Daily Times-Gazette, 7 Jul 1948, p. 9

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WEDNESDAY, JULY 7, 1948 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE ' PAGE NIN® Diplomat Predicts Red Terror Will Sweep Czechoslovakia a P-- ormer Minister Sees Dismissal Of Gottwald Assassination Of Tito By DOUGLALS HOW Canadian Press Staff Writer Ottawa, July 7 (CP).--O trom behind the Iron Curtai Cabinet Minister and diplom n the, basis of regular reports n, a former Czechoslovakian at Tuesday predicted that a Communist wave. of terror will strike the Czechs within a month and that Red Premier Gottwald will be ousted by Moscow. The predictions came from Dr. Frantisek Nemec who resigned in March as Czech Minister to Canada in protest against the Communist coup. In an interview he linked the pro-democratic demonstration in Prague with developments in Yugo- slavia and felt they marked the be- ginning of events that would end the Russian domination of Europe more quickly than he had dared | think. Dr, Nemec said regular communi- ques from his country made him confident that a "monster protest" would swell up in two or three weeks. The protest would be 'fol- lowed by a wave of terror and purge. Gottwald, Interior Minister No- sek, the man who prepared the March coup, and others in the gov- ernment would be driven out and replaced by virtually a two-man government. In command would be General Secretary Slansky of the Communist Party and Justice Min- ister Cepicka, "a very cruel man." (They would be completely under Moscow, replacing the men who had co-operated with other parties --at Moscow's orders. ° Dr. Nemec saw developments in the two Slav countries as signifi- cant of conflict between European nationalists and Russian domina- tion. The traditionally friendly feel- ing between the two countries in- dicated at least an indirect link. Dr. Nemec expectced the assasi- nation of Marshall Tito and inter- preted recent happenings to mean that the battle to succeed Stalin as Russian dictator is already on. Kennedy Opens New Veterinary College At Guelph Guelph, July 7 -- (CP) -- The new wing was only a symbol of the faith which the Ontario Govern- ment has in the agricultural and livestock system of this province, in the staff of the Ontario Veterinary College and in the future of the veterinary machine, Ontario Minis- ter of Agriculture T. L. Kennedy said Tuesday opening a three-storey addition to the college. More than 500 veterinarians and their families from many parts of Canada and United States attended the ceremonies to hear the new building dedicated by Rev. Canon Stuart H. Brownlee, rector of St. George's Anglican Church here, Greetings were brought from sister universities and special trib- ute was paid to the second oldest graduate of O.V.C, Dr. L. A. Meril- lat, of Chicago, editor of the Jour- nal of the American Veterinary Medical Association: -A. B. Fenwell, registrar of the University of Toronto outlined the history of the Guelph College. C. E. Burke, McMaster University; R. D. Deries, University of Toronto, and P. G. Edholm, of the Faculty of Medicine, University of Western Ontario, also spoke. Col. Kennedy said it is a "red etter day" particularly with so o-- Bevin Urges Miners In UK To Up Output Whitley Bay, England, July T-- (Reuters)--Foreign Secretary Bev- in told the annual conference of the National Union of Mineworkers today that Britain is not going to have a "night's debauch" with continue with austerity and use American assistance wisely. Appealing for every possible ef- fort by Britain's 700,000 miners to produce more coal, Bevin said Rus- sia and other countries are not in- terested in sterling but in railway engines and other capital goods for their own development. "I cannot do my job unless you do yours," Bevin told the miners who are meeting at this seaside town near Newcastle-on-Tyne. "We must have more and more economic integration with Europe. We must dovetail .our economic complementary to and not in com- petition with Europe." He warned that Britain must de- liver the goods on the day she con- tracted to do so, and added: "We want to get rid of rationing in this country when we can build up our own food stocks." He warned that the British people would suffer if the miners relaxed their efforts. They must acccept their obligations in the same spirit as they accepted a wage agreement. "Nationalization by itself cannot give you heaven but it can give you the means by which you can straighten things out," Bevin said. People were "trying to make us believe that we had reached a stage of decadence," but Britons were better fed and healthier than ever before in history. TWO DIE IN CRASH Batavia, N.Y, July 7--(AP)--Two passengers on a Buffalo-New York bus were killed Tuesday