Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily Times-Gazette, 18 Nov 1953, p. 1

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Daily Bverage ¢ * Circuladion for October, 1953 LJ] 28% THE D ILY TIMES-GAZETTE i Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle Cold Weather Forecast air held up out West. Sunny again Thursday. Low tonight 45, high tomorrow 65. A Post uthorized es Second-Ciass Mell, OSHAWA-WHITBY, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1953 Price Not Over 8S Cents Per Copy . SIXTEEN PAGES VOL. 12--No. 269 DYNAMITE PL KAYES SPORT SHOP "OAVIDSONS SHOES A 3 wn EN ICE AGE RETURNING TO OSHAWA? onto the road. Rush hour traffic was held up for blocks by the blocks of ice which 'blocked' the road, The Port Perry arena uses crushed ice to fill the area be- tween the freezing. pipes. It is considered easier than using sand as was done in the Oshawa arena. A Port Perry trucker was delivering the load, which fell onto the road when he made a left-hand turn from Bond Street West to Simcoe Street. --Times-Gazette Staff Photo ' | peace - | layed PANMUNJOM (AP) -- Allied and Communist negotiators today ing Sows pro- gress in talks to arrange Korean conference already long de- The Communists today turned down an American plan for invit- ing Beuttal powers to the yl dress talks, mtly aban- i BE Li conference at wi ne Sanding Russia--would have a full The Reds si instead that neutrals attend the conference as third to insure a '"'harmon- our Ee ere but with al- 'Arthur Dean, Dnited States spe- cial envoy, sald the vaguely. Property Owners - . Fear Power Job er pro; is low water in Montreal harbor. ar treal power oe charge was made at A pub conducted e tepiational Joint Commission. = RL gi A er project's water flow is A i to make Lake Ontario a reservoir to guar-- antee 'adequate water for the win- ter's er grind, and to keep the river from getting too high in ports do am. t plan, known as , specifies that the devel- opment "must maintain without t the low water levels of Montreal harbor. LAKE LEVELS DAMAGING The pro owners, Ol as the oD ne Ph iy levels is downstream. from | been site. opment and Beach Protection As- sociation, contended that the power lan as it now stands approved the IJC would boost Lake O- to damaging levels in winter association claims there has "millions of dollars of dam- age" to lakefront properties in both these seasons in the last few ail A. Hathaway, adviser to chief of the Army Corps way I can until there is adequate who put for people savings into lake shore prop- Air War Expert Gets No. 2 Post OTTAWA (CP)--Appointment of one of Canada's chiet exponents of the air concept of war as the No. 2 man in the RCAF's defence com- mand was announced today. The appointment of chief staff officer, air defence command, goes to Air Commodore Clare L. Annis, 41, of Scarborough, Ont., now at- tending the Imperial Defence Col- lege in Britain. He will d conflict would hinge on what hap- pens in the air. This concept involves three phases: The destruction of enemy air power; the destruction of the enemy's means of replacing this power until somplete mastery of the air is won; destruction of the enemy's ability to produce war materiel. This t is in opposition to Group Capt. J. G.. Scott, 40, of Bobcaygeon, Ont., who is to take an overseas appointment. Air Commodore Annis was cap- tain of a Liberator bomber which in 1942 made the first attack on a U-boat in North American waters, off the strait of Belle Isle between Labrador and Newfoundland. He later commanded an RCAF bomber station in England and has | P' held various posts since the war. the surface concept of war, where the air forces are used chiefly as close support for the army and navy. LIMITED ROLE Canada's air role in any future war would involve only firs hase of the air concept: The des- ction of enemy hters and bombers in the air. The other two | hases, involving strategic bomb- g, would have to be left to the hited States Air Force antl the The air concept of war preaches RA that the outcome of any future ACCIDENTS CUT / 30 PER CENT The American Army has re- duced auto accidents by nearly 50 per cent in five years. One reason: Soldier drivers now get a 10minute rest and a cup of coffee every two hours. A good way for you to pre- . vent accidents is to drive a good dependdble car. For a large selection in splendid auto- buys, see the "Automobiles for Sale" column in the Classi- fied section NOW. Though the defence department is placing increased emphasis on the RCAF in cash outlay, most of the money will go to keeping it up to date in fighter planes and equipment. There is no thought of a bomber command, simply be- cause Canada could not afford one. SHOULD JOIN AA David Moring, 22, - 201 Mary Street, was fined $10 and costs or 10 days on Tuesday, for being intoxicated in public. 