Daily Times-Gazette, 20 Jan 1951, p. 13

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Former er Hungarian Economist Visions Long War In Offing Sure West Will THE DAILY TIMES- GAZETTE Puy of Legal Eagles Not Win But Predicts Coming mi as Ti a Wikhy Geant sl Grice WHITBY High In Canada Says Survey OSHAWA-WHITBY, SATURDAY, JANUARY 20, 1951 U. S. Prisoners Released, Told to "Get Out of War" VOL. 10--No. 17 PAGE THIRTEEN * Toronto, hn Bc 20 (CP).--A Cana-| : ; dian lawyer earns most money as G& 1 d Costly Struggle a member of a large law firm, in a | reen an | city of 100,000 to 500,000 population | and after he has been in Practice | uf er S In ; more than 30 years, : Toronto Jan, 19-- (CP)--A former Hungarian e¢ono- This conclusion about the earn- Flu E idemic mist says he feels a long and costly war between the west- ge of lawyers in Canada = Pp reached in the Survey of the Legal ern powers and Russia lies ahead. But he is sure the West Profession in Canada, made under | will win. suspioss of the Canadian Bar As- | ene, Sviterand, Jon. 2 s sociation. The fi igh Ladislas Joseph Timar, 50, former member of the Hun- lished in the Sadi eS Sy that has swept through Britain and garian Social Democratic party's economic department, said Canadian Bar Review. Europe now has broken out in re- . . . : ival h . The survey showed that in | Mote Greenland where 90 per cent in an interview recently upon his arrival here: 1948, the most recent year for of the populations of some areas "It will be a long and costly war. It will commence, not which figures are available, the | ot SoU THA fh, (Fe orld Health / ) average income lawyers obtain- because the western powers want it, but because they don't ed from thelr practice was 15.013. The erganiuation said it does' want it. The feeling that the West does not want war has In comparison, doctors in 1946| wag olen in Latin had an average income of {3,800 or The number of deaths in the 126 made Russia eager and hungry. The tension will not relax; it will break." Budapest-borr Timar wife, a former newspaper woman, escaped from Hungary in 1948 after the Russians tightened their grip on Hungary. They waited in Aus- and his ® Chrysler Given $750 more than the lawyer average for that year, the®latest for which figures are available on the medical profession. "But (the 1948) averages alone do not show the whole picture," the report on the survey says, "The average itself is enlarged to a con- siderable extent by the income of largest towns of England and Wales was 458 for the week ending Jan. 6, W.H.O. stated. The organization reported the epidemic still is wide spread in northern Europe. In the United States flu inci- dence had zoomed 'again--mostly in Texas and Virginia, W.H.O. said. tria until they got permission to come to Canada. Hungary Sad Country "Hungary is a very sad country today," Timar said. "It exists on a five-year plan in which I was forced to participate, despite the fact I was opposed to it. Actually, it is nothing but a plan of military preparation. 1 wanted no part of i." He sald the work of laborers has been intensified and their hours are long, rounded out with lectures on Communism. "The Russians have good .weap- s. But the people in Hungary ve no boots or clothing. Hun- gary is a rich country that now is turning to ruin. People are not getting proper food. It is all being sent to Russia." Profits To Russia The Communists have national- ized everything in Hungary but the factories once owned by the Ger- mans. The factories are under Rus- slan ownership now and their profits are sent to Russia. Timar said he had undergone the hardships of two occupations of Hungary, first by the Germans and then by the Russians. After the German break- through in France in 1940 cut off business links between his home- land and the West, Timar became a translator of English and French books and stated to study econo- mic research and planning. In 1942 he took part in an anti-nazi clandestine intellectual movement as an adviser. Then Joined Russians "In 1944 after the Germans over- ran Hungary, my parents were killed by the Nazis. My wife be- me lost to me and I did not find again until 1945. I had to hide but during the days of the Buda- pest siege, I was found. I managed to escape from a German firing squad and went over fo the Rus- sians." 99 Million 'Big Tank' Contract Detroit, Jan. 20 (AP).