ap Deportation Order Ruled Valid By PC E DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle | OSHAWA WHITBY 4 W OSHAWA-WHITBY, MONDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1946 Price 4 Cents TWELVE PAGES VOL. 5--NO. 169 . More Out-of-Door Activities Urged By Provincial Head "You are never too old for Scouting, and after seeing the good-will and enthusiasm shown here tonight, I realize that I have missed something in my life," Thomas Hopkins, presi- dent of the Oshawa Local Association of Boy Scouts, declar- ed Saturday as he addressed 200-odd Scouters from points as far away as Lindsay, Sudbury and Port Hope, who met here to ex~ change ideas on Scouting, Cubbing and Rovering. Among the distinguished Scout~ ing personages attending the con- ference were Lt.-Col. Lionel H. Mil- len, Provincial Commissioner, Frank ©. Irwin, Provincial Executive Com- missioner, Joseph Harwood and Jack Atkinson, Provincial Field Commis- sioners, and Jim Watson, District Commissioner, Registering at the Athol Street Scout Headquarteers at 3 p.m., the grouped themselves for SCOUTERS CONFER (Continued on Page 2) M. Molotov Joe Stalin's Successor? 'London, Dec. 2 -- (AP) -- An ew publi buildup, in the government-conitrol- 'Russian press set tongues wag- throughout Europe today in he ar game of trying to pick Prime Minister Stalin's successor, Many diplomats and others who | 1am, had regarded M. Molotov as the most y candidate were inclined to guess again after Moscow news- papers, reporting the 56-year-old Russian diplomat's election as an honorary member of the Soviet "SAcademy of Science, lauded him lengthily as Premier Stalin's closest assistant. This almost unprecedented sing- ling out of a Stalin deputy for pub- lic praise came less than a month after M. Stalin, 67 years old and by some accounts in poor health, failed for the second consecutive year. to take part in the recent countrywide celebration of the Russian revolu- tion anniversary. To some students of Soviet affairs it looked as though M, Stalin might be stepping down, or perhaps be gradually relinquishing his powers, and as though M. Molotov was per- haps being groomed for advance- men M. Molotov, undoubtedly the Rus- sian leader best known to the Wes- tern world by virtue of his promin- ence in big power deliberations at London, Paris and New York, has been a life-long worker for the Communist party and is one of eight vice-chairman of Russia's Council of Ministers, of which the Premier is chairman, Should M. Molotov succeed Pre- mier Stalin it would surprise those who have been "backing" other leading officials. Hardware Man Pays $25 Fine On Liquor Count Donald H. Christian, proprietor ot Christian's Electric and Hardware store, pleaded guilty to a charge of haying Neuer in a public place and 'was ed $26 and costs or one jan's private office. Sixteen of the were full, three partly full and one empty, Oi Ge Soe a ere no evidence of traffic in the liquor, and that there was no public access the place in-question. He said t . Christian had sold his dence on the day of the raid hy he police and was living tempor- 'arily at his summer home in Jack- son's Point while -maving into his w home. It was, he sald, a pub- place by statute only and not practical terms, and that he doubted if such a raid had been since the days of the O.T.A. Chief Owen D. Friend said Mr. had been very impudent, 6. B. RICKARD WINS RESERVE TITLE ON OATS Honors at the famed Interna- tional Livestock Exposition in Chicago have been awarded to two farmers of this district, W. J. Bro- die of Stouffville and Garnet B. Rickard of Bowmanville, Mr, Brodie won the reserve championship in the 47-yean-old event with his carload of purebred Southdown lambs, while the Bow- manville man won the reserve championship in the oats class. 453 Ibs hn Bushel } Cartier oats shown by Mr, Rickard weighed 46.3 pounds to the |b hs tl Ss Aidt, 3 a es 3" or "0. 3" (Brodie Sr) has been a force to reckon with: for years in the lvestock show. Previous to this year's show, the Brodies had won eight succes- sive annua] titles in the carlot contest, The Brodie record has not been approached by any other show f : Three Canadians--two men and a woman--whose exhibits emerged supreme in the hay and grain dive ision of the exposition today held the wheat, rye and oats champion- ships of North America. They are Mrs. Amy Kelsey of Erickson, B, 8. -- first woman to win the title of "wheat king" since the show's inception --~W. 8. Simp- son of Dawson Creek, in the Bri- tish Columbia end of the Peace River district, who won the rye crown, and Gordon McArthur of Stayner, winner of the oats' award. First North American Crown As far as was known immediate- ly, it was the first North America crown for each although all have exhibited successfully in other fairs and exhibitions, including the Royal Winter Fair at Toronto, Mrs. Kelsey won with a hard red spring variety weighing 66.5 pounds to the bushel. Her victory in the show's first post-war re- sumption--it last was held in 1941 --retained for Canada the title it hag held sincé™i929. The 1941 winner was William Miller of Edmonton who also took WINS TITLE (Continued on