d Daily Average Circulation for September, 1953 2407 THE DAILY TIMES.GAZETTE Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle Weather Forecast Fine autumn day tomorrow with a high of 65. Low tonight about 40. Authorized os Setond-Class Mail, VOL. 12-=No, 236 Post Office Department, Ottowe OSHAWA-WHITBY, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1953 * Price Not Over 3 Cents Per Copy TWENTY PAGES RED BOSSES OF GUIANA FIRED; (GOVERNOR AND ARMY TAKE OVER |CONSIDERS MORAL SIDE | Rotary Opposes Car Draws Vicious BEAR ~ "People Fed Up With Them' . WHOSE PHOTOGRAPH IS 'THIS? 'The "man above was recently , the above photograph by calling sn by The Times-Gazeite | at the office of The Times-Gaz- c camera man. He can | etfe and identifying himself. secure an"8 by 10 inch print of | Times-Gazette Staff Photo. Ree Holds [Adenauer Post By Voted Back PR BONN (AP)--Chancellor Konrad Firing 24 Adenauer was elected today to a SEOUL (Reuters) --President second four-year term by an over- whelniing 'vote in the Bundestag, the West German Parliament's Syngmian Rhee today Fired 24 rapt lower house. ing officials of his Liberal party | Tne 77.year-old Christian Demo- in a move designed to ensure his | po¢ oo hay 304 Chris 466 i leadership of party and country. cast. Opposing votes came from The mass dismissals, following |148 deputies and 14 put in blamk earlier "house-cleaning" meas- | ballots. ures, sought to eliminate all ves- tiges of the influence wielded on the party by ousted home minister Lee Bum Suk, a potential rival for the nation's leadership. There was no debate. The election cleared the way for |the iron-willed old chancellor to | press ahead with his plans for a German alliance with the Western Rhee announced that 24 depart- | world, the unification of Europe ment chiefs and vice-chiefs of the |and the restoration of German party have been dismissed. He ap- | unity. pointed a three-man party com-| OFFER RAIL MEN JOBS mittee to prepare for an election | of new officials. | STRATFORD (CP) -- A Detroit inter- Under South Korea's constitu- | automobile firm Thursday tion, Rhee cannot run for the pres- | viewed former employees of the | idency again when his second term | Canadian National Railways mo- expires in 1956. Observers believe, | tive power shops with a view to however, his National Assembly |hiring them, Ralph Watt, mana- supporters will attempt to amend | ger of the unemployment insurance the constitution and make him | commission here said Thursday. president for life. He is 78. { Forty-seven men were laid off at {the sheps last week. Depths of more than 1,500 fath-| ops Jas week oms have been recorded in the| Upper Canada in 1793 was the Atlantic between Norway and Ice- first British territory to pass a and. |law opposing slavery. The Oshawa Rotary Club, which | the local service lub felt the time introduced 'the idea of draws for ls glose st lang Whed law, = automobiles in Ontario about 25": type of draw in the prov- years ago, last night went on rec- |jnce, ord as being opposed to a con-| It was fet that, while the local tinuance of that practice. The de- |club was first in the auto draw cision was made at a well at-|field in Oshawa, the public is be- tended club council meeting of the [coming wearied by the number of members when a recommendation vehicles being offered. One mem- to the club's board of directors, [ber of the club pointed to the fact that - such draws be abandoned, that two or three autos on which Discussion of the problem arose tickets are being sold can be spot- out of an address delivered by ted on the city's streets almost Judge Walter Little of Timmins at every day from New Year to the recent Rotary district confer- |Christmas. . ; ence in Sudbury. Judge Little voic- | Opposition to these draws is ed opposition to service clubs us- growing, another member stated. ing auto draws to raise money In Toronto baseball club execu- for their charitable projects. The [tives were prosecuted for holding {fact that the Oshawa Kiwanis [such a draw while in many prairie {Club abandoned auto draws a cities such as Winnipeg, Calgary. | year agow as also a motivating Regina and Saskatoon the sale of | factor. {draw tickets is prohibited by law. | While returns from auto draws | It was the feeling of the meeting over the past five years have av- [that while the draw raised money eraged about $5,000, members of ' for charitable purposes, the meth- lod of raising money was more |important than the result. It was | {important to consider the moral | side of the question at all times. | It was pointed out that much of [the money raised through the me- {dium of the auto