Daily Times-Gazette, 22 Aug 1951, p. 2

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PAGE TWO THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 22, 1951 "Births , and Mrs. A. B. (Bert) Jay, ; Smith), are happy to the Oshawa General on Tuesday, August 3, 1961. McKENZIE--Tom and Bileen Mc- Kenzie are happy to announce the birth of a daughter, Gaye Colleen, "on Monday, August 20, 1951, at the "Oshawa General Hospital. A sister for Banry. Deaths D--In the Oshawa Gen- FOWNSEN. ePhon "Townsend, (45 Interment Mount Lawn Cemetery. (Stillbirth). ILCOX--On Monday, August 20, flr Rosena Pearl Challis, beloved . "wife of the late John Henry Wil- COX. " - Resting at the family residence, Hampton, for service on Thursday, "August 23rd, at 2.30 p.m. Interment "Bowmanville Cemetery. "Card of Thanks " I wish to extend my heartfelt #hanks and appreciation for the acts of kindness, messages of sympathy 'and beautiful floral offerings eiv- 'ed from many friends, relatives, meighbors, and imperial. Oil and staff; during my s reave! < rd a A loving wife, Edith Stokes. (Jean) "Signed, Earle B. Stokes, 163 Athol E. ®bituary OF MRS, WILLIAM CARNCROSE Rev. R. W. Wighton, pastor of @alvary Baptist Church, conduct- ed the funera] service at the Arm- strong Funeral Home yesterday afternoon for Mrs, William Carn :erose who Dp d away d at her home, 93 Alexandra Street, Saturday last, Ihe pallbearers were [Everett Warne, W. Warne, Walter Stacey, P. Kennedy, Donald Harris and McGregor. Bis was in Mount Lawn '@emetery. Jap Treaty : (Continued from page 1) 'China and Russie would be eon- jidered an ac war. Mders China wasn't invited fo the 'peace treaty conference. Russia ac- ted after considerable delay, "He feeling around Gen. Mattliew PB. Ridgway's allied headquarters Eat that the Boyiet Jelegaies en route to San Francisco ying brief cases loaded with monkey wrenches. But Japanese sources predict the Russians will sign the treaty if they can thus prevent a separate treaty between the U.S. and Japan. ~The present plan is for the United 'States and Japan to sign a unilate- ¥4l treaty as soon as the ink is dry 'on the treaty at San Francisco. 27'This unilateral treaty would pro- vide for the stationing of Ameri- gan troops -- between two and four divisions of ground troops Jois au if {0rce AO 3 aie "Japan until the country is able to defend herself. ; "Russia is believed willing to sign 3 the provisions of the military establishment are placed in the treaty and a date set for the last American soldier to leave Japan. ° Failing in this, the Russians may .go ahead and sign anyway. One reason for believing the Rus- sians will sign is that they have $0 maintain an embassy here to 'continue their customary Com- munist propaganda activity among the people. Closing their embassy 'would mean pulling out of Japan 'diplomatically and th e Russians 'are too smart for that. Earth Quake (Continued from page 1) ° slants 18,000 feet under water the ocean floor. { There was no evidence of any §mpending eruption by Mauna Loa, one of the world's most - active wolcanoes. It spilled molten lava nto the sea a little more than a Jear ago. Trucks were hauling emergency water supplies to Kona coast resi- dents, The Kona coast normally yeceives no rain until well into October. Coffee farmers, with their crop at harvest ripeness, rushed to re- Puild their water tanks. "The coffee beans must be wash- #d before they are dried and pack- ed. Cattle Jancliors also began to re- ct . Harold Loper, territorial superintendent of public instruc- tion, said it may be necessary to down the twisted Honaunau '= school and rebuild it -- at a cost of $85,000. 1 Only two persons were reported §njured in the quake. Dope Ring (Continued from page 1) ever, said they doubt there was any connection between Gallow and Stout and the noforious Italian-- eported from the United States to his native country several years ago. Gallow and his girl friend were on a Hamilton street. one RCMP constable: 'e could have arrested both of days ago when we picked boss, Carl Stout, and seiz- ,000 worth of drugs." Hamilton police~ have 240 capsules of heroin, $3 each on the illicit y said 40 capsules were Carl Stout when arrested more were found when his searched. ; Hamilton police official y: "Dope addicts in Hamilton probably walking around with tongues hanging out. They 't get the stuff now." to buy, sell or trade? A | Ad, the deal is made. ¢& LF g 2 Peel 3 Ped, Hh 2. Beli, {¢ Hed 4 Oshawa. dnd District AT BAND SHELL TOMORROW The Salvation ys' Band will supply the Thi Bh music this. Thursday evening, from Mc- Laughlin 'Band Shell, at Memorial