Page 2) Little Doubt Winter Here By The Canadian Press ' Old man winter clutched Ontario with icy fingers ay as tempera- tures tumbled to far below zero in northern Ontario and to the near- zero mark in the south, White River, traditionally the north's cold- est hamlet, posted a shivering 27 below zero overnight. Other overnight frigid marks were "| Port Arthur, 18 below, North Bay, 9 below and Ottawa, 7 below. The sudden wintry blast caught most Ontarians by surprise. Rolling down from the northwest, an icy blast from the sub-Arctic brought swirling snow and marine storm signals to southern Ontario, along with the precipitate drop in tem- perature, Toronto area readings plummeted 20 degrees in a few hours to a low of six above zero overnight. A light snow whipped across the city but Yoday the weather was clear and cold. However, the weatherman gave some hope for better conditions to. morrow, recording that tempera- tures are expected to moderate on Tuesday over the entire province. THE WEATHER with a few snowflur- ries clearing this evening. Tuesday clear and miilder be- coming overcast by evening. Light winds increasing Tues- day afternoon to southwest 20 mph. Low tonight and high Tuesday 12 and 34. 00 ONT. SCOUTERS CONFER HERE Ask Re-Instatement Of Milk Control Board Prominent Scouters Took Part In Discussions Here Saturday Over 200 prominent Scouters from all sections of Southern Ontario gathered at the Oshawa Boy Scout Hall, Athol Street West, on Saturday to discuss various phases of Scouting, Among those pla role in the discussions were, left to right: Frank a leading ying C. Irwin, Provincial Executive Commissioner; J. Edwards, representative from the U.S.A. to the Canadian Paper Industry; Lt.-Col, L. H, Millen, D.8.0., V.D., Pro- vincial Commissioner; Charles K. Anderson, Assistant District Commis sioner and J. Harry Rigg, District Commissioner for Oshawa. otc sonidos td bac bbididion, bo. ir sob --FPhoto by Campbell's Studio Offer $2,000 For Toronto Cabbie Killer $2 in reward money awaiting anyone who can provide them with a clue, Toronto police today pressed a city-wide search for a pasty-faced killer who shot Alfred Reddish, 53- year-lod veteran taxi driver in his cab in West Toronto. Shortly after noon, law officers said bluntly that so far they had no clues, nor had they found any motive for the slaying of the cabbie twice awarded civic citations for courageous citizenship, Soon after Chief Constable John Chisholm posted a $1,000 reward for information leading to the cap- ture of the gaunt, pale-faced slayer, the Independent Taxi Owners' As- sociation added another $500. Later the Taxi Drivers' Union boosted the reward money to $2,000 al- together. ~ Meanwhile, residents who saw the gunman return to the death car, either to make certain his victim was dead or to remove finger prints he might have left, expressed fear they, too, might be shot. "How do we know he was not one of a gang who might shoot us some dark night if he feared we might identify him?" asked Charles Gay whose car was stolen by the gun- man for the getaway. A 13-year-old schoolboy returning home after seeing a murder movie at a nearby theatre watched the killer return to the scene, leap into a stolen cra and disappear into the night. The boy did not know at CABBIE KILLER (Continued on Page 2) Family Sleeps 60 Hours, 2 Die After Poisoning Montreal, Dec. 2 -- (CP) -- A contaminated meal of soup, tomato juice and macaroni sent a five member family of suburban north- end Ville St. Michel into a 60-hour sleep Thursday, resulting in death for two, another two are in serious condition in hospital and a girl was released Sunday. Dead are Mrs, Amedee Cholette Girard, 73, found on the floor near her bed, and her' grandson Real Parisien, 23, found lying on his bed. The boy's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Amedee Parisien, were lying mo- tionless on their beds when discov- ered by their daughter Rita Paris- fen, 19, who awoke Sunday thinking it was Friday. Rita retired three hours later and when she woke up Sunday morn- ing, she prepared breakfast and was about to leave for work when she saw her grandmother, brother and parents. The girl ran to the home of a neighbor, Mrs. A. Ricard, who came to the Parisien home and called the Ville St. Michel 'police. A doctor pronounced Mrs. Girard and Real dead and summoned an ambulance for the three others, In hospital they were given spec- fal treatment for food poisoning. Mr. and Mrs. Parisien were kept for observation and Rita allowed to re- turn home. An autopsy will be per- formed on the bodies of Mrs, Girard and Real Parisien. J automatically keep the coolant in Federal Lawyers Pour Evidence Into Lewis' Contempt Washington, Dee, 2--(AP) -- Federal lawyers today poured evidence into John L. Lewis' con- tempt trial in an effort to show that the soft coal strike inter- feres with a 'sovereign function" of the United States government. The evidence, government counsel told Judge T. Alan Golds. borough, is aimed at smashing the United Mine Workers' con. tention that private operators ac- tually run the mines under feder- al seizure and that the U.M.W, walkout is, therefore, not