 31 ad- ditional beds at a much lower rate per bed than was the cse whene only 100 additional beds were con- templated. Of the estimated amount requir- ed, $331,000 would be provided by government grants and $850,000 through debentures of the City of Oshawa as authorized by the rate- payers last December. This leaves a balance of $889,000 to be raised by grants, or the issue of deben- tures, by other municipalities serv- ed by the hospital, and subscrip- tions from industry and the gen- eral public. Reeve Elmer Powell, who re- prsents the County of Ontario on the Hospital Board, mentioned that a special committee of the County Council has already been appoint- ed to investigate the problem of hospital grants by the County. The Board agreed that as all of the money would not be required at one time, payments might be spread over two or three years. LOUISBOURG, N. S. (CP)--De- termined fishermen, aided by po- lice and a plane, hunted the waters off eastern Cape Breton Island to- day for a killer fish which has taken the life of one man and threatened a dozen others. The unknown fish, believed to be {a giant shark, gouged a two-foot | section out of a lobster boat Thurs- | day, capsized it and caused the drownii of John Burns, 40. A companion, John MacLeod, 21, was rescued by a nearby boat. Thirty days ago Donald Harding appeared in Oshawa police court to face three charges of arson and one of manslaughter. At that time he was remanded for a month in the care of the Ontario Hospital | at Whitby for mental examination. | Today Magistfate Frank S. Ebbs acceded to the request of Dr. James Sweet, assistant superinten- dent at the hospital, and remand- ed the 16-year-old boy for another 30 days. The manslaughter charge arose out of a fire which occurred at the boy's home at 211 Simcoe Street South and in which his moth- TIP ON TACKS AND NAILS Keen nails and . tacks in glass jars and you'll not waste time and patience in hunting cently enough about 3 p. m. Thurs- day suddenly whipped into a fur- ious, explosive force that beat the! {flames through the woods at tre- imendous speed. | up right ones. And for selling, renting and finding jobs, Classified ads hit the nail on the head! initial stages of work on Mental Tests Continue On Arson Case Suspect No time is being wasted on the | McLaughlin is donating to Osh- the | awa. The first spadeful of earth new library which Col. R. 'S. | -was turned at the beginning of Charlie Rafuse, skipper of the rescue craft, said the fin of the | killer fish was six feet out of the | water just before it rammed Burns' | 27-foot fishing smack. | RCMP officers went to sea with Huge Killer Fish Turns Boat Over (the fishermen in an attempt to | kill the fish. A place from Sydney was used as a spotter until it was forced to return 'to base because of bad weather. : Last week Newman Dubinsky raced 12 miles to shore at Main- a-Dieu and reported being chased by a giant shark that *'just missed the boat.' He was accompanied {by his four children and five men. { About . the same time fishing | craft from Little Lorraine, eight | miles east of here, scattered for safety when a large fish attacked them. : Burns' body was recovered to- day, indicating that the fish is not | a man-eater. There was some spec- ulation here that the fish might be la giant swordfish and not a shark. er, Mrs. Doris Harding, 37; perish- | ed. The youth was alleged to have | lighted ' this fire along with two others which occurred in the build- ing occupied by Tod's Bakery, where he was employed eamier in June, Crown Attorney Alex Hall, QC, said this morning that the findings of the medical conference which | will decide on the lad's mental con- dition, were not yet completed. In view of what he anticipated the ean President Syngman Rhee and | U. S. assistant state secretary Wal- ter Robertson were reported today i wn ¢ [toward an agreement under which final opinion would be, said Mr. Rhee would go along with an ar- Hall, he saw no hardship whatever mistice ending the Korean war. in recommending another 3 days | Well-informed authorities said remand. that according to their latest in 0 DOWN, DOWN GO THE GRABS this week. Within a few days this huge excavation for the foundations has been dug. Con- Agreement Near With Rhee WASHINGTON (AP)--South Kor- | formation the conclusion of a full | and final agreement with Rhee by | Robertson could be almost [to have made substantial progress |stantly achieved, if the 78-year-old | Korean in- leader did not again | change his mind. | Some officials said the under- standing amounted to an agree ment. tractors on the job 'are H. M. Brooks, of Oshawa. Times-Gazette Staff Photo,

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