Park, program commencing at 8.30 o'clock. ' FINE SPEEDER $10 In Magistrate's Court this morn- ing, Garfield Firth, Vincent Street, Newmarket, was charged with speeding and fined in absentia $10 and costs t LAWN TORN UP Reporting an accident yesterday in front of his home at 785 Simcoe Street North, in which his lawn was torn up rather badly and bark removed from a large maple tree, Leslie P. McLaughlin told police he was unable to identify either the destructive car or its driver. STREET RE-SURFACED One of the city's more heavily travelled streets, McMillan 'Drive was given a new surface of. finely crpshed stone and asphalt on Monday night. The job extends from King Street to William Street. THRESHING DELAYED Wet weather has slowed down County. Most of the spring grain has now been cut and it giving air excellent yield of good quality grain. Corn in the county is very spotty and there is considerable blight on potatoes. Apples are siz- ing up well. . ; COMMITTED TO HOSPITAL Overpowered by police after an all night siege at his home near Lake Dalrymple on Monday, Lyle Thompson has been committed on a magistrate's order for observa- tion to the Ontario Hospital at Whitby. Thompson is reported to be a very sick man. STREET. COLLISION J. Calvin Braun, 29!: Simcoe Street South, was driving south on Celina Street around 3.30 yesterday afternoon when he collided with a CN. ress truck driven by Sidney 8. , 142 Ritson Road South, going east on Bruce 'Street. P.C. Jordan, who investigated, re- ported some damage to both ve- hicles, which were insured. CHARGE DISMISSED Appearing in Magistrate's Court this morning on an assualt charge, Nick Kowalenko, 237 Beatty Avenue, pleaded not guilty, and the case was dismissed. Complainant was Mrs, Sophie Sabol, 122 Bloor Street Bast, who said that Kowal- enko had assaulted her twice, once on the street and also in. her home. After hearing both sides of the story, along with statements by witnesses Chief of Police Owen D. Friend, te Ebbs decided that both were equally at fault, and threw the case out of court. 1800 Miners Suspended For Walkout St. John's, Nfid. (CP) -- Some 1800 miners at Dominion Iron and Steel Company's Wabana Island iron ofe mines were suspended Tuesday for six days when man- agement invoked a seldom - used penalty clause in their working agreement. Under the clause, the miners can be suspended for six days for un- authorized work stoppages. The, suspension came following three walk-offs by the miners, to batk up demands for wage in- creases to $1.22 an hour. The work stoppages occurred Aug. 7, 14 and 21. Present wage scale was not disclosed. Shop Breaking Case Heard By Court Shop-breaking with intent to commit theft was the charge which brought John Wiskin, 16, of 283 Park Road South, before Magis- guilty and was remanded by Magis- trate's . Court today. He pleaded trate F. 8. Ebbs to August 29 for sentence. First witness for the Crown was William Smith, 262 Ritson Road North, a CRA Area director, who told the court that when he came on duty the morning of August 13 he. found the tuck shop had been broken into and two cartons of cigarettes and several packages of gum were missing. Further evi- dénce was given 'by Detective Serg- eant Flintoff, who said accused had admitted stealing the cigarettes, which were produced in court, but hadn't taken any gum. Crown Attorney Alex C, Hall, K.C. stated that Wiskin had been up in Juvenile court on a number of petty criminal offenses, and had two pre- vious convictions on breaking and entering. i The boy's father, A. G. Wiskin, appeared in court, and said he had been forced to take his son out of school because the authorities had caught him smoking, His Worship thought this wasn't a very likely reason, Wiskin said his son had tried to get jobs at the employment bureau, but older men had been taken in preference. He said he had threatened to have John come mitted to the Bowmanville Train- ing School, but this had failed to deter him, Thereupon the case was put over for a week. - GRANTS TO HOSPITALS Windsor (CP)--A bill to autho- rize grants totalling' $975,000 to two Windsor hospitals, was given two of the necessary. three readings by city council last night. Metropolitan general hospital would receive $400,000 and Hotel Dieu, $175,000, for additions. { | Labor Council (Continued from page 1) Labor, which said no evidence to substantiate Mr. Rutherford's al- legations at the last monthly meet- ing, could be found. ; "Because the investigator did not contact me", replied Mr. Rutherford. "The guy who did get hold of me was an unemployment insurance man and I was not giv- ing