an in- terference with the government. The sheaf of federal exhibits-- mostly orders and documents of the Federal Coal Mines Adminis- teration--were read by the first government witness, Capt, N. H. Collisson, Coal Mines Administra tor, as the third day of the pro- ceedings got under way, Mr, Lewis is charged with con- tempt for failure to call off a contract-termination notice that precipitated the soft.coal walk- out. John F, Sonnett, chief govern- ment counsel, announced at the outset of the session that 10 addi. tional witnesses, including Inter- for Secretary Krug, will be called to bolster the government's case against the U.M,W, chief. Although it had been expected that several Cabinet officers would be called' by the govern- ment, Mr, Krug was the only one of the President's official family named among the witnesses, He signed the mine contract which Mr. Lewis terminated, touching off the walkout of the 400,000 soft coal miners 12 days ago, Mr. Lewis' disregard of a court order to'keep the contract in effect brought on the contempt trial be- fore Judge T. Alan Goldsborough. Capt. Collisson, who has testl- fled that Mr, Lewis never disclos- ed his direct demands in the mine dispute before cancelling the con- tract was cross.examined closely by Welly K. Hopkins, Mr, Lewis' chief counsel, Mr. Hopkins pursued the same line of questioning as he did be. fore the court recessed Frida: This was intended to show that the government had not called on the wage stabilization board for approval of disputes over the coal contract prior to Nov. 1, Ford Union Opens Purse, Gives $5,250 Windsor, Dec. 2 -- (CP) -- Local 200 of the United Automobile Work- ers (CIO) today announced it has donated $5,250 to three charitable organizations and other CIO unions --including the United Steel Work- ers of America at Hamilton and the International Union of Mine, Mjll snd Smelter Workers at Noranda, ue. Local 200 is composed of Ford of Canada employees. The miners now on strike at the Noranda Copper Mine for a wage increase, shift differential and checkoff will receive $500. A $750 donation was voted to assist steel workers at the Steel Company of Canada, Hamilton, who were on strike for 81 days last summer and until early October, Automobile Workers at the Mil- waukee Allis-Chalmers plant, on strike for 10 months will receive $1,000, Each of the three charitable groups was voted $1,000. Detroit, Dec. 8 -- (AP) = Among the things to look for in the 1948 model automobiles will be engines that will start as rea- dily in sub-zero temperatures as in mid-summer weather--a boon to Canadian motorists, If current indications are borne out this will be achieved through the installation--as an integral part of the power plant--of a toy-sized oil burner designed to the engine water-jacket at a constant temperature whether the engine is operating or standing idle. With the tiny burner, using a virtually negligible amount of fuel, the engine will be kept warm, even if the dir is parked out of doors all day or all night in the coldest weather. The warm engine means immediate yapor « Toy-Sized Burner In '48 Will End Cold Weather Car-Starting Headaches eation of the gasoline; instant flowing of crankcase oll; greatly lowered oil dilution; longer life for bearings and pistons, and, of course, virtually no battery drain. Aside from quick cold-weather starting, availability of unchan- ging engine heat at all times means also an entirely new ap- proach to heating and oentilating of cars, trucks and buses, With unvarying temperature in the in- terior of the vehicle, fogging and frosting of windows also should be eliminated. The device, well beyond the ex- perimental stage, already has been installd in some buses and is reported to be performing up te all expectations, It is described as adaptable with equal efficiency to either diesal or gasoline powered vehicles, ait Reject Laski Libel Suit London, Dec. 2 (OP)----A high Soa Jury an. 2 ejected the libel } "of science at Tons don University and last year's chair- man of the Labor party, agains the Newark (Nottinghamshire) Ad- vertising company and the editor of the Weekly Newark Advertiser, Prof, Lacki complained that he had been wrongly reported in: a speech he made in Newark before the British general elections of June, 1945. He sald the Newark Advertiser had reported he had advocated rev- olution with violence. He denied he had made any such statement, The court awarded costs of the action to the Newark Advertising Company and Cyril Parlby, editor of the Advertiser, Oshawa Producers Urge Check Tests At Least Yearly At its 30th annual meeting Saturday afternoon, the Oshawa Milk Producers Association passed a resolution urging that the Ostario Milk Control Board be re-instated with full power to arbitrate and also to fix prices for milk and fluid milk products. Copies of the resolution are to be DISMISSAL OF APPEAL SETTLES ISSUE London, Dec. 2--((OP Cable)-- The Privy Council in a judgment handed down today declared that the Canadian Government's orders for the deportation of Japanese made by the Co-operative Commit- t | tee on Japanese Canadians, The appeal was against the de- portation