WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1951 THE DAILY TI MES-GAZETTE PAGE SEVENTEEr;; +» RED HUNTING NOW DIGNIFIED IN PROCEDURE Washington (AP) -- Red-hunting on Capitol Hill has become as fornfll and dignified as an English fox hunt. Gone are the hoopla days of the Dies committee when movie stars and other celebrities were at a premium as witnesses. The new mode is the creation of Senator Pat McCarran (Dem.Nev.) who is determined to make his in- ternal security sub - committee as prim and proper as possible. The committee nevertheless is build- ing up steam fn its ponderous way and may presently produce some sensational results. The house of representatives un- American activities committee ori- ginally called after Representative Martin Dies (Dem. Tex.) its first chaitman has produced nothing startling or embarrassing to the administration for more than a year. Its research into communism no onger concerns big names like lger Hiss and it doesn't look ch into charges of communism in government. It delves into such subjects as communism in vari- ous industries and areas. Its techniques have become more restrained and legalistic. Observers find the reasons for this difficult to explain. The com- mittee is still controlled by anti- administration Democrats and re- publicans. McCarran a Reno Nev. law- yer has been a fairly consistent critic of the administration ever since he first came to the senate in 1932. No one has any doubt that if he catches the administration in any skullduggery he will gleefully bring out all the facts. But no one will be able to accuse the McCarran committee of irrres- Cha; Elias Meek, Surrendered to Police rged In Slaying ong omy kK Lo Mrs. A. Alguire, Mother of Four, Found Stabbed Japs Strive THERE OUGHT TO BE A LAW' By Al Fagaly and Harry Shorten Indonesians of ($ In £ ul 0 xl { RNAS i THATS ONE epee THE BOOKS! ITS THAT EFFICIENCY GUY, IF NOY ASK ME! HE DRAWS DOWN' BIG DOUGH TO MAKE THINGS JUST A LITTLE BIT I TOUGHER! HEARD ; SOME THING SNAP! I THINK STRETCH JUST SUPPED A DISK! Lose Dreams For Country [ Jakarta (AP) -- The young In- | donesian republic's dreams of a bright future are being blotted out before they begin to take shape. In 20 months since independence was: won from the Netherlands the island republic has failed to attract a single new foreign invest- ment of any size. Meanwhile the Indonesians have not proved in any concrete way that they can build up their coun- try without a lot of technical assistance and capital from out- side. Compared with other Asians the Indonesians started with a lot of natural advantages: 1. Their sprawling chain of is- lands is the richest in the east in undeveloped resources. It has buried treasure in oil and tin. Its black volcanic soil yields a fat bounty in rubber tea tobacco copra palm oil and spices. 2. Damage 'left over from the Pacific war and local nationalist revolt is not great compared with = * SHORTYS TIME 5 CARD IS ALL THE WAY ON TOP AND STRETCH HAS TO BREAK HIMSELF IN HALF REACHING Te CARDS ARENT THE ONLY THINGS THAT NEED PUNCHING IN SOME PLANTS THERE OUGHTA BE A LAW! "Thanks To JaKEY CARUSO, 123% 57ST, WANDOTTE, MICH, | | { For Place In Marine World By H. E. PRINGSHEIM Tokyo (Reuters) -- Japan lost nearly nine thousand tons of ship- ping in the war and now works hard to win back something like her former place on the world's sea lanes. Anticipating the peace treaty, the wreckage and turmoil in most Asian countries. Indonesians have a third advan- tage in having genuine independ- ence. The country's leaders are their own masters. {| Why then is Indonesia's glitter- ing vision of high development and great properity becoming clouded? Proved Not Souse Has Singing Mouse Miss. (AP) -- Comes |what he thought was a mocking and governmental apathy and in- Brandon i | bird. experience appear to be causes be- hind the deterioration that is setting in. Security within the country is considerably better than two years ago when open warfare was going on, But armed bands still roam the countryside and Dutch plant- ers take a risk living on their hdldings outside the cities. Law enforcement is lax. Al- though nearly 90 Netherlands planters and businessmen have been killed no murderérs have been tracked down and convicted. Labor unrest has resulted in lowering of production and increas- ed production costs thoughout the islands. A great many Indonesian workers look on hard work as an want no part of it. Although these conditions have dimmed chances for any major economic improvement they do not mean the country's future is completely black. More than 90 per cent of the islands' 73 million people dig their living from the rich soil. SIGNS HOUSING PACT Windsor, Ont. (CP) -- Windsor last night became the first city in Ontario to sign on the dotted line for 325 rental houses under a municipal-provincial - federal scheme. Board of Control at a special meeting approved the agreement. Within a short time council added its approval. Efficient cleansing of the teeth is accomplished by brushing in a ro- tary motion, moving from the gums out towards the biting edge of the teeth. Twelve to 15 strokes to each section brushed should remove all food particles. {now a mouse that can sing. 3 . Don't believe it? | He put it in a jar and the mu- ; : {sical twittering came forth. Neither diq Ernest Barion re-| «We listened sympathetically to | porter on the Jackson, Miss, Clar-|his story hoping all the time he jon-Ledger until he heard the inch- | Would go to bed and sleep it off" | d sald Barton. : {lone creature warble Wednesday. "Skeptically we agreed to go in | Barton said the mouse has a voice | terview the mouse' Barton said like a mocking bird | "We were convinced and we got He said owner Bill Bass caught | out. of there fast. The blamed | evil from the colonial past and Twins, Dean and Donna, Found Crying by Relatives the American-directed occupation , ponsible scandal - mongering if it sticks to the rules McCarran has laid down. McCarran has decreed that. any- one whose reputation seems threat- ened by being named in public hearing shall be permitted to tes- | tify in rebuttal. No witness is allow- ed to inject names not pertinent Sought for 14 hours since his employer's pretty blond, 29-year-old wife, Mrs. Alice "Dolly" Alguire was found slain--in her farm--home near Cornwall, Ont., Elias Meek, 21-year-old hired man on Alguire farm, surrendered to police, who, with drawn guns, charged him with the murder. Body of atfractive mother of four was found near site 6f her home, where her twin daughters, unaware of tragedy, were found whim- pering and cold. Police, unable to discover motive for killing, believe jor post-war scheduled services to death was caused by several abdominal stab wounds, loosened former controls on Japa- nese ship operation. The "Maru" | ships are operating their first ma- Siam, Pakistan North America, and India. Permission to resume berth services came in June this | year. Occupation authorities, the mouse after a disturbance by |thing might have started talking." | [ her export and import trade in her had little more than 1,500,000 gross own vessels. Before the war, Japan carried up regular ; 10 60 per cent of her foreign trade. | Now her shipping experts estimate | | tons, including both' coastal and | seagoing vessels. This was con- sidered enough to carry little more than 22.5 per cent of Japan's 1951 foreign trade volume esti- an- | that Japanese vessels carry 40 per- to the inquiry. Rules of evidence | --Central Press Canadian Phot. are observed as far as practicable. Perec ean is EU rt -- Hh ts Public hearings are held only | FL : ater prolonged. invessgaion. No rl television or radio is permitted in| I atwaVs Welome, I 2 the hearing room. Still photographs | Bvenithg? : can be taken only before and after | bore v a sessions. y -- Art Exhibit -- Open The committee issues no state- | {public whenever building is open. ments before or during the investi- | Exhibit: "Local Exhibit. ation and no report or hearing is Friday, Oct. § mated at 22.6 million metric tons. cent of the country's foreign trade 3. Nest | SKED PENSIONS SESSION LAGS FAR BEHIND oe Cd Mobilization of maximum- ton- Victoria, B.C. (CP) -- The legis- nage would include the competion lature, special session to deal with | government measures which en-| of the post-war ship construction old age pensions will open Oct. 25, sured 'fair practices' and pro- | program; remodelling of wartime | Premier Byron Johnson announced hibition of "false billing, weighing, | standard ships; salvaging of sunk- | yesterday. The session was ad- tallying, and invoicing of cargo to sen vessels; purchase of second- | vanced from the previously an- obtain a lower freight rate." The hand ships from abroad, and thar- nounced date, Oct. 22, because of goal is for the country's fleet even- tering of foreign vessels. 'delay in the visit of Princess Eli- nouncing approval of Japan's re- | entry into this service, said the step was prompted by the recent performance of the Japanese ship- ping industry and by Japanese Program: "Social \ leased until it has been review- ed by every member of the com- mittee. The committee has issued three | reports: (1) On subversive activi- ties among aliens in diplomatic | status; (2) unauthorized entry into | the United States by aliens on a wholesale scale and (3) commun- ism in the big telegraph industry union the American Communica- tions Association. No public hearings were held on | any of these. Neither the subjects of the secret hearings nor even that they were going on were an- nounced. Records of executive ses- sions were published with the re- ports but edited to omit any charges disproved to the commit- tee's satisfaction. ndian Fori Holds Secret 0f Orient Jaipur, India (Reuters) -- One of the secrets of the Orient is the contents of the Tiger fort of Jaipur. This small fortress, on a hill overlooking Jaipur, is said to be stuffed and fabulous loot from the Punjab and Afghan expeditions of the first Maharajah Mansigh under the Mongul kings. But no one knows how much this vast hoard of jewels and precious stones is worth. A clan of Bhils, a wild and prim- itive tribes armed with cutlasses muskets and bows and arrows, guards the fort and refuses to allow anyone within four miles of it. Even the ruling maharajah may enter the fort only once in his lifetime. According to tradifion he's blind- folded and led through the fort- ess walls into the treasure house. There he may pick one'object of his choice to take out with hime The present maharajah has been there once, in 1944. He is reported 10 have chosen a jewelled bird with amond eyes, studded with rubies; vhich is now in the Ranbagh Pal- ace in Jaipur. 'A year later when there was a | famine in Jaipur, some silver was | brought out from the fortress' coin hoard for the relief of stricken families. The Bhils, about 100 of them, have had the hereditary privilege of guarding the fort for centuries. They live with their families up at the fort and never come down to the city. Even their food is sent up to them and handed through a careful- ly_guarded gate, They speak a dif- ferent tongue from the inhabitants | of Jaipur, so that there means of real contact. FEAR EX-SOLDIERS GROUP is no Bonn, Germany (AP) -- The West German government yester- day warned the new and powerful German ex-soldiers organization not to split the country by meddl- ing in politics. The swift growth of | the Verband Deutscher Soldaten (Federation of German Soldiers), which aims at a membership of four million has caused alarm in Bonn parliamentary circles. It is viewed as a possible state within 8 state, with a shadow 'high command" of former generals and able of exerting undue pressure Want to buy, sell or trade? A 9.30-11.30 am. -- A nursery pro- gram for childrer. 4 years of age. Crafts -- A fully equipped craft shop open for the teaching of leath- ercraft, gloves, slippers, weaving felt work, etc. 4.15 pm. -- YWCA Leaders' Corps -- A leadership course for girls 13- 16 years of age. Course Includes instruction in crafts, games, folk dancing, party planning, program planning, etc. 8.00 p.m. -- Oshawa Chess Club -- Wednesday, Oct. 3 9.30 p.m. -- Ballroom Dancing -- Intermediates -- A series of Ball- room dancing lessons for those who have completed the beginners series. \ All day -- Art Exhibit -- Open to 5 the public whenever the building is| 115 hobby club meets every Friday open. Exhibit: "Local Exhibit". evening; they have coaching for 800 pm. -- Women Teachers' | Pe8inners and keen trophy competi- Federation. ig for advanced players. Thursday, Oct. 4 of day ~ Art EXNHpH --- Open 930-1130 an. -- Morning Nur- public anytime building is open. sery -- A nursery school program | Exhibit: "Local Exhibit". Saturday, Oct. 6 for children 4 years of age. Sat-R-Day Camp -- Cancelled for 3.00-5.00 p.m. -- Crafts -- A ful- ly equipped craft work shop open | today. for the teaching of leathercraft,| 9.00-12 : m. -- - gloves, slippers, weaving, felt work, | Dance dh 7 a Blin gis etc ¥ g | for those in the community over 3.30-7.00 p.m. -- Irenie "Harvey | Dance Academy, hi years, of age. 7.00 p.m. ~ Meeting of the YWCA | slippers, weaving, felt work, etc. may be quickly and women in the community. New | sium. Phone YWCA to see if gym | hind cold miseriss. : germ-laden mucus. .. This club meets 1st and 3rd Thurs- induced headaches. of bridge playing. Men and ladies | In Jars and Tubes. &1 of all business girls, individuals, or | groups, intersted in playing basket- | py EBD COL ball this year. | 8.00-10.00 -- YWCA Badminton | members are welcome to join at any | reliev will be finished this week. 4 i pith ge ' soothe inflamed nasal day each month for the purpose of You'll breathe freer, welcome. Instructor: Mrs. M. R.| z Thursday, Oct. 4 | 8.00-10.00 pm. -- YWCA Rendez- | [|] E 'R] H 1] LAT U M 7.00-10.00 p.m. -- Crafts -- A fully | y equipped craft work shop open for | MISERIES the teaching of leatherwork, gloves, Club -- This club is for young men time. Held at Simcoe Hall Gymna- | Get relief now from helps clear nostrils of 8.00 p.m, -- YWCA Bridge Club -- oo ssages . .. ease cold- teaching beginners the fine points rest easier! Clarke, | NOW AVAILABLE--A : LOW-PRICED, LOW PRESSURE 7 TIRE "*CANUCK' W DUNLOP ifn low-priced tire with all the famous Duniop features of stability, road grip and sturdy construction pigs + the cushioned comfort of low pressure riding. 6.70/18 apy SEE US NOW! Sd Ask about our liberal trade-in allowance! STAN BOWERS i: STATION 261 KiNG ST. EAST : DIAL 3-4733 Cinssified Ad, the deai is made. a tually to carry up to 50 per cent of | At the end of March, 1951, Japan zabeth and the Duke of Edinburgh. At Home and Abroad SERVE CANADA in the "Front Lines of Freedom". win ne FIELD ARTILLERY The only possible answer to the forces of aggression already on the march, is armed, trained strength. The Canadian Army is gearing itself to meet any possible threat to our freedom. More and more men are joining the Active Force every day. New and mighty equipment is being built to give the Canadian soldier the finest weapons in the world. One of the most urgent needs is more men -- more soldiers in the Canadian Army Active Force. This is a call to duty -- a call to the defence of this country. In attack or defence, artillery supplies the heavy punch to soften or break opposition for the modern army. The Royal Canadian Artillery is a powerful voice in the defence forces of this country. The teams of field artillery are not built overnight. It takes time and training. But time may be short. Men are needed immediately to man the field artillery of the Canadian Army Active Force. : : Don't delay. Help man the field artillery of the Canadian Army Active Force right away, TO ENLIST YOU MUST: 1. Volunteer to serve anywhers, 2. Be 17 to 40 (Tradesmen to 45). 3. Meet Army requirements. 4. Married men' will be accepted. REPORT AT ONCE TO Your Local Reserve Force Armoury or Canadian Army Recruiting Station, 90 Richmond Street West, Toronto Ont. Listen fo "The Voice of the Army" -- Tuesday. and Thursday evenings -- Dominion Network. Join the CANADIAN ARMY ACTIVE FORCE Mow!