PAGE Two THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE TUESDAY, AUGUST 14, 195 : Births ASKEW--Mr. and Mrs, William J. Askew are happy to announce the birth of a baby son on Friday, August 10, 1951, at the Oshawa Ssaieral Hospital, A brother for C. . 9SBORNE Mr. and Mrs. Os- borne, (nee Joan O'Brien), wish to announce the birth of a som, on Saturday, August 11, 1951. WALLER--Mr, and Mrs. James SROMPTON--Entered into vest at Riverdale Isolation Hospital, To- ronto, on Monday, Aug. 13, 1961, Wiliam James Cromptom, beloved son of Mr. and Mrs. William of 97 Exeter St., Ajax, and dear brother of Lynne, in his 16th year, ' Funeral, private, on Tuesday, Au- gust 14. Interment Erskine Cemetery. 'JONALD--In Oshawa Hospital, en : August 14, W651, Annie M. ; Jovi, ved wife of Edward A. ald, (64 Brock St. BE), and of Mrs, Lloyd, (Mary, 'orkman, Frank, Ted and Harry, in her STth year. .. Fumeral from Luke-MecIntosh Fu- eral Mome, om Friday, A St. Gregory's Church for Mass at 9 am. Interment Bt. James Cem- ptery, @olgan. In Memoriam '--in loving memory of eur jar Father, Bdward Blight, who passed away August 14, 193. Sweet memories will Mnger forever; Time cannot change them, K's true; a Wears that may come cannot sever, Our loving remembrance of you. ~~Ever remembered by daughters Siva and Frances. LESLIE---In loving memory eof our dear Mother, Jessie Leslie, who passed away August 14, 1950. We saw you suffer, we heard you ,. sigh, All we could do was just stand by, When the time came, Wwe. suffered too, For you never deserved what you went through. --Daughter Eva and Family. MCLAUGHLIN--In loving memory of a dear mother, Ida R. Me- '"Laughlin, who passed away Aug. Peacefully sleeping, resting at lash The world's weary troubles an 'l trials are past; In silence she suffered, in patience ho she bore, Pill God called her home to suffer mo more. Lovingly remembered by som, v, and Martha. {1-188 He Hie if Harry of Whitby. Also surviving are seven grandchildren. The body will be at the Luke- McIntosh Puneral Home for mass in St 's Roman Catholic ed, He helped to build bodies: Toronto's first motor cars. and a member of the IOOPF, attended Toronto, and two brothers, Stan. y of Toronto and Ehrlen of Mon- J. GEORGE FRAME Pounder and president of Frame Weckwear Ltd, John George Frame, 48 Keystone Ave. Toronto, died in Oshawa General Hospital on Sun- y from complications following an ergency operation last week, at the age of 70. . Mr. Frame was born in Toronto. his own business 25 Pos ago he was associated with W, Woods here. He was a member f the Brampton Golf Club. 'He lieaves his wife, the former 'Mary Elizabeth; two sons, Russell, Brougham, and Frankland of ; four grandchildren, and sisters in Toronto. : FUNERAL OF SIDNEY ALBERT SNELGROVE "Rev. R. W. Wighton, pastor of Qalvary Baptist Church, conducted the funeral service at the Arm- ii Rag mag gh Snel: y, ior ey - DV! ho passed peacefully away wa General Hospital on Jast. Interment was i Cemetery. oh | Oshawa dnd Duatnict TORONTO MOH DIES Honey Harber, Ont. (CP) -- Dr. Gordon Jackson, 86, Toronto's med- ical officer of health for the last 21 years, died of a heart attack Mon- day night while vacationing here with his wife. VISITORS AT ROTARY Visitors at the luncheon meeting ; of the Oshawa Rotary Club yes- terday included Rotarians Percy Bowers of Brampton, Harvey Woods of Ohatham, Charles King of Whitby and Rev. 8. R. Henderson of Bowmanville. BIRTHDAYS REMEMBERED Members of the Oshawa Rotary Club, who are celebrating their birthdays this month, were honored at the club luncheon yesterday. Those honored 'were F, Brooks, Harry Kerr, James Reid and Alex Nathan. HIT FROM BEHIND Driving along King Street East shout one o'clock yesterday after- noon, John C. Kemp, 203 Nassau Street, was hit from behind by an~ other eastbound car in charge of 17, |Alfred Mivanet, 260 Huron Street. The latter told P.C, Cairney, who investigated, that he was to blame for the accident, in which both cars said to be insured, sustained some damage, MENOR ABRASIONS George Tomlinson, 266 Street, was driving a pick-up truck west on bond Street East at 5:30 pm. yesterday when a 'little boy darted out in front of him, It was six-year-old Dwight Sutherland of Timmins who is staying at 108 col- borne Street East. Tomlinson slame med his brakes on but did not avoid hitting the child, who was thrown to the pavement. P.C, Jordan, ine vestigating, "said Dwight was re- moved to the hospital, where he was found to me suffering only minor abrasions. SCARE City oZNOKE 30 a call about 8.15 last night to the home of J. E. Major, 278 Ritson Road North, where a smoke scare had caused someone to send in an alarm. The blaze was burning garbage in an oil drum incinerator. The fire had been left unattended, and was found to be too near a loading