him the names of witnesses for fear of any recrimination or discrimination. This man here is not the only one. There are other cases and I have other witnesses." QUESTIONED AT MEETING Katchaluba was' asked by wil- liam 'Taiboi wheiher hie was asked to join the army or whether he was merely told that he could join. The blue-suited youngster replied: "I was not actually told to join." To another questioner he said that he would be able to recognize the man in the unem- ployment office whom he spoke to. He could also bring seven other witnesses to bear out his statement. Mr. Fenwick said the investi- gator went to him to supply the names but he referred him to Rutherford. Norman Hodgson, the acting manager of the local un- employment insurance office was asked by the investigator to phone Rutherford to get the names of the witnesses, The point was that no matter who actually did make the approach the person was still connected with the unemployment commission. : "If therefore you are prepared to supply the information we could ask the Minister of Labor to send a man down here to see Rutherford personally" suggested Mr, Fen- ck. GIVES HIS VERSION Giving his version of the investi- gation, Mr. Rutherford sald Mr. Hodgson did ring him up to get the names in specific cases. He was at first prepared to supply the names but after thinking it over he thought "why should I give him the names of these guys so that pressure 'could be made?" So he told Mr. Hodgson that he would not give the names but if some other official wanted to con- tact him and get them, he would give them, Mr. Rutherford thought that Mr, Fenwick and The Times-Gazette had "given me a bit of a rub" on Tuesday last week by printing Mr. Gregg's reply. C. D. Howe, the De- fence Minister, had said in pub- lic that he would 'send recruiting officers to Windsor where there were unemployed and in the local employment office there were large posters and piles of literature on the Services, While he paid his $1.80 every pay-day for unemploy- ment insurance, Mr. Rutherford wanted to see the office there kept to help the unemployed -- not the government. DENIES CONIVANCE Mr. Fenwick was immediately on his feet to deny the suggestion that he had connived with The Times-Gazette to give Mr. Ruther- ford "a rub". He hotly resented that insinuation. The .Times- Gazette reporters, and reporters from Toronto papers as well, paid frequent calls to his office to see if there were any stories they could run, Last week, when =a local reporter called he did have some stories -- the letter from Mr. Gregg and a story on the date of the bus fare increase hearing. "So I don't llke members being left with the suggestion that there is| something sinister in me giving out. a Press statement 'for I've been giving them for a long time", said Mr. Fenwick. The motion that the council should set up a special committee to deal with the matter came from W. G. Wilkins, A charge that the council made false state- ments had been published and the council had been ridiculed. A committee could go into the allega- tions and see if they could be substantiated. Mr. Rutherford asked if any other delegates had heard of similar cases of men being told to join the forces. Several were men- tioned by delegates, including 'one from Fittings and another from Goodyear. HEARD MANY RUMORS 'We have all heard a lot of rumours about this. I'm not say- ing they are falsehoods but they are, in nearly all cases, hearsay. We must be careful that we don't take a shellacking," warned Wil- liam Talbot. Another delegate suggested that an advertisement should be pub- lished in The Times-Gazette, ask- ing for the names of people Who had had the same experience. That would give the council some- thing to work on. "If we do get this proof we should give it to the Ministry with both g=-=-=-=~ barrels", Mr. Wilkins, who was promptly requested by President Ed Cline to refrain from profanity. : "There is a certain fear of dis- crimination by people who could come forward," said Mr, Ruther- ford. "If these allegations are true, and I personally have no doubt that they are true, then I say that we should prosecute the matter and straighten it out", said Thomas King. He declined to stand for the committee as he was out of work. Appointed to the council's com- mittee to investigate the charges and report back to the council, were W. G. Wilkins, James Mec- Cullough and Bill Rutherford. On his way from the hall, Kat- chaluba gave his name and address to reporters, who were later asked by Bill Rutherford not to make known the identity of his witness. He said he wanted the name kept secret for fear of the discrimina- tion he had mentioned earlier. | Occupation (Continued from page 1) question whether troops should be sent to occupy the Iranian oil re- finery port of Abadan on the Per- slan Gulf. A government sfiokes- man in the House of Lords said re- dan under certain circumsta: which he did not define. iy was unlikely Britain would ris United Nations by undertaking i charges of aggression before military expedition in Iran, . Ye declared.) cently Britain would occupy Aba-. However, many observers sald it | gai Texas Warned of Approaching Hurricane Nurses are shown probing the debris of the women's poorhouse in Jamaica, where eight inmates died when the building was levelled by the Nlrticape sands of persons, whose homés were destroyed, that struck Jamaica, then roared on to Mexico. Thou- living in church and public buildings, with at least 109 persons known to have died in the storm and an estimated $56,000,000 worth of damage. Kingston and Port Royal were particularly hard hit. The hurricane is presently headed toward Texas. --Central Press Canadian Mossadegh (Continued from page 1) tinue the oil: crisis negotiations which are threatening to break down. The vote in the Majlis (lower house) was 72 to nothing. Earlier the Senate had approved the ma- tionalistic premier's uncompromis- ing policies by a vote of 33 in favor with three abstgntions. This new pdrliamentary move came an hour after the original geadlie set by Britian's chief ne- gotfator, Richard Stokes, who yes- terday said he would return to Lon- don unless Mossadegh abandons his stonewall Send against the British proposals. ; 'A British spokesman said Stokes extended his ultimatum deadline to 3 p.m. today (8:30 a.m. EDT) in view of the fact.that parliament appeared to want to keep the talks from breaking down. Later, Deputy Premier 'Hossein Fatemi said the cabinet would meet at 4 pm. to draft an answer to Stokes' latest statement. This seemed to make it plain that the Iranian government was ignoring the Stokes deadline, which apper- ently irritated phe Iranians. Fatemi told reporters that "we have the utmost desire to settle the oil dispute in friendly talks." The vote of the Lower House indicated that the Stokes' ultima- tum had one ef. intd the stone wall of Premier Mossa- degh's objections to the British proposals. Mossadegh told the House he had asked Stokes to ex- plain the British proposals. further, with regard to British management of day-to-day operations at the Abadan refinery, and added that thereafter "any decision taken will be in the best interests of Iran." Previously Mossadegh, according to Stokes, showed no inclination whatever to agree to the British plan under which British techni- cians could remain on the job. There was little debate in the public session of the Majlis when Mossadegh appealed for support. But in a prededing private session an informed source said deputies made it clear they wanted to try to avoid a breakdown. One deputy was reported in the private session to have told Mossa- degh he must resign if he cannot find a solution to the dispute with Britain over nationalization of the British - owned Anglo - Iranian Oil Company's vast installations in Iran Mossadegh did not commit him- self to continue the negotiations, begun 18 days ago. But Majlis Speaker Sgrdar Reza Hekmat an- nounced: "This vote of confidence is for Mossadegh to continue the discussions." In the earlier Senate session Mossadegh showed the strain of long illness and the pressures of the last few days as he began reading his report. When senators asked him to speak louder, he finally turned the pre- pared statement over to Finance Minister Ali Varasteh to read. Stokes had made his ultimatum after announcing he had withdrawn the British proposal for placing the much-needed British techni- jans and experts of the Anglo- Iranian Oil Company under a Brit- ish manager who would work for the nationalized Iranian company. Mossadegh last night tried to de- lay Stokes' ultimatum by asking for "more details" on the proposals for keeping the British technicians working, The premier has admitted in the negotiations that the British technicians must stay on if the vital flow of dil is to continue. But Stokes replied in a letter this morning that he already had ex- plained everything "quite clearly. The British proposal would turn over all Iranian assets ish - owned company to the Nation- al Iranian Oil Company --- the company Mossadegh set up under his law last March nationglizing the industry and cancelling Britain's 60 - year concession. The proposal also offered Iran a 50 - 50 split in the profits with a British market- ing organization and a non - profit British managing organization un- der the National Iranian Oil Com- pany to run the fields and refinery. Hurricane (Continued from page 1) when it swept across Mexico's Yu- catan peninsula Monday. Farmers said the corn crop was ruined. In the United States big waves beat against the shore as far up the Texas gulf coast as Galveston. In the Texas lower Rio Grande valley, cotton growers waited ap- prehensively fot gale winds in the hurricane's outer fringe, In Cameron county, county agent Frank eman id there were 200,000 to 300,000 bales of the valley's bumper eorop still to be harvested. Even slight rains, he said, would severely en- danger the remaining erop, Admits Three Charges False Statements In Magistrate's Court this morn- ing on three charges of making false statements to the Unemploy- ment Insurance Commission, Frank P. Buchanan, 379 Ritson Road South, pleaded guilty, was convict- ed and fined $15 and costs or 15 days. in the case was Eric ©. Naylor, an inspector for UIC, who related the facts about accused drawing sums for days when he had allegedly not worked. The inspector asked leniency from the court because 60-year - old Buchanan had made restitution to the Commission, and had worked only sporadically over the period in question. \ Cease-Fire (Continued from page 1)* legates assigned to an armistice mission constantly forced to divert their attention to the question of armed personnel in the conference area." The broadcast traced the history of incidents within the neutral zone and answered its own question: "It is now quite obvious that Kaesong was picked (by the Com- munists as a negotiating site) in order to intimidate the UNC (United Nations Command) dele- gates by a show of forge. "That failing, the 'conferences could be stalemated with a series of side issues blocking the main discussions." There was no suggestion from any quarter that progress had been made toward settling the main issue. Both sides were depicted as still holding out for their original de- mands on where to create a buffer zone. The U.N. wants it along the battle line; the Reds along the 38th parallel. Most of the front is north of 38 _ It was authoritaively reported that Vice - Admiral C. Turner Joy, chief U.N. delegate, received no new instructions from U.N. Commander Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway during a flying visit to Tokyo. Joy returned to Munsan Tuesday. . Responsible quarters said the U. N. position remained unchanged. A release from U.N. Command advance headquarters pictured the Reds as '"'obdurate in their/politi- cally - tainted demands" and "in- scrutable in presenting them." It said the Communists were "im- mune" to the "military logic" of the allied command. The statement appeared to sup- port the belief that the sub-com- mittee has made no progress on the buffer zone issue which stumped the full five = man truce teams for three weeks. Joy, withheld his formal reply to the two latest accusations that U.N. forces violated the neutrality agreement. North Korean Lt.-Gen. Nam II, head of the Red delegation, re- jected Joy's preliminary reply on one protest. 1 That involved an incident ,in which a Chinese patrol was am- pushed in the neutral zone and its leader killed. Joy acknowledged receipts of Nam's blistering charge, said preliminary investiga- tion did 'not - substantiate the charges," and added he would re- ply after he had studied full re- ports. of investigators. Nam Il rejected this, the Ko- rean Reds' Pyongyang radio re- ported, and demanded "severe punishment of the violators of the neutral zone and a guarantee of the non-recurrence of such inci- dents." . The other Red charge is that U.N. planes again strafed a white- flagged Communist liaison jeep. The U.N. insists the Reds must re- time of such travel. The Reds re- fuse to do this. port in advance the route and | Court Martial (Continued from page 1) of Vancouver, also members of the Patricias. They will be tried sepa- rately. ; The full charges against Blank include murder and attempted rape but he is being tried for murder only at the present hearing. The specific charges arose from the death of a South Korean Army lieutenant, Ee Chong-sun at the vil- lage of Chungwoon near Chipyong March 17. Two other persons died in the same incident, but the three men are accused only of respon- sibility for the lieutenant's vo Gol. Hanway of Amherst, N. S., as to steps taken to acquaint the defendants with provisions of the forthcoming national defence act. While the act, is not yet in force as a whole, some of