night when the bus skidded into a power pole, overturned and burned to its frame. The driver and eight of the 13 other passengers were injured. Dead are Mrs. C. F. Elsheimer, 20, Gasport, N.Y, and H. D. Hulse, 21, Columbus, O. many distinguished guests. Science cannot stand still, he said. There must be men of qualification and there must be a place for them to work. He challenged the staff to look for new methods of preventing disease as well as curing it. "It is not good enough for On- tario to be as good as other coun- tries, we must be leaders. We hope to see not only leaders in veterin- ary services graduate from this school. But leaders in world affairs as well," sald the minister. Try a classified ad in The Times- Gazette--It will get good results. Quebec Town Left Destitute As Only Industry Destroyed Priceville, Que., July 7T--(CP)-- Unemployment and depression came to this tidy St. Lawrence south shore town the night of June 2 at eight o'clock and people wept. They saw a raging fire sweep Priceville!s big sawmill and in the minutes it Became a smoking wreck hard times moved in with the pop- ulation of 3,000. The mill employed most of Price- ville's men during the warm weath- er sawing season; a half-year's wages for 600 families vanished in the ruins. In the month since then, Price- ville merchants have town on credit. People have used their savings, and the Caisse Popu- laire (Credit Union) has been push- ed into a precarious position, The Price of new homes has fallen by The only income of many fami- lies has been a family allowance cheque. Most of the men are not eligible for unemployment pay- ments because their work at the | sawmill was seasonal. | In"winter, men left Priceville for | the forests where they worked as | lumberjacks. When spring came | hey worked on th: drive which | ought logs down the Metis River | o Priceville's doorstep. In the sum- | mer they worked at the mill which | cut 30,000,000 feet of lumber a sea- | son. Since the fire, a number of young men have left Priceville to go back | to the woods. Others have gone. to | the United States. | A small new sawmill has come nto operation providing wages for | wbout 40 families. A few men have been kept on in the destroyed mill's planing department which surviy- ed the June 2 fire, By | carried the | Price Brothers and Company, Limited, operators of the burned mill, are arranging to move another from Ste. Anne Des Monts into Priceville, It will be smaller and offer less work than the old one. Eventually the destroyed mill will be rebuilt but until then life won't be normal for Priceville with its neat streets and homes and brand ! new $100,000 school. ? Marshall Plan aid, but intends to| What to Do To-Night RECREATION HEADQUARTERS 100 Gibbs Street | DAILY 7 = 9 p.m. Tues, Thurs. and Fri- day--Adult Leathercraft. All other regular activities in the building discontinued until further notice. Radio Club meeting Monday, July 5, in the club lounge at 8 p.m. Victory Park meeting Monday, July 5, at 8 p.m. at 506 Drew Street. Community Associations Central Council meeting Wednesday, July 7, at 8 pm. in Lecture Room. Summer Supervision Program CR.A. Supervisors will be on duty at the following playgrounds from 9:30 to 12 noon, 1:30 to 5 p.m. and 6:30 to 9 pm. daily, Monday to Friday inclusive -- Alexandra Park, Bathe Park, Cedar Dale, Park, Connaught Park, Park, North Simcoe School, Rotary Park, Sunnyside Park, Victory Park from 1:30 to 5 p.m. and 6:30 to {9 pm. | Ritson Pool and Rotary Pool ! Swimming and instruction daily, x Thi 4 1 Depart inted Chief Entomologist. » New Appointments in Herbert A. Pass (left), Chief Entomologist of Green Cross Insecticides ce 1945, has been promoted to Director of Research and Head of the W. Stirling McLeod Professor of Entomology at the University of Manitoba, has been ap- Green Cross (right), former Assistant (G. Milton Kelly, Associated Press Bureau Chief in India, re- has been happening in its first six months of independence.) By G. MILTON XELLY Rangoon, July 7 -- (AP) -- The people of newly-independent Bur- ma live in an atmosphere of im- | Monday to Friday inclusive, from 9:30 to 12 noon. | Free swimming under CR.A. su- pervision daily, Monday to Friday, | 1:30 to 5 p.m. pending danger. They accept it | cheerfully. Their minds are on the better days they feel sure are | ahead. | Rifles and tommy-guns of self- Burmese People Cheerful Despite Feeling Of Danger planning | Special Invitation To Al} Adults | styled Communist insurgents spat- During the evening periods in- | ter bullets on interior villages in struction shall be given to senior | sporadic raids. Rangoon, the capital swimmers for the improvement of | City, is quiet but heavily guarded. strokes--also in life saving