platform. The firemen were also out on a false alarm at 640 this morning. COLLIDES WITH TRUCK Uriah Jones, 461 Simcoe Street North, was driving down Simcoe Street South about 4 p.m. yesterday when he collided with a truck be- longing to Seven-Up Distributors, Sergeant F. Fawbert of the city pol- jce, who investigated, found the Jones car damaged on both right and right rear fender. Neith- was injured, he said, and was undamaged. POLIO CASES number-of poliomyelitis reported in Peterborough and during the last two weeks has now risen to 14. Four new cases were reported by hospital officials today. Three of the four cases are a Toronto family, father, mother and son, who had been staying in the district for the week. The other case is a Peterborough youngster, a 4-year- end. Of the fourteen cases reported four have been women, three men and seven children. Fears Czechs Plan to Kill Newsman Washingten--(OP)--Rep. 0. K. Armstrong Rep. Mo, told the House of Representatives Monday he fears William N. Oatis will be killed within "a matter of weeks" unless released from a Czechoslo- ted Press corre- at Prague, was sentenced to 10 years om ch of espionage which the State partment has denounced as 4 lace, Armstrong he received a cablegram from Ray Brock, free lance journalist now in Turkey say- ing Oatis "Is getting the full treat- ment and every brute cunning method of inquisition known to the dread Russian MVD---secr rome agent, formerly an assist military attache in a Balkan capital, HONOR PUBLISHER Banff, Alta (CP) -- Two chalets at the Banff School of Fine Arts will be dedicated Wednesday by Mrs. J. H. Woods in memory of her husband, former publisher of the Herald, After the de- dication, University of Alberta na- tional awards for music and paint- ing will be presented to Dr. Healey Willan, Toronto organist and com- poses, and A. Y. Jackson, Toronto EARLY PHONE OPERATOR Orillia (CP) -- Robert ATOR i. 81, who before retirement in 1938 was assistant vice-president of the Bell Telephone Company of Can- ada, died here Saturday. He joined the. firm at the age of 17 and served with Bell more than 50 Years, Born in Bamis, | he Nasted e company as ni rator in St. Catharines in 1887. NOTED PUBLISHER.DIES Beverley Hills, Calif. (CP)--Pub- lisher Willlam Randolph Hearst died today at 9:50 am. PEDT, Dawe, Jones Angus McEachern, Bverett Thomas Jones, Jr., Meredith wane Dantd Jomes. and Bmest t [try should clean its own house be- Checking On| Vandalism At the CRA Police are keeping a close watch on the CRA Building and its en- virons, and in the near future, hope to collar the young people who are believed responsible for a series of vandalistic acts which have taken place there over the past few weeks. More than 20 panes of glass have been smashed in the CRA building and time and again officials and employees have returned in the to find not only broken panes but the rooms inside, includ- ing the "auditorium, littered with stones and broken glass. Tyice in the last six weeks there have been break-ins and the tuck shop rifled. Police warn that these entries, made at t, are noth- ing more or less than burglaries and that apprehension will mean the culprits will face serious crim- inal charges with the possibility of jail sentences to follow. Red Rally Is Major Win For the West Berlin (AP)--The western allies today sized up the .world youth festival in Berlin as a near disaster for Communism in Germany. Official observers are planning to report back to their governments at the end of the festival this week the following conclusions: ; 1. East German Communist youth were exposed to West Berlin in such numbers they may flood their home areas with pro-western feel- ing. 2. Many delegates from the satel- lite nations, restricted to the Soviet sector of Berlin, were impressed by the fact that the cause of Com- munism has been stopped cald on the jyon curtain border and isn't pushing westward. 3. The lack of enthusiasm among the German youth has cast g sharp reflection on party emit dre York and the men responsible for it. A steady rain today cut down the flow of German youth in West Berlin but the total now has pass- ed the 680,000 mark. Hundreds of thousands of Egst German youth discovered the food, entertainment and the general wel- come in the West were far betéer than in Bast Berlin, CAB OFFICERS SAY GBC BARS FREEDOM Ottawa (CP)--The Canadian As- sociation of Broadcasters, repre- senting most of Canada's private radio stations, suggests this coun- fore telling others what to do abou freedom of information. . T. J. Allard, the associaton's general manager, made this view known in a letter to Bscott Reid, deputy under-secretary of state for external affairs, in commenting on the United Nations draft eonven- tion on freedom of information. The External Affairs Department