draw went to | |further the club's work among |erippled children. It was the feel- |ing of the meeting that if more {emphasis were placed upon the club's Easter Seal campaign for crippled children that the same result would be achieved. | The opinion was also expressed {that members of the service club \were 'fed up" with selling auto draw tickets. The abandonment of the draw would mean that money would have to be raised by other means which might well bring about a greater degree of mem 'ber participation in other projects as well as innovations in the field of money raising. A better club spirit might well result. SHOT DOWN IN OSHAWA A vicious black bear loose in North Oshawa, said to he "roaming about and frighten- ing children who were playing the streets," has been shot and killed by Humane Inspector Lloyd Fowler. The bear, kept as a pet, had been locked in a cage by its owner, a Mr. Don- ald, according to Mr. Fowler. It broke out and went on a rampage shortly after being given to the Oshawa man. The bad-tempered animal had been kept for a few days before at the city dog-pound after being caught by a Bow- manville man. It broke out and did considerable damage to kennels and bags of feed which were nearby. Apparenily the quarters pro- vided by the new owner were not suitable to Bruin, for he broke out. Mr. Fowler used a .22 caliber rifle to kill the bear in N. Osh- awa. He shot it between the eyes. Firs. Peacetime Army Div. Formed OTTAWA (CP)--Defence Minis-| Formation of the new division, ter Claxton announced today for- | first such unit in the army's peace- Matin 3 te Sauadian Army's | time history, was /but one of sev- The new unit, to be known as the (eral phases in a sweeping reor- Ist Canadian Division, will wear | ganization announced by Mr. Clax- the red patch of First and Second |ton. World War fame. It will be based| He said the 27th Brigade in Ger- will undergo training at the army's by the 1st Canadian Infantry Bri- new Camp Gagetown in Brunswick. {W. B. Anderson of Kingston and Noting that the organization and | Ottawa. training of the division's compon-| For the first time in Canada's ent units has been carried out dur- | peacetime history, an active force ing the past year, the defence min- | regiment: has been created, It i ister said its incorporation "will {to be known as the Regiment of not in any way add to Canada's |Canadian Guards, composed of commitments abroad." four battalions. Six People Shaken And Cut In Crash Six people, occupants of two Beriard Jariond, 89 Orchard Vie cars, were injured last night in an Boulevard, who were treated by far : Dr. W. K. Blair; Mrs. Alice Brown, {accident, a short distance south of {Ronald Sproule, R.R. 3, Osham.wa, Columbus, on the Oshawa-Port Dr, W, K. Blair; Mrs. Alice Brown, Perry Road but Jone seriously. 187, R.R. 2, Nestleton; ey were first taken to Oshawa |Ronald Sproul RR. I 2 General Hospital but mot admitted. hreated by Dr. C. RR 3D shamwa, Each was treated by his own doc- |Sprole, R.R. 3, Oshawa, also treat- tor. ed by Dr. Russell; Miss Janet La- The injured were: Mr. and Mrs. | Porte, 212 Bloor Street East, taken | Bernard Harmon, 89 Orchard View [to Dr. J. E. Rundle. { Boulevard, who were treated by vol SW Dr. W. K. Blair; Mrs. Alice Brown, | The accident Was a hres yay mix-up shortly after seven o'clock 87, R.R. 2, Nestleton; Ronald last night. Sproule, R.R. 3, Oshawa, treated | Ron Sproale's car was parked, by Dr. C. D. Russell; James | owing to a flat tire, on County | Sproule, R.R. 3, Oshawa, also|Road No. 2, facing north, while an- | treated by Dr. Russell; Miss Jan- other car driven by Harry Wil | et LaPorte, 212 Bloor Street East, |loughby, 257 Quebec Street, 'Osh- | taken to Dr. J. E. Rundle. jawa, was also parked. The third The injured were: Mr. and Mrs. vehicle was driven by Mr. Harmon. | night failed to take a curtain call after pulling down the temple in the last act. He Brought | Reason: A cable in the mech- | |anism snapped and the temple H {really did fall on him. Several | ouse own | stitches were 'required to close a | gash in his scalp but his wig | LILLE, France (AP)--The tenor save him from more serious | singing the role of Samson in the | jury. | opera "Samson and Telilah" at - SP oy : the Lille opera house Thursday REGINA (CP)--A total of 324,000 Police Doubtful If Vile Pair Had AnAcc KANSAS CITY (AP)--The FBI! The federal agency said it had lday held, 2 eountry-wide| delayed any countrywide search ert ol omas" John Marsh, i p ai lwitin ns: ; police from coast to coast are on| °F him pending clarification of in- the lookout for the mysterious ex-| consistencies in statements made convict who