'Magistrate R. P. Locke considered Moring's record: drunk driving in 1949 and disorderly conduct in 1950. '"You have the intelligence to make something of yourself," he com- mented. "I suggest you join Al- coholics Anonymous. Reds Give Up Demand For Round-table Talk worded Red plan needed clarifying and asked the Reds a series of questions designed to clear up con- fusion over the role neutrals would play in a peace conference. EXPECT ANSWERS The Communists indicated they would answer Dean's questions when the diplomats meet again Thursday. There were increasing signs that the Communists t not resume interviews with Chinese and Kor- ean war prisoners who have re- fused to go home. The Indian command said there will be no interviews Thursday and a spokesman said he has no idea when the explanations will resume. Unknown Canadian Gets Involved In White Case By JACK BELL WASHINGTON (AP)--FBI direc- tor J. Edgar Hoover's disclosure that he opposed, but bowed to, former president Truman's deci- sion to keep Hal Dexter White in the United States government has fanned political controversy in the spectacular case. i . In precedent-breaking testimony, Hoover told the Senate internal security, sub - committee at a crowded televised hearing Tuesday that he advised against retaining White, who had been named in an FBI report as an espionage sus-- pect. The ruddy-faced FBI director said he had never committed his agency to such arrangement, which he said would have been "inconceivable" for it and "not within my purview." He added that FBI efforts to keep an eye on White were hampered after Tru- man let White's appointment as U.S. director of the International Monetary Fund go through Feb. "At no time was the FBI a party to an agreement to promote Harry Dexter White and at no time did the FBI give its approval to such an arrangement," Hoover de- clared. But Hoover confirmed that Tru- man, as the former president had said, Jorma White to transfer from the treasury to the monetary fund post with the idea of contin- uing surveillance of him. Truman did not contend that the FBI had approved this course. CANADIAN INVOLVED In another development Tuesday, Attorney--General Herbert Brown- ell made public a letter from Hoover to the White House in 1946 which said a "high-placed" Cana- dian government source told the FBI director White was slated to be moved into a position, the monetary fund post, which would give him "the power to influence to a great degree deliberations on all international financial arrange- ments." (In Ottawa Tuesday night, a gov- ernment official said it would be impossible to run down the report quickly, but said inquiries would be made and possibly a statement issued later.) Hoover also said two Truman cabinet members involved did not favor keeping White in govern- ment service. Ike Flushes Over "McCarthyism" Tag WASHINGTON (AP)--President:a public statement in which he Eisenhower said today the Big Three meeting in Bermuda next month will be devoted to common problems of defence against Com- munist aggression in Europe and sia. He listed the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, Korea and Indo-China among he expects will be ed at his conference with , Prime Minister Churchill and French Premier Laniel. The three nations have many common interests, Eisenhower told a press conference, and if the forthcomig informal conversations can eliminate friction between the joverments that is all to the good. e mee! wil be held Dec. 4-8. 'ATEMENT Eisenhower "also 'said, in answef to a question, he is still that before too long he can lay before the American people® a clear description of their national security problems. . Eisenhower Plane Sliced time ago that he was 10 'Chutists FORT BRAGG, N. C. (AP)--A big C-119 Flying Boxcar hurtled to earth during a mass paratroop | fli drop here Tuesday killing 15 men --five aboard and 10 floating from parachutes in its path. It probably never will be known which of the men wére struck by the falling plane and which had their 'chutes collapse in its wake. |T The Boxcar apparently devel- oped engine trouble during a drop of about 1,000 paratroopers of the 82nd Airborne Division. The drop was part of a 32-transport training Project. DIE IN PLANE The pilot, co-pilot and two other air force men rode the plane down along inside when a shovel attached to his uniform hung at the jump door. Thirty-seven others jumped safely. with a paratrooper trapped |ing THe other victims had from companion pl! ne of the crash survivors, Sgt. C. Hubert Sluss, said two "sticks" of 19 men each were waiting to bail out. Then "the plane hit some- thing that sounded like two auto- mobiles hitting." 