asked the association for cominent on the convention. Mr, Allard wrote: "Canada is one of the mations which 'absolutely prohibits the broadcast of news, except such types of news as many be ap- proved in advance by a govern- mental authority, responsible di- rectly to the executive. Nor is titis done directly by legislation, but under means of regulations by the CBC." He then quoted from section 18 (1) of the CBC regulations support this statement. A. D. Dunton, CBC chairman, said he had no comment to make on Mr, Allard's letter. Ritson Road (Continued from page 1) shippers. is no way in which this switching can be carried out without, upon occasion, bl the crossing referred to. Our train crews have been very definitely ine structed regarding keeping the pe- riod for which the crossing blocked to a minimum. "The allowable period for which the crossing may be blocked is five minutes and an investigation re- veals: that on only once occasion was this period exceeded and then only by one minute. You may be assured that everything possible will be done to avoid delays to road (traffic over this crossing," conclud- ed the letter from CPR. Want Pupp Mill Tour Included In Visit Kapuskasing (CP) -- A tour of this Northern , Ontario pulp and paper town, a trip through the Spruce Falls Pulp and Paper Com- pany mill, a banquet and meeting with civic officials are included in the plans for Princess Elizabeth and the Duke of Edinburgh who sre scheduled to visit here Oct. 8 and 9. ! The plans, which must be ap- proved by the undersecretary of state, call for the special activities: will leave fairly early Oct. 9, we haven't made any plans for that day," Mayor Stevenson said today. to | was ca! British Election May Be Postponed Until Next Year London (CP)--Before parliament adjourned earlier this month for the summer recess polifical obser- vers insisted that an autumn gen- eral election was almost a certain- ty. Now they are speculating the date may be deferred until some time between February and June next year. Several factors have influenced this change of mind, but mainly 'a statement by J. Chuter Ede, leader of the House of Commons, that par- liament will definitely meet asain to prorogue before dissolution "But don't take that as a pro- phesy" he told members. He added it was the intention of the govern- ment to reconvene the House Oct. 16 and to ask the King to open a new session, the third of the pre- sent session, Oct. 23. The opposition accepted the sta- tement with undisguised scepticism and the Conservatives, at least, are gearing their election ery for any eventuality. The Tories are convinced the La- bor party hierarchy has been quietly laying the groundwork for an. early appeal to the country by offering pre-election '"'sops" and en- couraging whispering campaigns. In support of this view they point to recent measures introduced by the government to tighten price controls, increase certain rationed commodities, such as meat, lifting of the ban on industrial strikes and the proposed three-year "freeze'" of investment dividends. Political observers predict Labor strategists will seek to postpone the election date until its leaders are in a position to appeal to the coun- try with some spectacular issue of principle. Some say this may take the form of a special levy on ca- pital, along the lines of the tax im- posed in 1948 by Sir Stafford Cripps then chancellor of the exchequer. Similarly, Tory spokesmen are speculating that Labor may even attempt to build up the dividend freeze into a " -the-rich" show- down.-as part of general tactics to pin on the Conservative party the label of privilege and wealth. Behind these possibilities loomed the persistent whisper that the Tories, inspired by Winston Chur- chill, were pursuing a war-monger- ing policy and if returned to power would precipitate the country into another war. Recent public opinion polls have reflected a slight setback in the Conservative lead over Labor. But political analysts say that if a gen- al election were held now, the nservatives would bé returned with a majority of from 100 to 150. BRIDEGROOM OF DEATHGETS LIFE TERM Auckland, N. Z. (Reuters)--Ge- orge Cecil Horry, the 'Bridegroom of Death," was sentenced to hard labor for life today for murdering his wife Mary the day after their wedding nine years ago. Police have searched unsuccess- fully for Mary's body ever since and to the end of the trial Horry, 44, maintained he was innocent. He told the court after sentence today: 'She went to America and to the best of my knowledge she is still there." . But Supreme Court Judge Adams had asked the jury in his summing up: "Is it in the realm of possi- bility that a woman would leave behind so much of her wardrobe as has been produced in court?" Yesterday, Horryss defence law- yer said