Daily Times-Gazette, 10 Nov 1951, p. 1

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

HED OSHAWA AILY TIME Q O° IJLNL LL = Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle 7 A WHITBY VOL. 10--No. 263 OSHAWA-WHITBY, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1951 Price 5 Cents TWENTY_PAGES - 3113,629 IN COMMUNIT Y CHEST Service Of Remembrance Held At Cenotaph Objective Again YY Tributes Paid To Heroism Of Men Who Fell In War "The call of '39, as much as the call of '18, required heroism of a high order," Capt. the Rev. L. D. Begg, of First Baptist Church, told those assembled this morning at the Remembrance Day Service held before the War Memorial in Memorial Park. "Our men went forth to fight with the hope that this would be the war to end all wars. All honor to those men. Our prayer this day is that this hope may be realized." The Rev. Mr. Begg stressed that heroes were still required for the¥ years ahead. He spoke movingly of Sethack For those young men who came back with bodies and nerves shattered by B d i U N eas 1n U.N. = v Lommittee the war, who could look forward to long years in the hospital with no hope of - ever regaining a normal life. The horrors of war, said the minister, would always be vividly imptanted in their minds. "Let us not forget them," urged the speaker. "And let us work and . Dockeray. Their pray for the establishment of peace and the kingdom of God on earth." SPONSORED BY LEGION 'The service, which was sponsored by Branch 43, (Oshawa) of the Canadian Legion, and led by its padre, Capt. the Rev. H. D. Clever- don, rector of Christ Memorial Anglican Church, began with the hymn "O God, Our Help in Ages Past," to the music of the Salva- tion Army Band, graciously provid- ed by courtesy of Major Gilbert beautiful music formed a fitting counterpoint to the spirit of the whole service. The Scripture Lesson, the pas- sage beginning "Let us now Praise Famous Men," from the Ecclesias- ticus was read by His Honor Mayor Michael Starr following which the Rev. S. B. Coles, of Knox Preshy- terian Church, led in prayer. WREATHS PLACED Then came the placing of the wreaths, by such organizations as Branch 43 of the Canadian Legion and its Ladies Auxiliary, the I.O.- D.E.; The Corinthian I.0.O.F.; the Oshawa Firefighters, the Police Department, the City of Oshawa, the Province of Ontario, the P.U.C., The Oshawa Chapter of the Silver Cross. The Knights of Columbus, the Ontario Regiment, The Kiwanis Club, the Lions Club, the Kinsmen's sharp defeat today in its campaign to seat Red China in the United Nations. Fhe 14-nation steering com- mittee refused, 11 to 2y to put the question on the agenda of the gen- eral assembly. One nation abstain- ed. Observers do not expect the So- viet Union to give up, however, without & final fight on the floor of the assembly itself to have the question reinstated on the agenda as an amendment to the steering committee's report. The commiiftee was: voting on a resolution, submitted by Prince Wan Waithayakon of Thailand, cal- ling for rejection of Russia's de- mand that the assembly consider the question of Chinese representa- tion. U.S. delegate Warren R. Austin said the Soviet move '"'is a proposal which has been considered and re- jected nearly 90 times." Open College | | | Buildi Buildings _ Paris (AP) -- Russia suffered a | Leading federal and provincial Liberals appeared along with Walter C. Thomson at a recent Liberal rally in Londen, Ontario. Shown above, Liberal Party United Behind Walter C. Thomson Passed Never in its history has In Local Chest Campaign the Greater Oshawa Commus- nity Chest failed to receive the unqualified support of the residents of the area, and it has always exceeded its objecte ive in its campaigns, This year was no exception. With left to right, are Hon. Walter Harris, federal Minister of Immigration and Colonization; Walter C. Thomson, Ontario Liberal Leader; Hon.' con lJ | Paul Martin, federal Minister of Health and Welfare and Campbell Calder, MLA for London, who was a candidate for the Ontario leadership at the which elected Mr, Th a year ago. CANADIANS IN' Churchill Suggests Aid In Return for Providing Bases for U.S. Atom Bombs HOT BATTLE CHECK REDS By BILL BOSS Canadian Press Staff Writer West Sector, Korea (CP) -- The Eighth Army today let correspon- {dents tell a story that has been |piling up for days -- the rugged defence of Canadian and other Commonwealth units, night after night, against furious, Communist assaults. The assaults had more punch than any since last spring. the closing of the books for the 1951 campaign last night, it was reported that a total of $113,629, or $729 above the ob- jective of $112,900 had been received up to that time, Came paign officials were delighted with the magnificent response of the citizens of Greater Oshawa to the Community Chest appeal. MAY REPLAGE MOSSADEGH Congratulations are today being extended to Stewart R. Alger, gene erab chairman and Murray P. Johne ston, campaign manager for the successful conclusion of their hard work of the past few weeks. The attaining of the objective should be cause for rejoicing among all those who assisted in making such fine achievement pos- sible. Not only does it mean that the 16 participating organizations will be able to continue their very AS' PREMIER Tehran, Iran (Reuters) -- Spec- ulation grew in Tehran today that Mohammed Mossadegh might be | replaced as prime minister if he returned empty - handed from his oil mission in Washington. (It was announced in Washing- ton yesterday that Mossadegh has extended his stay until the end of next week. Some observers felt he was staying to make a last de- termined bid for American back- ing in the oil - nationalization dis- pute with Britain.) Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlevi cabled Mossadegh two days ago wishing him success, but express- ing the hope that he would return soon, Three former prime ministers are being mentioned as possible London (AP)--Prime Minister Churchill broadly sug- gested last nihgt that the United States give the "fullest | consideration" to Britain's need for financial help for her | rearmament program and her sagging economy. sure this will not be denied us," Churchill said, speaking at the annual dinner given by the As the wartime leader's sugges- o UN. OFFICERS PROPOSE NEW "I feel Lord Mayor of London, tions were being made, a British ~_ rs to Mi degh. Ghavam es Sultaneh, who was once accused of 'collaboration' with Russia, had an audience this MOSSADEGH (Continued -on Page 2) Union Leader worthwhile work, 'but also that through their spirit of self-sacri- fice the people of Oshawa have again demonstrated that they are behind the organizations which do so much to make Oshawa a better place in which to live. Oshawa owes a vote of thanks to the members of the Chest exe ecutive due to whose careful plan- ning is due in no small measure the success of the appeal, That their confidence in the philanthro- pic spirit of Oshawa residents was not misplaced has again been in- dicated. "That is & splendid job, well done," said Murray P, Johnston, COMMUNITY CHEST (Continued on page 2) Committee To Study New Deal for CBC Ottawa (CP) -- Parliament yes. terday set up the machinery to cons sider a new deal for the CBC, Club, the B'Nai B'Rith Lodge, the | At London Hebrew Comunity, the Oshawa | Public schools, Local 222, UAW-CIO | Oshawa and District Labor Council, | -- GM Veterans, .Polish Veterans, | London, Ont (CP) -- Huron Col- Boy Scouts Association and Sea | ' Cri Coro. snd man en 0, Ton 833m utes by local merchants and friends and y |and dedicated by Most Rev. John Lyons, Anglican Archbishop of On- |tario. (Continued on Page 2) ASS | 'The mother college of the 73-year | old University of Western Ontario F oreign Competition [tor ihe first time was host hi one ° | of university's convocations. Halts Quebec Mills | °c' building #eomodates 203 |students, 50 of them divinity stu- in REMEMBRANCE {dents and the rest enrolled Sherbrooke, Que.-- CP -- Textile courses in other faculties. manufacturers, employing half the | Dr. Reinhold Neibuhr of New workers in the Sherbrooke region, |York's Union Theological Semin- have curtailed operations and laid ary, a world - renowned theologian, off hundreds of employes due to received an honorary degree of a sales decrease blamed on' foreign | Doctor of Divinity from Chancellor competition. A. R. Ford of the university. A spokesman for Dominion Bur-| Rev. J. L. Patterson, rector of dington Mills here said today that All Saints Anglican church here 150 employes have been laid 'off | 2nd a graduate of the college, re- and that work was curtailed for the [ceived an honorary degree of The reds lashed unavailingly | treasury official said his govern- but with one foregone conclusion against Canadian positions early in | their latest campaign but found {them impossible to take or too |costly to keep. | A solid week of attack on the | Commonwealth front -- west of the |Imjin river line in the area west |of Majon -- left it largely un- changed, 'except that a long salient on dominating ground was captur- ed from the King's Own Scottish Borderers. Reuters correspondent John Ulm said the Borderers suffered heavy casualties from Chinese shell fire last Sunday. However, a United Nations officer called "fantastic and untrue" Peiping red radio re- {ports that two Borderer companies {were annihilated, with 450 killed {or wounded and 25 taken prisoner. CANADIANS (Continued on Page 2) Plan Allied ments will ask -- for the first time in 11 months -- for fresh dollar aid. One informant estimated Bri- tain will as for $300 million. Churchill based his belief that Britain will get American consider- ation on the fact that his country has provided the principal forward U. 8. atomic base. "It must not~be forgotten," he said, "that under the late (Labor) government we took peculiar risks in providing the principal atomic base for the U.S, in East Anglia, and that in consequence we placed ourselves in the very forefront of Societ antagonism. '""We have, therefore, avery need and every right to seek and receive the fullest consideration from Americans for our point of view and I feel sure this will not be denied us." one I's reference to Britain as the principal U. 8. atomic base pertained to the 20,000 American men at air bases spread all over remaining 650 workers. 