--Award of a $99,000,000 contract to the Chrysler Corporation for pro- duction of heavy tanks was announced yesterday by the Army. It is the first contract let for heavy tanks since out- break of the Korean war. Previously Chrysler was awarded a $160,000,000 contract for production of medium tanks. LIFE TERM IS SENTENCE IN yory Miracle Mould Seen MacArthur | sss: SLAYING CASE | as Effective Against TB. Defends His and implies a distrust of the SEE ° Han, Sen. X en Lansing, Mich. Jan. DT hg Censorship correspondents which is un- justified," the Editor & Pub- lisher editorial said. : Thomas Burnham, 38, Friday was MacArthur replied: : sentenced to life imprisonment for Thee years oe nesje hunung in It is a matter of public knowl- manslaughter + in the taxi-office | the haystack of soil moulds by the beating of Mrs. Bertha Stone, his | Michigan department of health has Poy A nk one-time common-law wife and | Paid off in the discovery of a prom- I ¥ ay thal he ising new antibiotic drug, clamped compulsory censorship on | py the press itself and finally yleld- Korean war dispatches at the de- | ed to its almost-united demand that mand of the press itself. military censogship be imposed." . ham guilty of manslaughter, after arate 6% , He almost exactly wha iey Vere Sook had been tried for murder but ng -- a companion for the "mr- acle" drugs, Penicillin and Strepto- 3 Sia) criticizing Pearce, 50, rides 13 miles on horse- | - back over isolated Dartmoor every | The censorship clamped over day to deliver the mail. | the 15 per cent of the profession who made $10,000 or more during the year. Nearly' two-thirds of all| lawyers received less than the average and half of these had in- comes of $3,000 or under." The average lawyer income in the United States in 1948 was $8,135. Lawyers in Manitoba, Ontario, British Columbia and Alberta had average incomes in 1948 ranging from $7,200 to $6,500. In another group, with average income rang- ing from $5,000 to $3,800, are law- yers in Quebec, Newfoundland, Nova Scotia, Saskatchewan, New Bruns- wick and Prince Edward Island, in that order. STARTS. 70 WORK | IN 2 SECONDS PAIN AND RELIEVES ' DISCOMFORT OF i. 11-1 F + 1di 2 China, is ganda purposes, captured U.S. and other U.N s lly soldiers | r d, often with notes from their captors, "advising all U.N. soldiers to get out of Korea, 'This photo, received from Communist sources in Peking. described by the that jes it: "Fleeing Ameri are intercepted by the Chinese People's Volunteers after the Wensan battle." Though the photo may have been posed for Communist propa- ~--Central Press Canadian. 70 4 OUT OF 5 CATR LOANS $50 TO $1200 ON SIGNATURE, FURNITURE OR AUTO uh men and women, EXAMPLES OF LOANS married or single, get cash promptly at A Sash 15 MO. |24M0.*(24M0.* ou Don't borrow bea, Get 154.19 | 529.59 | 756.56 but if a loan will enable you to Repay get a fresh start--pay medical or Meathly | $12 | $28 | $40 dental bills--fix auto or home-- Even 3 Zeyments Jo inbsriem sound by mounts are in proportion. *On loan: pay old bills--come cot wbiect fo A Camimer Cray egulations." in or phone today. THAT LIKES TO SAY veEs~ vaonal FINANCE Co. 2nd Fl, 117, SIMCOE ST., N. (Over Bank of Nova Scotia) Phone: 5690 © F. Elton Anderson, YES MANager Loans made to residents of all surrounding fowns * Personal Finance Company of Canada (erman Reds Oust Two In Data Loss Berlin, Jan. 20--(AP)--East Ger- man Communists today imposed heavy punishment on two members who surrendered records of Russian zone nationalized industries to West Berlin border police. The central committee of the Socialist Unity (Comr un.st) Party a d the ting of Richard Hentschel and Fritz Kirchhoff, leading officials of the Communist trade unions in Saxony, for the incident. The action wiped out their chances of getting good jots. The two took a short cut through the West sectors of the city one fend press freedom but strangely I found myself opposed on the issue |' An Ontario Supreme Court in the developmental state -- was t . jury Jute Yesterday found Bum discovered by researchers who knew aging cable r & Publisher, news- Dartmoor, Devon, England paper trade magazine, replying to (CP) -- Postwoman Mr tude edge how desperately I tried to de- mother of his small son. The new drug, synnematin --stil MacArthur's statement was in a EE Sn | the jury reduced the charge. A hy the = new | Mr. Stone. 31. was besten i mycin, also mould derivatives. death last Oct. 13 in a deserted East-End cab office. Her head was smashed against the walls and floor of the building. Burnham was ar- rested soon after and, when she died Oct. 16, he was charged with murder. The defence offered no evidence during the four-day trial. Colin Gibson, Burnham's lawyer, argued that there was no proof that the man seen in and near the taxi stand at the time of the beating was Burnham. It was Gibson's first The researchers sought an an- tibiotic effective against tuber- culosis and whooping cough. In Synnematin," said Dr. Al- bert E. Heustis, state. health commissigner, "it looks as if we have hit one of our targets." The group of 'organisms against which the drug appears most po- tent to date, he said, includes those which cause infant diarrhoea, ty- phoid fever and -septicaemia. Théy also cause "chicken diarrhoea" in fowl. Dr. Heustis and Dr. G. D. Cum- vg You're Invited to SEE After the war, he resumed his job with the Social Democratic Party's economic department and remained with it until it ended in 1948 with a Communist coup d'etat. Prior to that, he had become vice- president of the Hungarian state coal mines and production had been | jury trial. bt trebled. "When the Communists trans- | formed the coal mines from my business model into a Soviet model, I resigned." 