he could not find any jury in the British Empire which had convicted a person of murder in the absence of a body, except where direct evidence -- such as a confession -- showed the victim was dead. The judge declared that if the jury were convinced that Mary was dead and were equally cer- tain that Horry killed her, then they were entitled to act on that view. The prosecutor said Horry swept Mary off her feet and 'having no money of his own got her to marry him so he could gbtain her money and then destroy her." One witness testified during the week-long trial that Horry with- drew money from a bank aecount just before the wedding. Ship Aground Cargo of Gas Seen Big Risk Alexandria Bay, N. Y. (AP) = The tanker A. C. Dodge of New York ran aground Monday on the St. Lawrence river and leaking gasoline endangered shipping. The coast guard ordered all ship- ping away from the tanker which was grounded on rocks about two miles north of here at Sand Island shoals. : Gasoline spread out for hundreds of yards ground the vessel which oh a 200,000 - gallon eargo. The Dodge, owned by Spenton- bush Fuel rtation Service, Inc., of New York was'bound from Montreal to Clarkson, Ont. While all ships have been orde- red to proceed with caution in the area, another tanker, the Trans- bay, was sent to the side of the stricken ship. The Transbay plan- ned to take the gasoline cargo off the Dodge. 80 MPH Race Gets Boy To Toronto Hospital Toronto (CP) -- A police - es corted ambulance travelling at 80 miles an hour took three - year- old William Scott to hospital here late Monday 24 hours after he was struck by an automobile near his Niagara Falls home. The boy's condition took a sudden turn for the worse in Nia- gara Falls hospital Monday. Re- lays of provincial and Toronto city police cleared passage of the am- bulance to Toronto's Hospital for Sick Children. Plane Crash (Continued from page 1) ed on the flaming mass served in part to spread the flames as gaso- line ran through the structure on the surface of the' water. It was nearly five hours after the crash at 2.18 pm. PDT, 5.18 EDT, before the blaze was under control. Meanwhile, firemen and police tunneled steadily into the debris, removing the scorched bodies one at a time until 11 were accounted for, including the air crew members. The apartment house records were destroyed, but Kenge Kadoyama, the manager, said he thought most Classified ads are sure to pay Phone The Times with jouss today. of the residents had been sacount. ed for, Oshawa Girl Will Meet President Washington (AP) -- More than 100 Canadian, British and French exchange school teachers arrived today fora week's stay before scat- tering to teaching jobs throughout the United States. They will be presented to Presi- dent Truman at the White House Thursday. They will trade jobs with Ameri- can teachers for a year. Canadian teachers include: Margaret M, Scarfe, Elmwood school, Winnipeg; Margaret Kerr, Simcoe school, Oshawa, Ont.; Evelyn, M. MacLaurin, Kitsilano Jjunior-senior high school, Vancou- ver; Wilma W. Laing, Haultain school Saskatoon; Mildred A. Clark Benson school, Regina, and Grace Tollefson, Albert school, Saskatoon. Italy Feels Very Violent Earth Tremor By The Canadian Press Italian seismologists late Mon- day night recorded a violent earth- quake with an epicentre somewhere between 730 and 1,360 miles from Rome, possibly in eastern Greece. They sald the, shock would have had "destructive and catastropic" effects if it occurred in an in- habited area. Shortly before the Italian reports, a: dispatch from Ankara, Turkey, said a strong earth tremor lasting 11 seconds was felt in the Anatolia and Gandkihir] areas of central Turkey, which is several hundred miles east of Greece. The Turk- ish shocks caused unspecified dam- age. Seismographs at the Leghorn and Faenza observatories in Italy regis tered tremors of 'exceptional in- tensity." Experts at Faenza said the tremors surpassed razed the city of Messina, Italy, in 1008 and killed 75,000 persons, They were so strong they knocked out the Faenza instruments and prevented exact observation. Walkout (Continued from page 1) sian Foreign Office legal chief and former judge at the Tokyo war crimes trials, ' Department officials look fo Communist Czechoslovakia and Po- land, the only Russian satellites in- vited, to follow Moscow's lead short- ly and announce they will attend the conference. An American plan for thwarting Russia's designs at San Francisco is reported to call for: 1. Limiting speeches to the sub- ject of Japanese peace treaty draft. 