'The nylon-manufacturing Bruck Mills recently dismissed about 100 workers and closed down its dyeing department which employed 155 men. {Bachelor of Divinity. { Among those also taking part {in the ceremonies were Rev. W. E. Bagnall, Bishop of Niagara, and Rt. Rev. Renison, Bishop of Moo- sonee. Chiarman was Rt. Rev. G. M. Luxton, Bishop of Huron, Ask Doctors To Be More Considerate in Charging Patients for Operations San Francisco (AP)--The Ameri-: can Cbllege of Surgeons yester- day asked the profession to more considerate about charging patients for operations. NET PAID CIRCULATION The Times-Gazette Average Per issue for OCTOBER 11,345 Surgeons should consult "more |freely" with the patients' family ® | doctor about the ability of an in- | dividual to pay for his operation, {said a report approved by the col- |lege's board of regents. The surgeon also should talk jover finances with the patient be- fore the operation,.the report add- e "Ghost surgery," one of several forms of fee-splitting among doc- tors, drew a specific note of dis- {approval from the regents. In this | procedure of the patient's regular doctor pays the surgeon for per- forming the operation. The surgeon may remain unknown to the person upon whom he operates and the patient may be led to believe the family doctor did the work, the | lregents said. the country. But no British or Am- erican official would say whether any atom bombs actually are stor- ed in England. On the plans of eastern England there are five huge U. S. bomber bases, and further inland four more are near completion These bases will be capable of handling CHURCHILL (Continued on Page 2) 25. Are Killed Command In Middle East Paris (AP) -- The Big Three and Turkey joined in a four-power declaration today that they would set up an allied Middle East com- mand, despite Arab objections. The statement said the U.S. Britain, France ind Turkey ont . decided to go ahe wit! e! Middle East allied defence organi- | In Italian Storm zation because "defence 2 the | : Middle East is vital to the free | world and its defence against out-| Milan, Italy (Reuters) -- Fresh {side aggression can be secured on- storms today swept over northern |ly'by cooperation of all interested ltaly, where at least 25 persons | states." ' {have been killed, and thousands of Soma Arab.states have said they | tdollars of damage caused by floods are unwilling to join any allied de- |and winds in the last three days. fence setup in the Middle East,| At the same time, emercency and have insisted that the Arab relief supplies were being flown bloc of states themselves could from Rome to southern Italy, Sic- provide adequate defences for that [ily and Sardinia -- devastated 10 larea against possible Communist days ago, with 110 persons killed. aggression. | In practically the whole of ne th- | Seven delegations from Arab ern Italy men were desperately try- |states to the United Nations Gen-!ing to dike dangerously swollen eral. Assembly called a closed rivers. meeting today to consider the de-| In Milan shousands of workers [fence role of the Middle East. waded or rowed boats to work. Hundreds of building were flooded. Roads and railroads were cut at dozens of points by landslides. Bodiés were still being dug out Winds southwest 15. Low to- of the mud at the village of Taver- night and high Sunday. 35 and nerio, near Como, where mud and 50. 'debris killed 18 persons. 1 THE WEATHER Sunny today and Sunday. Little change in temperature, Cook Book Will Appear Next Week The long aticipated Cook Book, supplement to The Daily Times Gazette, will go to press early next week. It will con- tain 44 pages of over seven hundred carefully edited re- cipes for cakes, cookies, des- serts, pies, quick breads, cand- ies and supper dishes submit- ted by readers. The list of ten prize-winning groups will also be announced. subscribers desiring extra cop- ies should make sure of them by placing their order with the circulation department without delay. There is no extra charge for the cook book. ] Famous Composer Passes Suddenly New York (AP) -- Composer Sigmund Romberg, 64, whose oper- ettas and songs are loved by mil- lions, died last night of a cerebral hemorrhage in his Ritz Tower hotel suit. Romberg wrote such musical play favorites as "The Student Prince," 'Desert Song," "May- time," "Blossomtime' and "New Moon." In 40 years he turned out Auditorium, Reports on the year's songs. Apparently in good health, Rom- berg arrived in New York Nov. 3 from his home in Beverly Hills, Calif. His body was.found on the bath- room floor by his wife, Lillian Harris Romberg, whom he mar- ried in 1925. Before he collapsed, she said her husband had not complained of feeling ill, Found Dynamite Stick In Her Coal Supply Grimsby, England (Reuters) -- Irene Dodge nearly put a quarfer- pound stick of dynamite on her fire last night. She was just going t6 place some fresh coal on the to place some fresh coal on the fire | package among the lumps. Inside | 'was the stick of dynamite. An of- ficial of the state-run coal declined to comment. BUFFER ZONE Munsan, Korea (AP) -- United | Nation truce negotiators again to- day proposed that a cease-fire buf- fer zone be created wherever the battle line happens to be when a Korean armistice agreement is ready for signing. "Minor and local adjustments' could be made. An allied. spokesman said this would permit the U.N. to maintain military pressure on the Commun- ists while agreement was sought on the three remaining points to be decided. There was no immediate indica- tion of Communist reaction. The Reds rejected a similar proposal earlier this week. The Reds Saturday submitted a rephrased version of their demand that a cease-fire line and buffer zone be created right now. The U.N. spokesman, Brig.