may hold the key to! by the pair now held in the kidnap- certain unanswered questions in ping. bd the Bobby Greenlease kidnap-kill | Under arrest in St. Louis are ing. | Carl Austin Hall, described as the eater in the pil. and uf. Sonne URGING HOSTESS oa MAY BE HUNGRY aided him. Hall admitted kidnapping the six When you see a hostess in- sisting that her guests take year-old boy, son of multi-million- "just one more." you may be aire Robert C. Greenlease, 71 looking at a person hungry for burying the child's body after find {ing him dead and collecting the $600,000 ransom. | But he denied killing Bobb, Hc | ------ | copies of the Bible in 68 languages | were circulated in Canada last year {by the British and Foreign Bible | Society, general secretary Dr. A. New | gade under the command of Brig. | Jail-Bus | Caught One year and five days after a daring escape from the county jail | at Whitby, Nicholas Marchuck, 37, | facing a two-year sentence in King- | ston Penitentiary for car theft, was | day. The escapee, whose hometown is | Brantford, Ontario, was arrested in Nassau, Mineola county, New York. | After serving five previous terms |in Kingston, Marchuk was in cus- | tody in Whitby jail last year await- {ing removal to the penitentiary once more. However, using a steel leg pried | loose from one of their beds, Mar- chuk in company with another pris- oner, Gordon Reid, 17, cut an es- cape route through the ceiling of the cell and through the board and plate roof of the jail: The flight was discovered almost immediately by William Outwin, {alone on duty as night guard. He ter In US. phoned Governor James Sutherland {in his home adjoining the jail and {the Governor and his son emerged | from the-house just in time to see {the men speeding down the road in a car stolen from Allan Lavis, initially at Petawawa, but later |many will be relieved this month | apprehended in New York Yester- (jail caretaker. | The Governor's son Donald hur- ried the men on their way with a shot from a .22 rifle. Provincial Police detachments surrounding Whitby were alerted but no trace of the missing men was found. The next day however, the es- {cape car was discovered- abantion- ned in North York Township. A few days later, Reid gave himself up in Toronto. Marchuk apparently had made good his escape -- until yes- terday that is. He will be brought back to Whit- by to complete his two-year sen- tence for car theft, to face another charge of breaking and entering the Uxbridge Co-operative Store, and to face a charge of escaping custody. Water Main E | Approval was given last night {by Oshawa Public Utilities Com- | missioners for five more water ex- itensions at a total estimated cost lof $22,375. The largest item is an {eight-inch main on Simcoe North {which will carry water from the lend of the present main, northerly [1,839 feet to the city limits. Cost (of this item is $13,623. | The smaller extensions will be {put in this fall, it is planned but |because the Simcoe North main has to cross Oshawa Creek and |for reasons of the size of the job, it is possible it cannot be com- pleted this year. All the five works lare on a local improvement basis {following petitions from the resi- 'dents whose properties are con- | cerned. : | - One petition was refused for this year because a portion of the |property. This is an extension re- uested on Glover's Road, from Simcoe, 618 feet easterly. It would {have cost $2,472, it is estimated. The other four items approved 'are: On Beaufort Avenue from {Harmony Road, easterly 478 feet at an estimatéd cost of $1,912. Al- H. O'Neil of Toronto reported here. omplice Ly MAY PROTECT | Why was he killed, even before | ransom negotiations were well un-| | der way? { | What happened to $300,000 ran-| | som money still missing? | Approximately $292,000 was re i covered from a room in St. Louis | Hall has shid he may. have 'lost MIAMI, Fla. (AP)--Perfection of | another bag of money while drunk. | an experimental polio vaccine to 'a Further 'doubt was cast on Mrs. | point jutifying * inauguration of Heady's story that she didn't re | plans for countrywide vaccination! alize she was participating in a| tests on hundreds of thousands of kidnapping when she lured Bobby from his school on the pretext that| haps early next year, was an-| she was his aunt and his mother | nounced today. | had been taken ill. | It's" the vaccine whose develog | The FBI said her fingerprints) ment first was announced last| had been found on ransom notes| spring by Dr. Jonas E. Salk of the| T Nation-Wide Test For Polio Vaccine an: at po- | Dr. Salk made the historic nouncement that science has last achieved a material