2. A majority-vote rule which can be used to declare violators "out of order." Russia's delegates to the meeting are expected to press vigorously Moscow's contention that the Uni- ted States is seeking to revive Jap- anese militarism. No limits on Japanese rearma- ment are contained in the Ameri- can treaty draft, co-sponsored by the US. and Britain, This Stems disarmed at a time when it Communist China and Russia have an eye on Japan's indusigial facilities. Steel Squeeze (Continued from page 1) affected will likely try for supplies in Europe or Japan, or they may try Ottawa. Mr. Harris said all new applica- tions will be considered "on their merits" but not all will be granted. There may be enough for defence projects, hospitals, hqusehold dur- able goods but there may not be enough for say, building homes and apartments with steel frames. Currently, Canada is getting steel from the U. 8. at the rate of more than one million ingot tons a year. She normally imported about a million tons a year in peace time. Her own production is being stepped up and is expected to top last year's record 3,200,000 tons. Mr. Harris said he could give no estimate on the shortage. those which [48 Hairy Spider Curiosity To Reporter Latest edition to The Times-Ga- zette biology department is a mon- strous, hairy spider. Over-sized eggs, dragon-flies and birds have all made their apearance at the newspaper in past weeks, but fisher- | man Arthur Ross capped them all when he walked in with his week- end capture. Securely locked up in a sandwich spread jar the spider was left on a reporter's desk to await identification. p The hairy brute is so large thal Mr. Ross and his fishing-companion Phillips saw it spread-eagled out on a tree-trunk while they were in mid-stream. Carefully knocking it into their boat they trapped it in a bully beef tin, Mr. Ross attempted to classify the spider from text-books but failed so he brought in to the newspaper to give it a home while he was af work. The reporter-cum-biologist was frankly scared of the -eight- legged monstrosity; as was Mr. Ross. Thoughts of horrible deaths en- dured by people bitten by Black Widows and by spiders that had landed in banana cargoes were turned over in the captor's mind but he asks that if the spider turns out to be non-poisonous it should be released. So if anybody makes a speciality of spiders an opportunity is waiting. The spider has a body one and a half inches in length. His leg spgn cannot be measured in- side the jar--and he is not going to be let out! Mr. Ross and Mr. Phil- lips live at 567 Simcoe Street North. Truck Ditched On Hart's Hill Two out-of-town truckers were involved in an accident about 11 am, today in East Oshawa. Colin J. Campbell, 2150 Queen Street East, Toronto, driving a panel truck east on Kingston Road East at Hart's Hill, was trying to pass a car ahead when the car suddenly speeded up, making it impossible to pass, Campbell tried to get back in the traffic lane, and found he couldn't, causing a west bound truck, driven by Stanley Clement, 301 Bryant Street North, Trenton, to brake suddenly. L} The load shifted in Clement's truck, causing it to go into the ditch. P.C. Cook, who investigated the accident, said the load was thrown off, and undetermined damage was done to the Trenton truck, while the Toronto vehicle came out of it unscathed. Both trucks were insured. Cease-Fire (Continued from page 1) responsible," "belligerent," "abusive" and "intolerable." Nuckols said Joy, in a one-hour- and-six-minute reply, emphasized air and naval power in an effort to convince the Reds of the reason- ableness of the U.N. proposals for a demilitarized zone along approx- imately the present battle lines. Joy, head of the U.N. delegation, explained that the U.N. would have to relinquish its air and sea su- premacy in the event of an armis- tice, therefore ground forces must be left in positions that could be defended. A UN. communique said this "lo- gical military reasoning" was "with- out tangible results." Negotiators ended a two-hour. and-forty-minute session in the sweltering heat of Kaesong still deadlocked on where to create a demilitarized zone. Regional Shorthorn Brings Many Noted Breeders In District Parade Chief LEW McCONKEY Chairman of the special attractions and program and parade organiser, Ld Britain (Continued from page 1) sat in the lounge with Mrs. J. Wig- gans of Courtice and Mrs. Sadie Beyd of Oshawa, and found them looking forward to the final stages of their journey. Mrs. Wiggans still has some travelling to do be- fore she reaches her native coun- try of Tyrone. She travels by an- other boat from Liverpool to Bel- fast, she told us, then by train to Tyrone. She will have the com- pany of some genial Irish folk she has met on shipboard, however, right to the doorstep of her old home. PX STORE TEMPETATION Mrs. Boyd and ourselves leave by train from Liverpool at 9.15 a.m, tomorrow. She goes to Glas- gow while we go on to Edinburgh. But before that we have to face the ordeal of immigration and customs examination. There