-Gen. William P,. Nuckols, indicated it would be rejected. Both proposals were submitted et Saturday's afternoon session. Negotiators agreed to meet again Sunday morning at 11 (9 p.m, EST Saturday). Porter Asks Thomson For More Details Toronto (CP) -- Attorney-Gen- eral Porter last night repeated a demand for Walter Thomson, On- tario Liberal leader, to give de- tails- of '"'more than $340,000" he received a solicitor for handling veterans' land act cases. Speaking in support of John Yaremko, Progressive Conservat- ive candidate for Toronto Bell- woods in the Nov. 22 Ontario gen- eral election; Mr. Porter said: "The man (Thomson) said he thought he would have a clean election. A -question I asked the other night appears to have made it an unclean election. I think it is strongly in the public. interest that they should learn what sort of a transaction the man has entered into with Ottawa." Mr. Porter made his original de- Dismissed, Books Seized Toronto (CP) -- Samuel Lapedes general manager of the 1200-mem- ber local of the United Gar- ment Workers Union (AFL), was dismissed today. The office and re- cords of the union were seized un- der a sheriff's order taken out by order the union's international head quarters, Louis Isaacs and Company chartered accountants, has been called in by the unign to audit the books. Mr. Isaacs said two other members oi the officestaff, both women, were also dismissed. The order gave "subersive acti- vities' as the reason for the seizure Mr. Isaacs 'said. Mrs, A. Ross of Edmonton, an international representative of the Garment Workers Union, has been placed in charge of the office. Lapedes was ousted from the District Trades and Labor Council last year for alleged Communist sympathies, --the annual $2.50 radio licence fee will stary, Opposition parties in the Come mons suggested abolition of the fee along with plans for a special tele- vision license fee from TV comes to Canada next spring. They also urged that control of Canadian ra- dion should be taken from the hands of the CBC board of governs nors and placed with an independ- ent body, Revenue Minister McCann, who reports to parliament for the CBC, said he is not favor of elimina~ tion at this time of the radio fee which yields $6 million a year. As for a new regulatory body, he noted . that the Massey royal commission on arts, letters and sciences, had recommended against it as well as against private radio stations establishing their own networks. He said these latter matters could be taken up by -a special committee to study changes in the CBC setup porposed by the govern- ment. The committee was approved at the end of more than four hours of debate on Canadian radio, all the time available at Parliss ment's short Friday sitting, 8th Army Headquarters, Korea, (CP) -- Eighth Army headquarters today disclosed that the 1st Com- monwealth Division was the one which withtood last Sunday's as- sault by a Chinese Communist di- vision northwest of Yonchon. The Chinese, blowing bugles and whistles and supported by about 20 tanks, hit the division in waves for hours Sunday and continued spora- dic attacks thereafter. The Brunt of this Red assault, due north of Seoul, was borne by the King's Own Scottish Borders and the Royal Australian Rifles. The enemy lost heavily, but they captured two hills which they still rétain. The Communist tanks and self- mand last week in a speech at Propelled guns -- probably 76-mil- Brandford. Mr. Thomson issued a statement in reply in which. he d he handled many veterans' d act cases for only one-fifth the normal jee, a limeter -- made several appear- ances within 1000 yards of the battle line. The Communist's armour was obgaged a6 long range by ( WR Commonwealth Division Sustains Heavy Losses Hurls Back Red Drive, Commonwealth tanks. Allied of- ficers made no claims of damage. It was even possible, the officers said, that the heavy Commonwealth tanks in the darkness may have engaged Red self - propelled guns rather than tanks. No estimate of Communist cas. ualties was released, but they were believed to be severe. Offi- cials -at the front said Chinese corpses were piled on allied barbed wire at some points, In a report from the front line, said 600 British troops of the Bor derers suffered heavy casualties in the#Shell fire, He said the Britons were outnumbered 10 to one. Peiping radio, which first iden tified Commonwealth units in the line, said two companies of Bri- tons were annihilated, with 450 kill- {ed or wounded and 25 taken pri. soner. | A United Nations' officer 'the claim "fpntastic and

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy