Daily Times-Gazette, 11 Jan 1951, p. 1

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. % THE DAILY TIMESGAZETTE OSHAWA Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle WHITBY VOL. 10--No. 9 OSHAWA-WHITBY, THURSDAY, JANUARY 11, 1951 . Price 4 Cents TWENTY PAGES PREMIERS PROPO E PEACE & --o ALKS 2,100 Reds Killed As Yanks Charge With Cold Steel By OLEN CLEMENTS for-Scotland group today demanded Tokyo, Jan. 11-- (AP)--Allied forces today hacked out | "gti "Big Three" meeting of a holding line on the critical central Korean front after a! himself, Prime Minister Attlee and | s | Winston Churchill. see-saw battle south of Wonju. | The demand was the latest | The battle front was uneasily quiet late in the day. The | development In the Christmas | snow-covered valley and hills were splotched with the blood Day. behing hl Bini of 2,100 killed and wounded Korean Communists. | as the Scottish stone of des- | American, French and Dutch troops dealt out death to | tiny--from Westminster Abbey. the enemy in a seven-hour fight that developed after a | tank-led United States 2nd Division patrol pushed into the onal Covenant: Commitioe "ia let. | abandoned road-rail hub of Wonju and then. voluntarily | Churchill, Conservative Party lead- | withdrew, At one stage, the Americans fixed bayonets and |er. Campbell said: charged. ASKS PARLEY, NEW TREATY London, Jan. 11--(AP)--John J. Campbell, leader of a home-rule- Campbell, head of the Scottish Na- | More than 7,000 North Kor- eans jumped the company-size entry patrol south of Wonju { torn away the evil of secrecy con- | cealing from the English people our & * The proposal was made public by Isobel Women's Academy of Chiropractor's Award. 5 orea | | HANG, PLEAS ARE DENIED Ottawa, Jan. 11--(CP)--The Federal Government has turned down a request for a stay of execution and a new trial for J. Albert Guay, Quebec jeweler, scheduled to be hanged shortly after midnight tonight for the murder of his wife in the time- bombing of a p ger aircraft. | tice Albert Sevigny today ruled | against a petition Morrison (right), daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Wm. Morrison, 24 of execution for J. Albert Guay due | Madison Ave; and Jack G. Sloan, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Sloan, | ido | 370 Lakeshore; today graduated, after a four-year course of study from | ta he hanged shortly. afier mid. the Canadian Memorial Chifopractic College at Toronto. | veterans of the armed' forces and D.V.A. students who qualified for their | | Doctor of Chiropractic Degree at the British Commonwealth's only Chiro- | practic College. "The removal of the stone has | pr. night at Bordeaux jail in Montreal. The petition was laid yester- day before the chief judge of Quebec Superior Court by Irenee Simard, counsel for Mrs. Arthur Pitre who is due to go on trial for murder Feb. Both were Miss Morrison, in addition, captured two top awards, | Walter W. Sturdy Scholarship for General Proficiency and the ---Photo by Peter G. Gordon. demand for an amicable revision | of the terms of the treaty of union, in accordance with the needs of modern states." He called for an immediate con- ference with the two British poli- on the road to Chonju. The patiol was reinforced by the other Allied forces and the Reds broke off the battle Wednesday night. But the greatest menace to Allied arms was shaping up in a 50-mile stretch between Chungju and Red- held Osan in western Korea. Chinese and Korean Red forces {estimated at 285,000 were in the FOUR MONTHS FOR FORMER b. M. GU ARD Ea th George Walter Joseph Stevens, 92 | forces of the U.S. Eighth Army on on Street, a former member | rere eneral Motors Security | KOREA Police, was convicted in police court | (Continued on Page 2) this morning of the theft of four | tires and tubes and a box of safety | gloves from the General Motors | plant, He was sentenced to four months in the county jail by Mag- istrate F. 8. Ebbs. "According to the testimon- dals which I have before me, you have had a good back- ground up until now and that you have let yourself in for a serious offense like this is hard to believe," stated Magistrate Ebbs. "However ample warning has been given before by this 8COTS (Continuea on Page 2) U.S. Aircraft Firms Need Year's Time Los Angeles, Jan. 11 (AP)--It will take the American.aircraft industry at least a year to begin