'Then came' his flight to freedom. Mrs, Stone's death was the climax of a long series of vio- lent quarrels between the two, the trial showed. Several Crown witnesses told" of oc- casions on which Burnham threatened to kill Mrs. Stone. He had been drinking prior to mings, laboratory director, credited the actual distovery to a team of workers headed by Dr. Russell Gottshall, Dr. John 1M. Roberts, Dr. Lucille Portwood, and J. C, Jen- nings. Dr, Heustis said the team check- ed more than 17,000 mould growths. Synnematin came from the 3,590th night this winter and were halted by the border customs police. Rec- ords of "people's owned" plants were found in the car and seized by the West Berlin police for examination. The Communist central committee asserted this permitted "important information to reach the hands of The NEW 1951 the American secret ser-ice." Czech Red Warns the taxi-stand fight. Mr, Justice Treleaven, in his charge to the jury, said drunken- ness, in itself, is not a defence for crime. mould tested, a small peach: colored bit of soil growth, Synnematin has been used only on animals. On them it does not ap- S00 Defence Opens Drive For Recruits Sault Ste. Marie, Ont., Jan. 20-- (CP)--Zone and district wardens of the Sault civil defence commit- tee today began an all-out drive for recruits to build up a complete organization by Feb. 15. Committee officials said several district and hundreds of post war- dens are needed. Police Chief I. L. Robertson sald the organization will be considered completed only when there is a warden post on every city block. Defence officials were shown preliminary sketches of an evacua- tion map of the city, which is divid- ed into six areas, with nine main routes of evacuation to be followed in an emergency. About 40 control points along the routes will be manned by uniformed and auxil- iary police officers. Still Debate Chief For Windsor Force Windsor, Ont., Jan. 20--(GP)-- e Windsor police commission hursday delayed choice of a new police chief until Mayor Arthur J. Reaume, one of the commissioners, can interview six out-of-town candiates for the job. ° The board adjourned after two days of closed meetings and set no date for its next meeting. "Now the commission has agreed I should have the opportunity of interviewing them," thé mayor said. Four of them are: Provincial Po- lice Inspector C. W. Farrow of Peterborough; Non Nimmo, assist ant inspector of detectives of the Toronto police force; Frank Crowe, former inspector on the Toronto force, and Jack Berger of Sudbury, former R.C.M.P. sergeant. STARTING EARILY Peterborough, Ont. --<(CP)--= A pretty young blonde who went to o the National Employment Of- ices here was taken to the police tation, The girl, who had never vorked before, was given a box of opcorn while waiting for her father. She is three years old. Gotham Red Paper Sings Money Blues New York, Jan, 20--(AP)--The Daily Worker, Communist Party organ, called on its readers today to help its circulation which it' said had "fallen to a point where the existence of the. paper is definitely menaced." In a front page editorial titled "to all our readers," the Daily Worker said: "The total circulation of the Daily Worker is now below 14,000; The Sunday Worker is below 50,000, with 28,000 subscription expirations falling due within the next few months. "This drastic drop is in no sense the result of the people's opposition to our message of peace. , ." pear to be poisonous. Germs have not yet appeared to grow resistant to Synnematin, This resistance is one of the drawbacks of the other antibiotic miracle drugs. Antibiotic means they are manufactured by living organisms. LIKE FATHER Revelstoke, B.C. --(CP)-- After 57 years as a fireman, including 41 consecutive years as fire chief, Sam Needham has retired from the post. Elected «to succeed him as chief was his son, S. E. Needham. JUVENILE THEFT Vancouver -- (CP)--Pupils who raided the Laura Secord School during a week-end, entering with a skeleton key, didn't do any dam- age, but stole the strap from the principal's desk and removed a few fuses from a fusebox. Church To Subside Prague, Jan. n. 20-- (AP)--Zdenek PFierlinger, Communist deputy prime minister, said today "a terrible de- feat" awaits the church if it stands in the way of progress in Czechoslo=- vakia. Fierlinger, in charge of the state office for church affairs, spoke be- | fore a regional conference of Ro- man Catholic clergymen here, In his address, ¢ stributed by the offi- cial agency, he said: "Not even the church can ignore the newly-created community and its order. It cannot be neutral in this great fight for justice: "It must not place itself in the way of progress. Otherwise a ter- rible defeat awaits it." Heacham, Norfolk, England -- (CP) -- Specimens of bronze age pottery have been unearthed here, THERE OUGHT TO BE A LAW By Al Fagaly and Harry Silorten Wen WORMWOOD PICKS A WINNER WOW! IS HE ON 0BOYOBOYOBOY! 00] I KNOW HOW TO PICK 'EM) LOOK! 52 FISH! ae IT TO You? WHY DON'T YOU GUYS MIND YOUR OWN BUSINESS? G'WAN 294 PLEASANT 57, EAST WALPOLE, MASS LINCOLN Now On Display Place Your Order NOW For Quick Delivery! ---- at BRAMLEY MOTOR SALES NORTH OSHAWA PHONE 5505

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