'OSSED TWO OUT a "pusher" whose job is men jump on sig- nal, said the plane 'started to weave and equipment was' thrown into the aisle. . .. A couple of the bogs fell down and we threw them out," Officers said the plane was fly- ing at about 1,200 feet before start- its dive. The pilot veered sharply to the left, apparently try- to avoid hitting more of the ting parachutists. g Ontario House May Open Early TORONTO (CP)--An early open- jug of phe os Session of the a o legislature, perhaps du the first or second week of Febru- ary, is being considered. Premier Frost said Tuesday the government has had many re- quests for an earlier opening. He said the government will do what- ever suits the convenience of most members and, since the province's fiscal year ends March 31, an early opening would have some advant- age from a budget viewpoint. Usually the session lasts six or seven weeks and ends at Easter. In 1954, Easter will be late, falling April 18. Old Fort Blows Itself To Ruin STRASBOURG, France (Reut- ers)--A century-old stone fortress slowly pounded itself to a smoking ruin today as fire which broke out Tuesday in 200 tons of ammuni- tion stored there by the French army continued with periodic blasts and new belches of smoke and flame. Rescue squads stood helpless half a mile away, not knowing how much of the explosives were left still to go off. Inside the tumbled walls of old Fort Foch were six men trapped by the initial blast. Hope of finding them alive has been almost aband- oned, but their families hope they may have escaped the initial ex- plosion and found shelter in an underground dungeon. GREAT BRIDGE Longest single-span bridge in the world, the Golden Gate Bridge at San Francisco is 4,200 .feet long. Fog Blankets All Europe LONDON (Reuters)--Fog blank- eted much of Western Europe to- day for the second day running. ut London, still fearful of The Great Fog, which killed up to 12,- 000 persons in four days last December, breathed easier today. A heavy smoke-laden pall which blotted out the daylight du most of Tuesday lifted today an visibility increased to 600 yards. The weather men warned, how- ever, that it would be back by nightfall. Isewhere in Britain and across Europe as far as Communist Hun- gary, air and surface vel were snarled by continuing fog. hopeful [yes hoped to outline exactly what con- fronts the U.S. from the stand- point of continental def Brownell, who preceded Hoover as a witness, said any "reasonable man" would have to conclude that Trunfan knew White was a spy when he appointed him. But the attorney.general con- ceded, under questioning by Sen- ator John L. McClellan (Dem. Ark.) -that it was a matter of "judgment." He said he was not impugning Truman's loy. as the former president had claimed in asserting that Brownell 'lied to the American people." Brownell said, rather, that Tru- man was guilty of 'blindness' and "laxity" toward Communists in government. In Kansas City, Truman shrug- ged this off with the comment, 'why waste words?" Truman said he had watched Brownell's testimony on TV but not Hoover's. He added of the FBI director: "I'm sure he told' the truth." Fanny White, 70, a sister of Harry Dexter White, said in Boston that Brownell's charges are 'false, all false." She said her brother, who died in 1948 after swearing he was not a spy, "loved this counfry"' and 'had no respect for | Russia." 5 . WASHINGTON (AP) -- Senate investigators ' introduced evidence today that former treasury secre- tary John Snyder Aono § Harold Glasser in 1946 after FBI reports had linked Glasser with Harry Dexter White in Soviet espionage. Documents to this effect were put into the record of the Senate internal security subcommittee which heard FBI director J. Ed- ar Hoover testify Tuesday that e and related matters, and what his ad-- ministration is doing about it. He said he hopes his administra- tion has demonstrated by its ac- tions that there need be no fear on the part of the American people that government service is weak 8 its vigilance against Commun- QUESTION BRINGS ANGER A reporter cited the statement of former president Truman the Eisenhower administration had embraced "McCarthyism." Flushing, the president replied abruptly that he was ready to take the judgment of the assembled re- porters on that matter. : The president avoided a direct or no answer when asked about reports that Pakstan is in- terested in United States military aid and Znight grant air bases in return for it. ' do that would Sittven in neighboring India, he The Indian government has in- dicated great concern over reports that the United States might act to strengthen Pakistan. DEFICIT SEEN On domestic conditions, Eisen- hower said he does not believe the federal budget can be balanced in the fiscal year beginning next July 1. He also said the administration probably won't know until next month whether it will have to ask Congress to increase the national