methods, | Everywhere is evidence of extensive police and military vigilance. A stranger finds plenty of evi- dence that the people as a whole are behind the leftist course their government has set. It is difficult, however, to find anything that looks like a general desire for a plunge into Communism. The average citizen is intensely nationalistic; he wants Burma for Burmans, He believes government ownership is the best means of breaking the foreigner's grip on his country's resources. He seems to have little patience with talk of Communism. The government is tough, and admits it readily. It is a people's government, but freedom such as the people enjoy in western dem- ocracies is still something in the future. The press is censored--at times even cables of foreign: cor- respondents are censored. The po- lice and the executive government have broad emergenccy powers of search, seizure and arrest. The government sayg it does not want to be tough, but that it must be. Its official explanation is that it must control the politician who surrounds himself with 'gunmen and dreams of running the coun- try. I asked representative Burmans about it, Most admitted their gov- ernment was not perfect, but that it has done as good a job as pos- sible. It has had to make concessions to extremists to keep its coalition forces from falling apart. (The anti-Fascist People's Freedom Lea- carrier and releases. Saturday Free swimining under C.R.A. su- pervision from 9:30 - 12 noon and 1:30 to 5 p.m. Special instruction will be given as follows: Specialists in Crafts--Frances Gage Specialist in Boxing--Billy Goulding Specialist in Tumbling and Gym- nastics--John Kwak. Mondays 9:30 - 12--North Simcoe--Crafts: Cedardale--Tumbling; Connaught --Boxing. 1:30 = 5 pm.--North Simcoe-- Boxing; Cedardale--Crafts; Con- naught---Tumbling. 6:30 = 9 pm --N. Simcoe--Tum- bling and Gym; Cedardale -- Box- ing; Connaught--Crafts. Tuesdays 9:30 - 12--Alexandra -- Crafts; Cowan--Boxing; Bathe--Tumbling. 1:30 - 5 p.m.--Alexandra--Box- ing; Cowan--Tumbling; Bathe-- Crafts 6:30 - 9 p.m.--Alexandra--Tum- tling; Cowan -- Crafts; Bathe -- Boxing. Wednesdays 9:30 . 12--Victory--Boxing; Ro- tary--Crafts; Sunnyside--Tumbling. 1:30 - 5 p.m --Victory--Crafts; Rotary -- Tur-bling; Sunnyside -- B.zing. 6:20 - 9 p.m.--Victorv--Tumbling: Rotary -- Boxing; Sunnyside -- Crafts. Thursdays 9:30 - 12--North Simcoe--Boxing; Red Cross Cottage--Tumbling; Ce- dardale--Crafts. 1:30 = 5 pm.--North 8Simcoe-- Crafts; Red Cross Cottage -- Box- ing; Cedardale--Tumbling 6:30 = 9 pm.--North Simcoe-- Tumbling; Red Cross Cottage-- Crafts; Cedardale--Boxing. ¥- "lays 9:30 - 12--Victory--Crafts; Cow- an--Boxing; Bathe--Tumbling. 1:30 . 5 p.m.--Alexandara--Tum- bling; Rotary--Boxing; Sunnyside --Crafts. 6:30 = 9 pm--Nortn Eimcoe-- Boxing; Red Cross Cottage--Tum- bling; Cedardale--Crafts. It is suggested that parents save this schedule of activities. NAZI LEADERS SENTENCED Bad Toelz, Germany, July 7--(AP) --A German Denazification court today sentenced Walther Funk, Nazi Economics Minister, and Baldur Von Schirach, Hitler Louth Leader, to 10 years in prison and ordered their fortunes confiscated. Both were convicted as major Nazi offenders. Hospitality in your hands | gue welds numerous parties and | unions into the coalition govern- Cowan | cently visited Burma to see what | ment.) | | Thakin Nu, who has announced | he will retire as Prime Minister | | July 20, says he plans to i more energies to promoting his | United Left Party, which he hopes | i will take 'over the government by | democratic process. I" He frankly contends Burma | | should adopt Marxist ideology and | ! work for economic and political | { friendship with Russia. He says) | that should not mean domination |§ | by Russia or a break wi*h "he west. | | Like other Burmans, L nts his people to run their own country's "affairs. 100 Seek Entry To Navy Schools Ottawa, July T--(CP)--Almost 100 young men seeking entry to Cana- das two services colleges as naval | cadets will be interviewed during the next two weeks, There will be about 47 vacancies for naval cadets in the two schools-- HMCS. Royal Roads, Esquimalt, B.C., and Royal Military College, Kingston--when classes start in September. Schedule of the Eastern Division Board, headed by Commodore G. R. Miles of Ottawa, Chief of Naval Personnel: July 7-9, HM.CS, York, Toron- to; July 10, Naval "Headquarters, Ottawa; July 12 and 14, HMC.S Donnaconna, Montreal. ° Appoint K. E. Lantz To Farm Position Toronto, July 6 -- (CP) -- Ken- | neth E. Lantz has been appointed | agricultural representative for Stor- | mont County to succeed A. M. | Barr, recently. appointed Associate | Director of Agricultural Extension | | for Ontario, Agriculture Minister | | Kennedy announced Monday. Mr. | | Lantz has been serving as assistant || | agricultural representative in Mid- | dlesex County. WORKING is actually fun when you're feeling fit! So keep clean inside. Try the ANDREWS way. to "inner cleanli- ness". You'll find a new spring in your step . . ./a brighter twinkle in your eye. Here's how sparkling, bubbling ANDREWS LIVER SALT does its healthful work: FIRST, . . ANDREWS cleans and refreshes the mouth and tongue. NEXT... ANDREWS sweetens sour stomach and corrects excess tHE IDEAL FORM OF LAXATIVE ANDREWS sxir INNER CLEANLINESS HELPS AS 5 cueammess Fir A FIDDLE THANKS T0 WER h hE Sr = LAXATIVES Moin Ly ------ stomach acidity. THEN... ANDREWS works on the liver to check biliousness. FINALLY . . . To complete your Inner Cleanliness, ANDREWS gently cleans the bowels. It sweeps away trouble-making poisons, corrects temporary constipation, Try ANDREWS LIVER SALT tomor- tow morning. Get a package now. And insist on getging real ANDREWS » « « NOt @ substitute, KEEP YOU FIT! No Connection Seen Between Youth Gangs Stouffville, July T--(CP)--Police in this Whitchurch Township village said Tuesday there is no connection between 40 youths charged with trespassing at Musslemans Lake and the 15 youths faced with vagrancy and disturbing the peace charges arising out of disorders at Wilcox Lake, 12 miles away. It had earlier been believed the two gangs had been connected in causing a series of fights and acts of vandalism in the area, Both groups are slated to appear in cour at Newmarket on Friday. i SUN SPOTS ACTIVE Philadelphia, July 7--(AP)--Dr. K, Marshall, Director of the Fels Planetarium, says ultra-violet rays from sun spots are near their maximum numkers and intensity for the first time in 11 years, These beams of invisible energy coming from 93,000,000 miles away can eas- ily affect tempers of people, since various glands of the body may readily be disturbed by the sun's ultra-violet rays, he asserts, Stole Pay Phone, Couple Arrested Toronto, July 7 -- (CP) -- A young married couple from sub- urban Leaside were arrested yesterday by Toronto police on a charge of stealing a pay tele phone, Police said they found 222 five-cent coins, seven 10-cent coins and four quarters in the 19-year-old wife's handbag. CLAIMS SHOTS FIRED Montreal, July 7 -- (CP)--Police said today that Conrad Sauras, vice- president in charge of organization, Canadian Seamen's Union (T.L.C), reported two shots were fired at his window from the street yesterday morning. No one was hurt. FLOODS HIT JAPAN Tokyo, July 7--(AP) -- National police headquarters reported Tues- day two persons were missing and more than 600 homes inundated by floods in Kochi Prefecture in Shi- koku Island. Some 4,500 acres of rice paddies were washed out. U.K. Miners Seek New Wage Scale Whitley Bay, Northumberland, England, July 7 -- (CP) --The Nae tional Union of Mineworkers Tues day was instructed by its 750,000 members to demand a new wage Soheme pegged to the cost of live Arthur Horner, the union's gene eral-secretary, said the new scale for the socialized mines must apply to every part of the country. Abe Moffat, president of the Scottish Union, said the present wage system is "rotten from end to end." Underground workers now get $23 a week and surface men get $21. SCIENTIST HONORED London, July 7--(CP) -- Norman Robertson, Canadian High Commise sioner, Tuesday presented the Gold Medal of the Canadian Pharmaceus« tical Society to Sir Alexander Flem, ing at Canada House. Sir Alexane der is the discoverer of penicillin, Frank M. Brobst, vice-president of the society, was present. devote | § | R, for : celf with Refresh ourself "saline. od hea 2 : f popular suggestions a whole COM i111 IVE PRICES Plus PERSONAL SERVICE DRUG STORES MONEY SAVING VALUES FOR THURS,, FRI. and SAT. guard your some drink: & a number Listed below are er 29, PLASTIC CURLERS Toi HOME PERMANENT THE CREME COLD WAVE Deluxe Kit $2.50 BROMO-SELTZER 2 KRUSCHEN SALTS GAL HEPATICA =) 35¢ - 65¢ yr Salts ... - 98¢ Andrews Wi Saie Sa - 59c - 98¢ salts abbey le's Grape Alka-Seltzer -- ovaltine Horlick' Makes YO Keeps You Fit For tress, headaches. I.D.A. 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Liniment . 50c - $1.00 CRESS 30: | Corn Salve Nu-Feet Insoles, pr. . 25¢ Freezone .......... 32¢ Cornfix ......cc0ee. 350 Absorbine, Jr. $1.19-$2.39 mBuk OINTMENT Soothes tired 41c Excellent, too, for cuts, bruises, burns, soalds I.D.A. MEMBERS POWELL'S - DRUG STORE . Phone 1360 35 Simcoe St. N. (Next to Loblaws) We Deliver KARN'S DRUG STORE Phones 78 and 79 28 King St. E. (Next to Post Office) We Deliver We Reserve the Right to Limit THOMPSON'S DRUG STORE Phone:22 10 Simcoe St. S. Delivery to All Parts of the City Quantities

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