its provisions became operative Feb. 1, One of these stipulates that an accused person is entitled to representation by a defending officer or counsel 8) Ine taking of a summary of evid- e. Col. Hutchins asked Capt. Han- way: ; 'Was the accused to your know- ledge acquainted with these provi- sions?" Hanway: "Not until either May 1 or April 30 when we definitely knew that he was among five who might be in serious trouble and then he was told that he had a de to be represented by coun- Hutchings: "He was not told that he could be represented by a law- (yer at the taking of the sum- mary?" Hanway: "No, there was none in the theatre at the time." COULD CALL WITNESS Hanway added that Blank's offi- cer representative, Lieut. John J. Regan-of Vaneouver, had a chance to call defence witnesses if he wanted and, where written state- ments were taken in the absence of witnesses on duty elsewhere, he could demand their presence if desired. Hanway said Regan did neither. Hutchins: *"Then the summary of evidence represented only the evid- ence of prosecution witnesses?" Hanway: '"That's correct." Regan, who is attending the eourt martial as assistant defending of- ficer, testified that he had no legal training and apart from re: the rules guiding the taking of ence, he was not schooled in the practice. To find out whether battalion per- sonnel were advised through other means -- such as publication in unit orders or by briefings from company commanders -- of the protection extended under the pro- visions of the National Defence Act Hutchins asked for®Majors R. K. Swinton, Vancouver adjutant at the time, and George Flint of Mont- real, Blank's company commander Capt. Gordon Turnbull of Toronto, present adjutant, and Lieut. Arhold Beauchamp of Hamilton, Ont., as- sistant adjutant at the time of the alleged offence. Hutchins said: "This point is so crucial to the accused that I could not without protest allow this trial to go forward without their evid- ence. I propose to show that had he been properly represented, the evidence in this- summary would have been such as to eliminate all possibility of a murder charge." When Col. Dick suggested nip other commitments prevented the required officers from attending until Saturday, and that perhaps Blank's testimony could clear up the point, thereby saving time, Hut- chins said he was preared to put chins said he was prepared to put the accused on the stand but that would not be enough, "I want the record to be clear on that point," he said. He added: "I've come 6000 miles to defend this case and two or three days more are neither here nor there." Col. Dick said thre appeared to be no alternative to an adjourn- ment until Saturday. i DIAL OSHAWA FREE BEDROOM CHAIR With every order , , call our office at once for free esti- 3-8549 mates. . SAVE WHILE YOU CAN TORONTO FURNITURE MFG. CO. Special! Save Money Now : Buy Direct From Factory We are tops in re-uphol- stering* and custom built _ furniture. Buy fromus. ., save the middleman's profit. Fine Railway For Blocking Crossing The Canadian Pacific Railway Company was charged in Magis trate's Court today with obstruct- ing traffic as the result of an in- cident which took place on July 9. The company, in the person of its counsel, G. C. Butterill, pleaded not guilty, but was convicted of the charge, and fined $25 and costs. The charge was laid by Alderman H. E. Robinson, 72 Richmond Street West, who said that his car and a number of others were delayed for a period of seven minutes while a freight train was shunted back and forth over the busy Ritson Road crossing. A CPR conductor, W. Cole of Toronto, appeared as witness for the defence, stating that there was some rail congestion at that time, as.there were three trains in Osh- awa just then. After some argument between crown attorney and defence coun- sel as to what constituted "wilful obstruction," Magistrate F. 8S. Ebbs reviewed the evidence and register- ed a conviction, Korea (Continued from page 1) They couldn't resupply. They couldn't do anything. "I don't think there's one damned man up there." The communists had an estimat- ed 1000 men in the hill stronghold when the attack started. When the South Koreans stormed the final crest just before noon Wednesday, only one Red platoon remained, MacArthur said. Niagara Power (Continued from page 1) army engineers to do the building offers no safeguards against the federal government keeping control of the project. The private development plan, he said, is favored generally by the people of his district, in which the project would-be located. Witnesses at a day-long hearing yesterday divided sharply over the Lehman proposal and a bill by Se- nator Irving Ives (Rep.