debt ceiling of $275,000,000. Urges Farmers To Form Union ARTHUR (CP)--C. H. Millard Canadian director of the United Steelworkers of America (CIO- CCL), Tuesday night urged farm- ers to join a. union. Mr. Millard, whose uhion has Bpwards of 8,000 miners on strike northern Ontario and northwest- ern Quebec, said in an address to the semi-annual meeting of the Ontario Farmers Union that farm- ers' problems are basically the same as those of labor. No Musical Ride In 1954 OTTAWA (CP) -- The RCMP lans to keep its musical ride off horse show circuit next yeah, i a spokesman for the force Tuesday. The step is being taken to en- sure that all recruits go through the stiff course in horsemanship which still is a part of a Mounty's basic training. Such training is difficult when a score of mounts |: are on tour. Killer "Who Has Found God" Is To Be Hanged STRATFORD (CP) -- Reuben Henry Norman, 26, insisting that he felt no sense of guilt, was sen- tenced Tuesday night to be hanged Feb. 16 for murder in the nogn- hour shooting on a downtown Stratford street last Feb. 2 of his former girl friend, Jean Marie Satchell, 17. An Ontario Supreme Court jury deliberated two hours and 45 min- utes before returning its verdict. Evidence was that the shootin, came as a climax to a quarre durin, which. the aratrooper ask the girl why e had de- cided to give him up and her reply was "because I want to."' Police said he fired at least six small- calibre revolver bullets into her body at close range and: then set out for the police station, less than a block away. Norman was found 'mentally un- fit to stand trial last May and sent to a mental hospital at Pene- tanguishene. Last week a jury de- cided he was mentally fit for trial and the hearing started Nov. 11. ADMITS GUIL "It is true I cannot deny the event took piace by my hand," Norman sai Suring a six-minute speech after Mr. Justice Wishart Spence asked him if he had any- thing to say. "I do not know what in my own heart made me do it. I have no sense of guilt. e opposed--but bowed to--former resident Truman's decision to eep White in the government. H.P. Ratrace Condemned PETERBOROUGH (CP)-D. C. Gaskin, president of Studebal Corporation of Canada Limited, Tuesday night criticized rival au- tomobile manufacturers for what he Safle 3S eMriepowsr rat race." SS t! Peter] Sales and - Advertising Eh ugh said cars now being produced with 200 horsepower or more still will have that power 10 years from now when their steering, brakes, tires and other means of control ling them have become worn. He said they will probab) the h of youthful buyers who may not' realize their danger, T FOILED BY POLIGE é ad Rebellious Scots Planned To Blow Up St. Andrew's EDINBURGH (Reuters) -- Four young Scots plotted to blow up a government building in Edinburgh last June but armed police guards chased them away, chief detective Edward Ferrier testified today. He told the Edinburgh high court ¢ the four Scots--accused of conspir- ing to set up a republican regime-- tried to dynamite St. Andrew's House a few days before the Queen was due to visit it on a Coronation tour. St. Andrew's houses several Scottish government ministries. Ferrier said armed police, tipped off about the plot, surrounded the building and gave chase to the defendants' car when it was seen in the neighborhood. The four men, rounded up in the following few days, claimed the alleged explo- sives plot was a pure "hoax" on | Republican Army, an Edinburgh SAYS PLOT But Ferrier, head of the investi- gations, said he was convinced the plot was genuine, He said police treated the activities of the secret group, calling itself the Scottish with "utmost gravity." He testified in the second day of the trial. The four men, also ac- cused of collecting arms and am- munition for their activities, are Raymond Forbes, 23, Owen Gillan, 27, Robert Watt, 22, and Malcolm MacAlister, 24. : police informer. GENUINE SPYING HOAX IS ADVERTISED AS FICTIONAL New York Times carried an advertisement Tuesday for "The Man Who Wouldn't Talk" the story by Quentin Reynolds about the supPosed career of George Dupre of Calgary in which 'Dupre last week ad- mitted to be a hoax. At the top of the advertise- ment, the word "fact" was stroked out and the word "fiction" substituted. Below the book's title and author appeared the caption: "The spy story that proved too good to be true." Egypt To Try King Farouk CAIRO (AP)--A judge of Egypt's revolutionary court says the tri- bunal will try ex-king Farouk in absentia. The former monarch, ousted in a 1952 army-backed coup. is living in exile Taly, The justice, Hassan Ibrahim, did not specify what charges ht be placed against Farouk, ut | President Mohammed Naguib's re- |gimm has accused the former ing of graft and abuse of power. Reports here have said . Italy fall into