producing half as many planes as it did in the Second World War, a survey of | main plants in Southern €alifornia | indicated today. | President Truman has called for | | a production capacity of 50,000 | planes' annually in the present emergency. x Claim Russians Mass Troops To Attack Alaska Taipei, Formosa, Jan. 11 (AP) --The Chinese Nationalist de- fence ministry said today Russia has moved an additional 300,000 troops to Siberia in readiness A-Bomb Seen Lone Deterrent to Russ Attack On Europe a war? When? What do you do about it? cluding the so-called Russian "experts," but if you live next door to the Russians in Europe -- as. I have since the end { of the last war -- the answers go like this: 20 as an accomplice of Guay in Quebec's airplane time-bomb case, The petition by Simard was one of two 11th-hour moves made yes- terday to keep Guay from the gal- lows. While the Simard petition was argued before Mr. Justice Sevigny, Guay's lawyers appeared in Ottawa before Justice Minister Garson with their final appeal for a stay of execution and a new trial for the 33-year-old jewelry salesman. Simard's petition asked for a postponement of the hanging on the ground he needed to question Guay- in the preparation of Mrs. | Pitre's defence and "probably" [would need Guay as a witness at i i 3 , i . | Mrs. Pitres' trial. Despite their seeming lethargy, these three questions Me. Toots Sevigny. fuled that : By WES GALLAGHER New York, Jan. 11--(AP)--Will the Russians provoke give Europeans the same nightmares they give people in |this argument was not a definite the western hemisphere today. of intention to eall indication Guay at the Pitre trial. No one knows positive answers to these questions, in- | France Finds Formula For 1. The Soviet Union is apt to blunder through an aggressive: Quebec, Jan. 11--(CP)--Mr. Jus- | requesting a stay | al To Urge Meeting Of U.S., China For Korea Parley London, Jan, 11--(CP)--Informed sources today ree | ported that the Commonwealth countries have proposed & | high-level meeting between the United States and Commus [nist China to discuss a Korean settlement. The proposed get-together would be under United Na tions auspices, the informants said. Neither the United States nor Red China has so far ree acted to"the suggestion. The new move apparently has the support of the leads {ers of all nine Commonwealth countries who have been dis cussing the tense situation in the Orient and in the rest of the world in a conference which began here last Thursday, Few details of fhe proposal were available, but its ime | | | mediate objectives were clear. It would seek to avoid forme | | of a new cease-fire resolution which might prove unaccept- able to either the United States or Red China. It would seek to defer offéring of a project- ed United States resolution to have the United Nations brand Communist China an aggressor. { Britain, other members of the | Commonwealth and many western | countries would find it difficult to support such a resolution. Some | have recognized the Peiping gov- i ernment. All want to keep out of . a limited or open war against Red China. They fear labelling Come munist China an aggressor event- | y % ually would lead to imposition of | ¥ economic sanctions against China, | i i which could be a step to war. Eni : The Prime Ministers have been { i ; studying a set of principles which om Britain and India are said to feel ® ulation in the United Nations Called by Death " would help end the Korean war, | : pi is : These include admission to Red | 3 China to the U.N. re-affirmation | e ? i by the big powers of the 1943 Cairo declaration promising return : 4 id Formosa to China, a time-table or withdrawal of foreign troops FREDERICK C. DAVIDSON from Korea and 'a seat for Red Prominent in the busi life of | China on any U.N. group set up to Oshawa singe 1505 Whe passed away restore Korea politically and ecoe n e Oshawa Genera ospita i ole 4 aay I i Tory at, nomically. Foreign secretary Beve court on similar offences that such offenses will be dealt with severely. The fact that you were a guard and the goods which you stole were placed in for an attack on Alaska. It said "Marshal Malinovsky, the Soviet Union's far eastern commander," has more than 15 seasoned divisions under him | | | Plane makers here claim they can expand to any capacity required if they get the necessary materials, tools and manpower, A spokesman for Douglas Air- acy into a world war rather than start one deliberately. 