-N. Y.) to permit the New York authority to build the development. Lehman and other supporters of the Lehman bill contended there is ample safeguard for an agree- ment to have the project turned over to New York State after con- struction. Ives and supporters of his plan argued that there is no such gua- rantee in the Lehman bill. Chairman John E. Burton of the New York Power Authority said the Ives plan would 'establish fe- deral-state cooperation rather than 'the power monoply sought by the department of interior." The Lehman bill, he contended, carries '"'an open invitation to the nullification of the.bill's expressed intent" in its transfer agreement provision. "If such an agreement is not ne- gotiated," he said, '"'the 'project power shall be delivered and dis- posed of' by the department of in terior." Under the transfer proposal to New Yor State the cost the pro- ject would be repaid by the state. Change Asked In New Route Windsor (CP) -- The Ontario highways department will be asked to change the route of the proposed new dual highway into. Windsor, following a meeting of the subur- ban Sandwich West town council and planning board last night. A department surveyor said that definite consideration would be given to the proposal. The West Sandwich council told director of surveys W. J. Fulton of Toronto, that it would like the new highway to meet the old no. 3 high- way further east than was planned. Classified ads are sure to pay Phone The Times with yours today. Picket Ship In Union Row -- . Montreal (CP) -- The M. V. Massey, picketed briefly Tuesday in a dispute between two rival seamen's unions, left port Tuesday night after discharging 30,000 bysh- els of grain. Harbor officials said the lake boat was unloaded despite a small- y of men who identified them- selves as pickets protesting against the working of some crew mem- bers overtime without compensa- tion. The 'pickets' left shortly after unloading began. Company officials termed the ' dispute "a tempest in a teapot'. It started when two of the 24-man crew left the ship and joined the Seafarers' International Union, The National Seamen's Associa- tion, bargaining agent for the Sew. Slaimed the SIU was '"'raid- g" its members b p po Eg y illegal means Train Kills Man On Track Simcoe, Ont. (CP) Geor; Howie, 35, of Brantford, was foe ally injured Tuesday night when run .over by a Canadian National Railways freight train one mile ast of Simone. embers of the train crew to} police they saw a man lying i the tracks as the train approached. They said the train could not - be halted before the locomotive and three cars passed over him. His right arm, big toe and second toe of one foot were severed and he had a deep laceration on his forehead. He was taken aboard the train and rushed to Norfolk general hospital where he died at 10 p.m., three hours after the acci- dent. Police said Howie, whose father Arthur Howie, lives in Paris, ont.. had apparently been to Norfolk to seek work in the tobacco fields. Policé Seek Strangler Of Negro Dresden, Ont: (CP) -- Provincial police said Tuesday that a second autopsy on the body of Grant Wal. lace, 37, found floating in the Sydenham river Friday, showed that he died of strangulation. The body was exhumed Tuesday on 'the order of the Ontario At- torney-General's Department when police apparently were not satisfied with an earlier autopsy. The discovery touched off a province-wide search for Wallace's killer and suspeots are being ques- tioned in Dresden, adjoining towne ships, and Windsor. ; The body of the Dresden Negro was released for burial after exame ination Friday revealed no indica tions of foul play. Stalin Guard (Continued from page 1) try," Hoover said. "We found among those files a record to show that the personal bodyguard of Sta- lin even during that time thai the last war was. in operation, had gone into Germany and had become a commissar in the army of Vas- silov." He explained that that was the "White Russian army that had joined with the Nazis." "This commissar had sent con- fidential information back to Mos- cow during that period of time. He sent it back through the medium of a woman. .." Ltd., contains all the no waste. 2. Buy it at .". . HOWARD'S POLYMIN The newest and purest mineral supplement.' Polymin made by A. H. Howard Chemical Co., For a higher feeding value per 1b. use . . . Specially formulated POLYMIN for CATTLE POLYMIN for HOG BROOKLIN FLOUR MILLS Phone: Brooklin 26 BROOKLIN essential minerals but \ [7

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