safe, PUC Approves Five New xtensions berts Road West, from end of {present main, westerly for 1,013 |feet at cost of $4,052. Thornton's |Road North from King Street. northerly for 300 feet at cost of $1,200. Thornton's Road * South, southerly for 397 feet at cost of $1,588. ; iw | This supplement" to the PUC in- stallation program for 1953 will { bring the work to an end. When ithe scope and cost of the various works are totalled, it is probable that the commission will find it |has had the biggest year in its { history. - CLOSE FIGURING |" NORTH BAY, Ont. (CP)--Of an | appropriation of $1,500 for weed | control here this year, $1,497 has | been spent, city superintendent |J. G. Brunet reported to council. | Besides spraying with insecticide, in- main would have to cross private | workers used a power mower and hand scythes to cut down weeds. 'Steps By Britain To Prevent Crisis GEORGETOWN, British Guiana (CP)--Sir Alfred | Savage, governor of British Guiana, today ousted the col- | ony's leftist government and proclaimed a state of emer- | gency. | i Premier Cheddi Jagan and his six ministers--the col- | ony's elected government under the colonial constitution {won earlier this year--were fired under an order-in-coun- Hushed groups of citizens gath- ered in the capital's broad streets | |as the governor's voice, blaring | through loudspeakers, announced [that the six-month-old constitution {of the colony will be suspended |""to prevent Communist subversion {of the government and a danger- {ous crisis both in public order and | economic affairs." | Savage said he intended to run th: colony himself with the help of his advisers for a short time. | After that, an interim government {will be set up and a commission will begin an inquiry aimed at drafting a new constitution. | Britain, in a statement issued here and in London, named the Jagans among the ringleaders of a Communist plot aimed at sub- verting the government and creat- ing "a dangerous crisis both in public order and in economic af- fairs." Besides Jagan, Britain ousted these other ministers: L. F. S. Burnham, minister of education; A. Chase, labor and industry; Sid- ney King, communications and works; Dr. J. T. Lachhmansingh, health and housing; Jai Narine | Singh, local government and local welfare. The British announcement spe- cifically named the two Jagans, King and Rory Westmaass, {be rded vice-president of the PPP, as ringleaders in the alleged plot. The governor said the army and navy are here "in sufficient force to cope with any emergency that may arise, and the forces are widely distributed throughout the country." cil issued by the colonial office in London. o®- 4 The governor's warning was aimed at quieting fears that it would be a tremendous task to supervise the colony's 83,000 square miles, much of it wild jungle, Bad roads and communications to the interior make it a possible trouble spot for Communist uprisings. Furthermore, the PPP is known tb have obtained much support from the police and government employees with promises of bene- fits in their pay and working con- ditions. The order suspending the con- stitution cannot become effective until it is under British parliamen- tary consideration for 40 days. Par- liament will convene on "ct. 20. RED BOSSES (Continued on Page 2) 'The Cricket Game Must Carry On LONDON (AP)--Governor Sir Alfred Savage, in a radio address today declaring a state of emer- gency in British Guiana, made this announcement: "The intercolonial cricket match with Trinidad will begin this morn- ing and will continue Saturday, provided crowds disperse quickly to their homes after the match." Colony By FRASER WIGHTON MARGATE, England (Reuters)-- Oliver Lytte 1ton, minister in charge of British colonial affairs, Itold the annual convention of the Conservative party today that cau- tion must be the watchword in bringing colonial people toward po- litical maturity. "In constitutional and political change, the key is to judge the | pace right," he said. "Go too slow |and you frustrate many of the beneficent forces which will work for progress; you may even turn them to refreshment and hostility, "Go too quick and you may bring governments into disrepute and people to disaster." Lyttelton gave a detailed review of the year's developments in the colonial empire, in a state of fer- ment as native peoples press for more and more independence. Dealing with these internal con- {vulsions was "not an enviable but a grim and stern task' which had to be carried out unflinchingly if the life, liberty and well-being of ordinary citizens were to be pro- tected. His review trouble spots: touched on these Cautious