orders imposed on Japa- nese Canadians resident in Canada and British-born Japanese who re- quested repatriation and was sup- ported by the Attorney General of Saskatchewan, The Privy Council said that de- portation could properly be applied to non-Canadians under Canadian law. The appellants argued that at the date of passing the National Emer- gency Transitional Powers Act, JAPANESE (Continued on Page 2) Kiwanis Ch icken Day Sees Over 100 Entries --Honors To N. Oshawa hb 4 More than 100 pupils from East Whitby Township schools showed cockerels at the annual Kiwanis Chicken Club competitions on Sat- urday, with four of the 13 prizes go- ing to North Oshawa pupils, The Kiwanis Club supplied 25 one- day-old barred rock chicks and 25 pounds of chick starter to 144 chil- dren who made application for membership in the Chicken Club last April 15. Rules of the contest required each member to return lire live cockerels to the Kiwanis The children were entertained at noon dinner and were given free theatre tickets for the afternoon. Th event was held in Rotary Hall The exhibits generally were con- sidered to be of unusually high qual- ity and the prizes were awarded by the judges -- Don Knapp, assistant agricultural representative for the county, and Kiwanian Doug Coombs, a graduate of O.A.C. as follows: First prize of $750 to Gordon Selleck, North Oshawa School. Second prize of $5 to Allan Cam- eron of Conlin's School, Third prize of $2.50 to Harold Strong, North Oshawa School. Ten prizes of $1 each to Carolyn Sedsworth, Conlin's; June E. Cory, Perriman's; Kenneth Catherwood, Raglan; Clarence Wood, North Osh- awa; Gwen Fleming, Columbus; Violet Alford, Baseline West; Dor- othy Bolton, Baseline West; Robert Haines, Westmount; Bob Lymer, Baseline East; Shirley Scott, North Oshawa. The Kiwanis Committee in charge of the event, headed by Kiwanian Ev. Disney, included Kiwanians Bill MocClennen, Ken Conlin, Jack Cole- man, Don Burns, Harold Stark and Maurie Reed. sent to Premier Drew, Agriculture Minister Kennedy and the member of the Ontario Legislature for this riding, T, K, Creighton. Reviewing the steps leading up to the recent three-cent-a-quart in- crease in the consumer price of milk, the president, C. F. Werry, who has also been a representative on the Provincial milk producers tion, declared' that somehow Is Re-Elected C. F, WERRY or other the farmers had to be paid in accord with their increased costs. He expressed the view that all through the war years, when there was plenty of money in circulation, the consumers benefitted by both consumers' and producers' subsidies on milk and that they should not now object to a price increase of this amount. Reached Compromise He explained that in arriving a8 the price, the producers and distri- butors had submitted statements of their respective costs and when the Milk Board was called in to arbie trate, a compromise had heen reach= ed with both groups accepting the three-cent increase which, however, was based on lower costs than those they had submited. In the discussion on the resolution that the Milk Board be give en definite powers to set prices, Norman Down said that he was cone cerned more about the personnel of the Board. He felt that under some governments it might reflect only the government's views. It was the opinion of the meeting, however, that in the past the Board had given fair decisions and that it was more likely to set prices favorable CONTROL BOARD (Continued on Page 2) Ajax Carpenters Get Wage Increase A wage rate of $1.06 per hour, as of July 1, 1946, for journey- men carpenters working for A. W. Robertson Ltd. on the conver- sion of the former D.LL. build- ings at the Ajax Division of the University of Toronto has been) granted by the Regional War La. bor Board. The directive also au. thorizes payment of four cents per mile for workers commuting four miles or more. An application had been made by Local 397, United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Jointers, re- questing a rate of $1.10 per hour as of July 1 with payment of four cents a mile for those commuting four miles or more. The previous rate had been 97 cents per hour and the company had concurred in the union's requests, with the exception of the retroactive date. % LATE NEWS BRIEFS Toronto: Action of Lilian Moke ded nine, in rousin parents after she awoke e her arly today and found her edroom filled with smoke was credited with saving the lives of eight persons. Hamilton: Gifts from an aunt in India, a grandmother in Scotland and a godmother who was a member of a titled English family provided, among other things, money for Mrs. Evelyn Dick's education at Loretto Academy, her mother, Mrs. Alexandra MacLean, said today in an interview. Ottawa: A new refusal by David Gordon Lunan to give evi. dence today forced an adjournment of the case of Prof. Israel"Halperin of ueen's University on a charge of conspiring to communicate confidential information to Russia. Toronto: Police today charged Harold Hartley, Sault Ste. Marie, with manslaughter in the death of Ruth Steeves, 18, who was burned to death in a blazing motorcar night. in Toromto's porthwest suburbs Friday,