has been a great temptation to stock up with cigarettes, tobacco and other articles from the ship's PX store. On the ship, they are sold tax free, so that here, a package of cigarettes which costs 40 cents in Oshawa can be purchased for 16 cents. American cigarettes are $1.50 per carton of ten packages. A package of tobacco which costs 35 cents in Oshawa can be bought at the PX for 15 cents. But as we are limited to 400 cigarettes or one pound of tobacco for duty free entry, we have to forego the de- sire to load up so as to give our Scottish relatives and friends a special treat, The ladies on board have been stocking up with beautiful nylon stockins at low prices, and with candies, also much cheaper than on shore -- and these things, of course, are very scarce in Britain, with candies still rationed. We are very much afraid that the waist line has suffered con- siderable expansion since we left Quebec. The meals have been s0 delightful that we have succumbed to the temptation to eat far more than we would think of doing at home, and of course, the lazy life of shipboard gives ligtle opportun- ity to work off adipose tissues which accumulate under such con- ns. EASY FRIENDSHIPS They agreed to meet again Wed- ditio nesday at 11 a.m. 9 pm. EDT Tues- y. While Admiral Joy and Gen. Nam argued at Kaesong, Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway told a press conference in Tokyo the allied position was not inflexible. . "The line we propose is the line now generally held by the United Nations forces," the U.N. comman- der said. "It is a military line, de- void of political implications, and the general line along which our, forces now stand facing north." He did not indicate the depth of a buffer zone he wants. Communist negotiators say he wants the demilitarized zone to extend substantially north of the present allied line. "We have made no effort to draw a rigid line," Ridgway said. After a demarcation lines is agreed upon, he explained, the Reds could "pick any line which would give them as. much defensive abil- ity as we have." But, he emphasized, the UN. fill not accept the 38th parallel as a demarcation line, That is the old political boundary between North and South Korea. 'It is poor tere rain, militarily, for defence pur- poses. .. STUDIES Montreal (CP) -- Sir Earle Page, Australian minister of health, was in Montreal Monday carrying out his North American study of gen- eral health policies. He said he hopes to learn how federal, prov- incial and state governments "are meeting the evergrowing costs of ding medical care and hospi- 1 care which will reach all mem- bers of the community." Iran Oil (Continued from page 1) turn over all assets of the British- owned Anglo-Iranian Company to the Mossadegh government, Stokes had indicated that he would agree to Iranian participa- tion in a new nationalized com- HEALTH PLANS pany, but that British technicians | would insist on working under British management. Iran--woe- fully short of technicians--could not keep the complex operation go- ing without highly-skilled foreign help. The Iranians turned down the same general offer last June. That deadlock led to the closing of the world's biggest refineries of Aba- dan, Iran's Persian Gulf oil port. The free and easy friendships made on board ship are interest- ing. We had a very interesting chat with an old Scottish couple, on their way home from Cali- fornia, where they make their home, for a holiday. As we watch- ed the young people enjoying themselves at a fancy dress party in the lounge, the old gentleman shook his head despairingly, and "did not know what this young generation was coming to," while his wife deplored the modern af- fair revealed the ingenuity of the young people, who had to use whatever materials they could find on board ship to produce cos- tumes. One young woman, who won first prize, had taken poses- sion of the ship's flag, and with some cardboard and a pair of scis- sors, became a Very creditable Britannia, with crown, trident and shield. Bed sheets enabled one man to give lifelike representa- tion of Mahatma Gandi, even to the bald head. The uniform of a stewardess transformed one young man into a nurse, and so on. It was quite a glamorous affair, and even the older folk enjoyed look- ing on, At the moment, we are moving sluggishly across the Irish sea. The last time we did this, the ship was steaming full speed ahead, with an escort of destroyers on either side, and of Sunderland flying boats, their guns ready for action, flying overhead. Today we sail along in happy and carefree fashion; then we lined the deck, wearing life-belts, with nerves and senses tense. Thus already we feel an awareness of 'the. difference be- tween a peace-time holiday trip to {| Britain and one taken on a troop- ship as a member of the Canadian army. And as we go along for the next three or four weeks, we. will be making other comparisons be- tween this trip back home as com- pared with those which we made in wartime at the expense of His Majesty's government. PSE NO TEETH, NO BITE Toronto (CP) -- It just wasn't possible, William Titanic Monday told Magistrate H. R. Polson, for him to have bitten Bernard Co- deau, as Codeau' claimed. "My teeth had been kicked out and were lying on the road," said Titanik, |! appearing as the complainant in 8 assult cas. Titanic said he assaulted after he asked men to £ op making so much outside his home, Ee Famed among dairymen in On- tario is the Regional Shorthorn Show which brings to Oshawa pens such magnificent animals as the bull seen above. £ This year prizes amoun to $650 are being put up in oy horn Cattle special classes. Spon- soring the show and providing the prizes are the South Ontario Agri- cultural Society, the Ontario Shorthorn Club and the Ontario Department of Agriculture. Breeders from the counties of Victoria, Durham, York, Ontario, Peterborough, Hastings, Northum- berland and Simcoe are eligible to enter their Shorthorns in the show and a great array of entries is ex- pected. Other cattle breeds will have their own separate classes and there will be a class for commercial cattle. Officers Get Prison Term For Treason Warsaw (AP) -- A Warsaw mili tary court Monday sentenced nine high - ranking Polish army officers to long prison terms after a 14-day trial in which they were convicted of treason, spying and conspiracy to overthrow this country's Com- munist regime. Four generals were sentenced to life imprisonment; three colonels to 15 years; a major to 12 years, and a lieutenant - commander to 10 years. All were sentenced to loss of all rights for years and to con- fiscation of their property. Recruiting (Continued from page 1) ferred should be carefully investi- gated. Consequently, I sent your letter to the Unemployment Insur- ance Commission. I can assure you that the Commission in its admin- istration of offices throughout Can- ada would not countenance any such conduct on the part of its em- ployees as charged by your dele- gate. "The Commission sent one of its senior staff members from Toronto to Oshawa where an investigation was conducted. His report is now before me. He states that he was unable to find out what members of the union actually made the charges, though he attempted to do s0. Employees of the commission's Oshawa office, he reports, denied making the statements referred to in the charges. : EDITORIAL QUOTED "Incidentally, they showed him a copy of an editorial headed "Advice to Labor Councils" which appeared in The Oshawa Times-Gazette on July 16. This editorial stated that "on more than one occasion, charges and attacks: inconsistent with the f-:ts have been made by individual delegates to the Council. During the discussion with the Commission staff at Oshawa the investigating officer emphasized the importance of care in avoiding any statements which might reflect on the service. "This he did even though no evi- dence had been submitted to sub- stantiate the charges made," con- cluded the Minister. - His letter will be officially received at a meeting of the Labor Council to be held next Tuesday. Explosives (Continued from page 1) the regular powder men to bring the explosives up without the union stipulations. He added that Mr. Weir said the explosives were not yet dangerous. La. Genie, international repre- sentative of the union, when asked if the union would allow men throught picket lines without the in- surance and $25 a day demanded by the union, said: "We're on strike and we have something to say about who goes Jiroush e picket lines. It's a mat- er that would have to be threshed out between the union and. the company. We've sat down - and talked over other matters relating to the strike. There's no reason hy we can't do the same with s " Some 1600 miners at Hollinger struck July 9 for higher wages and a union dues check - off. The company and the union have al- most agreed on wage differences but are deadlocked over the check-off issue. Busy Trio (Continued from page 1) when more facts and figures are available. Another: One pact power wired yesterday for what amounted to three-quart- ers of the suites at the Chateau Laurier, also a dozen or so cars, numerous offices and rooms for three cabinet ministers and dozens of advisers. It is being asked to trim its sails. The horizon is bristling with other problems but consider that of the three ministers. It is customary for example, for cabinet members to meet opposite foreign numbers on arrival. Since up to 33 forel cabinet ministers will Bb : by various methods. times, there are volved. ' : Should the Me ton and Abb piecemeal hours group to if n u