Tory Policy British Guiana: "It has become {clear that the present government is inspired by Communist prin- ciples and is determined to apply |them, regardless of the interests of the mass of the population." The British government was not willing to allow a Communist state to be organized within the British Commonwealth, Lyttelton said. (It was announced in London today that the constitution of the South American colony, less than a year old, has been suspended.) Malaya: The long-drawn-out con- flict against guerrilla rebels con- tinues and '""There is still danger, but . . . the every-day life of the people is carried on in increasing security and increasing progress, politically and socially. Kenya: Marked progress has been made against the anti-white Mau Mau cult in the East African colony although the situation in some districts is still 'bad." Nyasaland: This territory, rec- ently become part of a central African . federation with Northern and Southern Rhodesia, was still suffering unrest chiefly over land matters but "I am hoping the coun- try will settle down." di § sib i T tent and promising enough to be| i children in the United States, per- put to the acid test of determining} whether it protects against the disease under natural conditions of exposure, He said large-scale pro- duction is possible. He told the American Academy 3 3 ' 3 } | told officers he turned the bof over used during the kidnapping nego-| University of Pittsburgh, working, of Pediatrics in a prepared paper a'fection, psychologists say. |i, Marsh on the day of the kid tiations. { under a March of Dimes polio funi| that the vaccine--early proven to What she may be trying to do. {napping and later found him shot| Hall and Mrs. Heady now are|grant. be capable of preventing polio in without realizing it, is hoping |to death in the basement of the'| held on $100,000 bonds on federal| Today's announcement ° consti-| experimental animals--has now to get to people's hearts |[Ifeady home in St. Joseph, Mo. | charges of extortion. However, fed. | tutes first word that it now is ready| been tested in 637 humans, inc¢lud- through their stomachs. He claims he hasn't seen Marsh|eral Attorney-General Herbert| --as soon as details can be worked ing 163 described in his original But if what you'd like to un-|since. " Brownell said in Washington they |out--for the supreme test which| report Jast spring. - load 'is a piece of property, a | Some authorities have expressed | would be, turned over to the state|will determine whether it can ulti-| He explained that the human used car or merchandise, a [doubt that Hall and Mrs. Heady|of Missouri for prosecution. { mately be released for general use. | tests conducted so far repeatedly Classified ad in The Times- |had an accomplice. | Prosecutor Richard K. Phelps of| It'was disclosed that additiona | demonstrated that the vaccine can Gazotte reaches folks hungry | There has been some specula-| Missouri's Jackson county said| preliminary research on humans! produce in man antibodies theoret- tion that Marsh may be dead. | they probably will be brought to since last = spring has y | ically protective against the major for your offer. Thousands of A 3 1 - Oshawa people read want-ads The FBI has filed a fugitive tvar-| trial here. Ile said that at this strengthened hopes for the vaccine, | viruses of polio---and also demon: of the vaccine MAYOR'S NEW OFFICE TO BE HANDSOMELY FURNISHED strated' the safety every day in search of things + others want to sell. Your prospect may be look- rant for the arrest of Marsh on a charge of murder, Re The capture of Marsh could point Kidnapping charges against them in Kansas City are stronger| than would be the murder charges! and that it's also been found pos-| sible to improve it and to. produce it in a variety of forms, each of | itself. But he emphasized that it now | This sketch shows furnishings for the new city hall office of Oshawa's chief magistrate. Fur- been purchased by the Junior Chamber of Comme ce and ac- cepted by the city. This is the been provided for any mayor of Oshawa. It is 'expected the city hall can be completed and occu- which may have particular. advan- | is necessary to determine whether tages in the fight against the great|the vaccine can actually protect crippler. against, the disease in nature, ing tonight. So place your. ad | answer these questions: | against them in St. Joseph, Mo. now by. dialing 32233. i Who actually killed Bobby Green Both crimes carry a possible death lease? . ) penalty in Missouri, pied within a few months. niture, pictures, drapes have all . Times-Gazette Staff Photo first time an office has ever