would not permit Farouk's extra- dition to Egypt because of his status as a political exile. "KILLJOY" MINISTER Papers Defend Queen's Racing LONDON (Reuters)--Two mass- circulation London papers today came to Queen Elizabeth's defence in a current controversy with Brit- ish Methodists on whether or not she should go to the races. The Daily Mirror and its rival Daily Sketch joined forces to at- tack a Methodist minister, Rev. Donald Soper, for telling the Queen that she should stay away from the tracks. TELLS QUEEN RACES RACKET Mr. Soper, president of the Brit- ish Methodist conference, told a Manchest dience Monday that the Queen would be wiser if she kept away from 'what is erron- eousy called 'the sport of kings' but which is largely 'the house of racketeers. The Mirror told its 4,000,000 readers that Mr. Soper should ex- plain himself to the stewards of the Jockey Club whose job it is "to empty racketeers out of the rt. "There are shgdy characters everywhere--even in church con- gregations," said The Mirror. "But nobody says the Queen must keep away from church to show disapproval." CROAKERS AND KILLJOYS Herbert Gunn, edi of The Daily Sketch, said in a front-page article: "They are at it again. The croakers, the moaners, the Kkill- joys, the pestiferous busybodies: Telling the Queen what to do; telling her what not to do. The Sketch recalled that Mr. Soper had written in the Socialist Daily Herald that, "When my wife and I go on vacation we always put our swimsuits under our Sun- day best and hope for a short ser- mon." Editor Gunn concluded that the Queen has done nothing that the vast majority of her subjects would not wish her to do. Change In l-way Route Early next week it is expected that "through street" signs will be relocated on Albert Street, South, making it a "through street" to Olive Avenue. The extension of this one-way street for Southbound traf- fic, recently authorized by city council on recommendation of the Traffic Advisory Council. It is suggested that motorists using this route should be on the look-out for the change coming next week. For the time being, the Albert-Olive intersection will be a four-way "stop" street. But af- ter a period familiarization, Olive will be the 'stop" s while Albert will be "through". TCA Freight Rates Cut OTTAWA (CP) -- The air trans- port board has approved a reduc- tion in government-owned Trans- Canada Air Lines' air freight charges across Canada, it was legibed Tuesday. ting . e new rates, cul presen tolls by as much as 50 per cent in some cases, are expected to become effective Jan. 1. The board's approval of the rate cut application TCA, filed early this year, follows closely on the cabinet's decision not to an air freight franchise anadian air freight franchise to Canadian Pacific Airlines between Montreal and Vancouver. The TCA rates approved by the board, an informant said, be roughly the same for air freight as Canadian Pacific had men- tioned in its application as pros- pective rates. The tolls generally would be be- tween 25 and 30 cents a ton-mile-- that is, for a ton of cargo flown a mile--as compared with the cur- rent figure of between 35 and 87 cents a ton-mile. Calls Frost Labor's Friend TORONTO (CP)--The Canadian head an international union Tuesday night praised Premier Frost as a friend of labor. Sam Finlay, vice-president of the International Brotherhood of Boilermakers (AFL), spoke at a dinner in honor of Jol Bruce, gensral organizer of the lumbers Union, who at 78 has completed 60 years in the trade union movement. Premier Frost attended the dinner. "As for Leslie Frost," Mr. Fin- lay said to his audience of 500 AFL trade unionists, "he has played ball with labor to the best of his ability at all times and is still doing so." "I intend to make an appeal. |... I was mentally ill and I am now cured, God knows. People think I'm a nut because I've n con- verted by the. grace of God. Wherever I go from here will be God's will. I have been sonyicted } because of my conversion, . . . can't understand why a judgment of guilty is placed on me. I know there's a mistake being made." TAKE HOUSE FOR A RIDE This broad-beamed, weather beaten frame house blocked all traffic on King Street West this morning. - One man perched on the peak of the house guided the strange cargo under low hanging wires as it moved slowly from Queen Street to its final resting lace on Park Road South. The ouse, owned by A. H. Robinson, is shown above at the corner of Queen Street and King Street West where it stayed from Mon- day afternoon until this morning awaiting the raisi of the CNR telegraph cable. F. J. Dohan's House Raising and Moving com- pany from Toronto is in charge of the job employing a rented Johnson Transport truck. : ~--Times-Gazette Staff Ph/

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