2. The greatest war danger period since 1939 is from April through September of this year. your trust makes the offense even more serious." In a statement made by the ac- FOUR MONTHS (Continued on Page 2) before the reinforcements. The ministry also said the Moscow-Peiping axis is convert- ing China's northwestern prov- inces into a vast military base. 2 Teen-Agers Plead Guilty In $1,050 Warehouse Break 9 Crashes, Burns As 11 Escape Albuquerque, N.M., Jan. 11-- (AP) --United States Air Force twin-engined C-47 crashed and burned about 30 miles west of Albuquerque last night but all 11 persons aboard survived. Ground search parties early today. found the three crew members and eight passengers. Seven of them were injured. The crew had radioed the mil- craft Corporation said the in- dustry turned out military planes at the rate of nearly 100,000 a year during the peak period of the Second World War, Douglas is producing at one-fourth of its wartime maxi- mum and would have to dou- ble its production to reach the President's capacity quota. California manufacturers agree on three principal points: 1. The factories can't retool and | 3. You must fight in Europe as long as you can, no matter how little you have. It is useless to speculate on whe- ther the Kremlin is planning a de- liberate all-out attack. This would be the most closely kept secret in the most closely guarded country in| the world. The best intelligence agencies in the world frankly admit they would not likely obtain such top-secret information. The best hire additional help until the orders | they hope for would be a few days come in and until they know what | warning of a possible attack by | is expected of them. | evidence such as troop dispositions, PS * | | | | | Big U.S. Plane F ranco Deal Paris, 'Jan. 11--(AP)-- After a month of diplomatic squirming and inspired rumors, France today | parently found a formula for | ing an ambassador in Spain without - | adding to political trouble at home, y ap- hav- French Socialists oppose sending an ambassador to Franco's Span- EEE ON ARMS COST Unemploed essential link in the present French coalition cabinet. ormula calls for elevating | 51-year-old Bernard Hardion, now | | Frermch charge d'affaires in Madrid, i to the rank of "ambassador of the | Muir, president of the Royal Bank | delegates here yesterday French republic." This means he | of Canada, will be merely a "high fiinctionary | democratic PREMIERS (Continued on Page 2) 2. There is an acute shortage of | skilled technicians. ; and. Richard | 3. The whole program is going to break at | | the J ide 8Iy @ afier an atempied | Maracle of Toronto also pleaded | eo le tazpayes considerably. more to break and enter Wards Cigar Store. Edward Proskin Four members of a gang of teen- agers who were arrested on Janu- | A-BOMB (Continued on Page 2) Ward's Cigar Store on King Stree} uilty to a joint charge of breaking | A West, appeared in_palice court this ing" entering the Food Shop. OUNeE | are compions "Sect Demos morning. | Membeis of the same |charges against Maracle were at-| work in .the Los Angeles area. gang were charged with breaking tempting to brea® and enter | Douglas alone had 160,000 in 1943, and entering the Christie Bread | Wards Cigar Store and receiving . | cheques stolen from the Christie | warehouse on Wolfe Street on De- | ZA ET FE C0 A 2 Falls M en cember 20 and the Food Shop on | pmourth member of the gang, Rob- | 3 Simcoe Street North on January [ert Clayton Kirkpatrick, 167 Bark | dl B Badly Burned! Fleeing Fire 3 y road north, pleaded guilty to a Niagara Falls, Ont., Jan. 11--(CP) More than $1,050 in cheques |Charse of attempting to break and | } enter Ward's Cigar Store, i | and money orders was obtained Also charged in connection With | by Robert Brownlee, 17, 26 |; preakins, was Shirley Mitrick, | Cadillac Avenue, and Edward |30 of Toronto, who pleaded not Bre fr eke Sr. {7 7 ceo eaer's tie Bread warehouse. Both TEEN-AGERS a Er a CY. Smits, pleaded ity t ttemptin, Continued Page 2 ' SYlly tv attempting { onfse fighting their way turough a flame- filled apartment. They were rush-| ed to hospital in a police criusei. Fire broke out in an apartment occupied by Ryan, his wife and four-year-old daughter. Ryan Coals to Newcastle? U.K. . was sleeping lone on a chester- ow en S ea 0 ana a field on the flower floor when : : ® he was aoused by smoke in one | of the cushions. He ran to the 1 | kitchen and put the cushion By ALAN HARVEY [headline proclaimed today that this | under a water tap. London, Jan. 11 -- (CP) -- With (country is actually sending meat | Britain's meat ration at a miscros- | to Canada, of all places. copically low level --~ and most of He returned to the living room | to find it ablaze and rushed upstairs | it tasting like chunks of untamed Jeather at that -- a newspaper Government officials said it's true, | to help his wife and child, who in| {all right. But they added that the | the meantime had been aroused by | traffic is so small it really doesn't |the smoke and escaped outdoors. | make any difference. . Smith, owner of the building, who "Just a few hundred tons a | lives in the adjoining apartment | « Year are involved," a food.min- |ran into the Ryan apartment to istry spokesman said. "It | help. Flamed trapped the two men | wouldn't make the slightést |as they descended from upstairs. difference to the ration." : | They suffered bad body buurns be- But the Daily Express, which put | fore finally making their way ote {the story under: the incredulous | side. All of Ryan's hair was burned | headline--"We Send Meat To Can- | oft. | ada" -- quoted housewives' repre- | | sentatives as saying it's "ridiculous" | | | NET PAID CIRCULATION The Times-Gazette Average Per Issue for DECEMN.BER 11,120 | that any meat should go abroad, EIGHT FLEE FLAMES Oh firm involved in the coals- | | lo-Newcastle business was sald to | destroyed the two-store i h - y frame be in Urmston, Lancashire. It sends | house of Frederick Coates early. to- | | day, driving a family of eight into Brockville, Jan. 11 (CP) -- Fire Ii | the cold. All escaped with minor | burns, (Continued on Page 2) ! A ---------- camp atrocities, the courtroom last night and refus- ed to leave her jail cell to attend the court session today. 7-Hour Quakes Do Damage In New Zealand Auckland, N.S, Jan. 11 -- (AP) -- Sharp earth tremors rocked southern New Zealand early today, toppling chimneys and buckling railroad tracks. No casualties were reported. The quakes, which lasted over a period of seven hours, set church bells pealing in the vil- lage of - Christchurch. and brought chimneys crashing down in Cheviot, 75 miles to the north. The railroad station at Chev- iot settled three inches into the earth and the main rail line north was knocked out by the quakes, Just Comedy Says Witch, Admits Fake Augsburg, Germany, Jan: 11 (AP) --Ilse Koch has admitted, that she |lar passenger planes -- in one hour is only faking in her courtroom col- | and nine minutes, lapses, witnesses testified today. . The "red witch of Buchenwald," | on trial for alleged concentration | was carried from | But Dr. Dudolf told the court thai, vrs. Koch bragged to him, after last night's seeming col- lapse, that "she had played a good comedy." representing the government of France," instead of a full-fledged ambassador responsible to the pres- ident of the republic, one official explained. itary control tower at Kirtland that it was abandoning ship before the crash, Canada' Avro 1. b Again Sets | Lisenhower | Gets Dutch New Record | Arms Plans Canadian-built Avro jetliner, only | --_-- jet-powered commercial transport | The Hague, Jan. 11--(AP)--Gen. in North America, returned late Dwight D. Eisenhower today began Wednesday after completing a rec- [a series of talks with Dutch lead- ord-breaking, 1,570-mile triangular ers to find out what this little flight -- with stops at Chicago and | country has to contribute towards New York -- in four hours and 22 the defence of Western Europe. minutes. In his visits to both Belgium Officials of the A. V. Roe and The Netherlands Eisenhow- (Canada) Limited said the fly- er has had the task of convinc- ing time of regular airliners ing these two small powers that over the same route is seven defence against Red aggression hours and 20 minutes. is a job the west must assume The big plane reached a ground | to save itself. In both lands the speed of 520 miles an hour on the fear of war between Russia and flight from Chicago to New York.| the West is great, but in both It averaged 360 miles an hour for countries observers said that the 1,570 miles. there has been an awakening On the Chicago-New York flight | realization of the need for re- it set two records for transports in| armament. the United States: an altitude rec- | Some 200 people demonstrated be- ord of 36,000 feet and a rate-of- | fore the building of the United climb performance by climbing to | States Information Service in Am- 30,000 feet in 22': minutes, The |sterdam last night, shouting "down jetliner has 'flown as high as 39,- With German rearmament" and | 000 feet in Canada. | "Down with Eisenhower." | Officials said the plane flew the Communists distributed pamph- 360 miles from New York to Tor- onto -- a two-hour fHght for regu- lets near the military barracks here this morning warning Duteh $ol- diers they would soon have to serve shoulder to shoulder with German troops "who murdered our families, and with the same bandits who THE WEATHER plundered and looted our country." Cloudy, night rain or wet snow ending this morning, few sunny intervals this after- noon, clearing tonight. Sunny Friday with little change in temperature. Winds northwest 15 today, light Friday. Low to- Cornwall, Jan, 11 (CP)--Cornwall ratepayers will vote on Sunday sports in a referendum April 4 it night and high Friday 20 and | was decided Wednesday night at a 35. Summary for Friday: Sunny {Joint meeting of city and township and mild. ; ' councils. BANKER URGES POOL ADVICE g-. Rid For Uninsured Montreal, Jan. 11--(CP)--James Regina, Jan. 11--(CP)--Welfars approved suggbsted today that a report of three members of Parlia=- governments consider iment that the Federal Government | setting up advisory committees. on should hold itself responsible for | financing in the move toward re- | unemployed person. not receiving | armament. unemployment benefits. These committees would com- The delegates were atlending the prise governors of central banks, |second-day session of the mide | representatives of industry, fi- winter meeting of the Canadian nance and labor and senior | Welfare Council's division on pube civil' servants who would re- lic welfare." : view expenditures and advise on The report, prepared by the possible economies. | committee on public assistance-- In his prepared address before | David Croll (Lib--Toronto), the bank's 83nd annual meeting of | Donald Fleming (PC--Toronto) shareholders, . Mr. Muir said the and Stanley Knowles CCF-- committees' functions: "should be | Winnipeg) --will be presented cinfined to restrictive action, with | af the annual meeting next May no power to suggest new expendi- | at Toronto of the council and { tures or the increase of those al- | public welfare division. ready proposed." : |. The report also recommenced full "At this siage the most impor- [jp njementation of the Federal Gove BANKER URGES (Continued on Page 2) ° (Continued on Page 2) Caucasiams Anxiously Ask "Go Or Stay?" In Far East By FRED HAMPSON | Kong. In view of the Chinese Come . Bangkok, Thailand, Jan. 1l-- | munists' disregard of international (AP)--All over Communist-menac- | horders by invading Korea, Hong ed southeast Asia Caucasians again Kong now appears to be a target are confronted with the question: | "Shall we go or stay?" time. Families of some white busi= Even 'hére in placid Bangkok, ness men there have been sent which by comparison with most of | home. Asia is as péaceful as its famous re-| The announcement more than a clining Buddha, members of the month ago by Panamerican Air white race are pondering the ques- | Lines that it was removing depens tion. 8ents from Hong Kong had a pro- White residents of Asia. who [found effect on other Asian coun lived through Japanese intern- tries. ment and those who were It is true that Hong Kong is caught by the Communist re- nearer the source of danger-- volution in China have no de- literally under the muzzles of sire to risk it again. Chinese Red guns--but whites 'The Communist anti-west and | in this part of the world feel anti-American campaigns of the| they are prety much in the last few months are viewed by most | same dilemna, whites as a warning that it will be| Some places will last longer than, dangerous business to fall into their others. But once the Red swarms hands from now on. {move south from China it will be | Tension is mounting 'in Hong only a matter of time. I which the Reds may hit almost any' 3 af $y

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