Daily Times-Gazette, 24 Dec 1952, p. 1

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

SNR ye ey a Tw. | / PHONE '3-2233 FOR WANT AD RESULTS THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE Combining The Qghawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle Weather Forecast Cloudy and a little eooler outlook for Christmas. Low tonight and high Thursday, 32 and 35. Price Not Over TWENTY PAGES Authorized os Second-Class Mail, Post. Office Department, Ottewe OSHAWA-WHITBY, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1952 3 Cents Per Copy VOL. 11--No. 301 Carry Yule Spirit! Throughout Year Tribute By HON. LOUIS 0. BREITHAUPT "Lieutenant-Governor of Ontario I know that we have all been thrilled by the announce- ment that the Queen will broadcast a Christmas mess- age to the British Common- wealth of Nations and to the world on Christmas morning at ten o'clock, thus emulat- ing the great and good ex- ample of her late father, who -had so endeared himself to each and every one of us by coming into our homes in such an interesting and prac tical way which was greatly appreciated by all of his faithful subjects. Christmas itself is not- far away. Preparations for its Thousands Pa Visit Ancient Bethlehem Misses Death By Six Inches 'In 40-Ft. Fall A miraculous escape from death was experienced by Adam Harris, | 32, of 371 Mitchell Avenue, an em- | ployee of Piggott Construction Com- | pany, who fel! more than 40 feet celebration have been going on for many days, joyous an- ticipation is reflected in the conversation one overhears. Children have turned out in greater numbers than ever to the Santa Claus parades in our various cities. Christmas music is heard in the stores and from the Towers of our Churches. Our streets are decorated with colored iights and evergreens, lighted Christmas trees brighten our homes and decorate our lawns. That 'we must not neglect preparation of our hearts, for Christmas is more than a gay holiday. It is a holy day. A commemoration of the historic.! event to which God became incarnate in humar flest in order that 1.2 might more fully make himself known o us, At this sea- son of the year, the first Chapter of the Gospel according prépared the early Christians for the first Christma... Medi- taticn upon this passage of Scripture will help us to prepare ou, own hearts and-mi.ds for this holy day. May we make ready for Christmas--not only with dec-! orating tinsel, but with hearts and minds made spiritually sensitive through righteous living and sincere devotion to God. hile wrapping packages to give to others, we must not forget to wrap our own lives in sincere humility 'as our gift | tu God. The glare of our Christmas lights must nc* make us unaware of the Christmas: "light, while singin our Christmas carols we must not ignore the song which the Angels sang at Christ's birth; we must remember that while the Christmas season femporarily redeems life from much |from the scaffolding of the new | Truck Plant of General Motors of | noon. | The construction worker fell on S Yule In Oshawa Better Than War | Christmas in Oshawa is a de-)| {cided change from war - infested | | Korea, according to AB Frederick | | Baker, who has just completed a| | trip around the world in the Royal | {Canadian Navy destroyer Nootka. | He lives at 57 Harmony Road | South. | § "Nobody lives like they do in! |Canada Limited yesterday after- | Canada," the young sailor empha- | ized. "In Japan, and the Chinese -- | QUEEN DELAYS YULE MESSAGE LONDON (AP) -- Queen Elizabeth's Christmas radio address, her first as sovereign, will begin tomorrow three min- utes later than usual at 10:03 a.m, EST. It will be the first delay since the royal broadcasts stared 20 years 8go. The Queen approved the * InnsAllCrowded As In Bible Days BETHLEHEM (AP)--By the thousands, the faithful | came to Bethlehem today and once more, as it was on the | first Christmas nearly 2,000 at the inns. Arab and Israeli border years ago, there was no room guards relaxed their frontier regulations 'to let the pilgrims approach the holy places change so that more than 1000 overseas radio stations, which will carry the address, can of Christianity. The thousands of visitors filled every room and every bed in the hotels, hostels and pensions of the Arab section of Jerusalem, Bethlehem, Jericho and Ramallah. At 8 a. m. today the Mandelbaum #- - | pick up the broadcast. soft ground, within six inches of | they are all primitive. The English | a pile of bricks, receiving two broken ribs and a thorough bruis- ing. Alex Boyd, ambulance driver, who rushed Harris to Oshawa Gen- eral Hospital, said he found the injured man lying with his head against the bricks. Dr. A. P. Fulton, said Harris is making satisfactory progress considering the nature of the fall. He will be kept under observation at the hospital for at least a week. heavy barrage from shi {are depressed, because of the past | A | war. There is no place like Can-| ih ; lada." 4 Tm | i The Nootka arrived in Halifax crew members were glad to be oF back home after one year's serv- ice in the Far East. Two other Nootka seamen, Ronald Lowry, 327 Celina Street, and Gerald Mason, 745 Margaret Street, will be home in the new year, according to rela- tives. One hair - raising stunt the Noot- ka participated in during its stay in Korean waters was the bom- bardment of shore batteries on the east coast of the mainland. A p and shore . 'the -destroyer after it raced into a shallow bay, Baker related. Two small vessels opened fire on the Canadian ship, but the Nootka's heavier guns soon had the situa-| tion under control. Baker was as- AB FRED BAKER one of the jobs of the Nootka to catch these drifting disturbers and ship them to captivity, Baker said. {The Nootka left Japan November {9 for Hong Kong. Other. points [along the extensive ocean journey that Baker found particularly inter- esting were Ceylon, Port Said, Mal- ta, and Gibraltar, It took 79 days of travel to get around the world; 42 davs frcem (via Panama December 17, Baker said, and all r 10-Year-Old Girl Gets Top Prize For Coloring Results of The Times-Gazette | They must be back in Israel by | mar! | coloring contest were announced this morning by the advertising department of the newspaper. With H : ws brightly - gleaming star atop the | Gate into the Israeli part of Jeru- | Church of the Nativity will lead | salem opened to admit 1,200 Arab | Christians who live in Israel. They had special permission to visit rel- | atives on the Arab side of the fron- tier dividing the Holy City and to | attend Christmas services tonight. Christmas night. Hundreds of foreign pilgrims also | came through Israel and the Mand- | them--as another star led the magi | --to the birthplace of the 'holy child. | Christmas Eve was a day of ceres {money and worship, climaxing toe {night in the midnight services king the birth ef Christ. | Roman Catholic patriarch Alberta | Gori was to lead the procession to | Bethlehem. Attended by four hundreds of entries, many of them | €lbaum Gate. They will not be al- mounted constables, his party in- {of exceptional quality ne a [lowed to return home through the | cluded the consular corps and Uni- {high standard of artistic talent, {the task of judging was a most difficult one, "The five winners in | 280, the pilgrims today pressed to- | each of the two classes are as/ ward Bethlehem. Tonight a! { follows: | UNDER 15 YEARS | 1. Margaret Dominik; 319 Ritson | Road, 10 ycars, | 2. Randy Mark, 386 Richmond | Street. East, 11 years. 3. Sharon Cobb, 520 Madison Av- enue, 8 years. 4. Clara McCrimmon, 245 Burk | Jewish state, however. | Like the three wise men of long |ted Nations officials from both | sides of the frontier that has split INNS C.OWDED (Continued on Page 2) t It's More Green Than White For Canada's Christmas By THE CANADIAN PRESS Northern Saskatchewan reported | signed to the gun crew. The Nogt- | Halifax to Japan ka then broke water from its pre-|Canal) and 37 days to reach Hali-| gtreet, 11 years. | There will be more green and no snow falling and warmer-than- carious position and headed out to| fax from Japan (via the Suez | 5 jerry Shaw, 98 Willingdon Av-| red than white in Canada's colorful usual temperatures which boosted sea. But it returned with guns! Canal). | enue, 13 years. | Christmas celebrations this year. sales by bringing country folk into blazing after a short wait. Commu-, Koreans have never had Very | ovER 15 YEARS With just the last ornaments to | town. Regina has a full bloom of nist guns had then been left to cool | much, the seaman said, and the | "y "cis Boxstrom, 426 Massqn | be hung and the last presents to colored lights and decorations with and the Canadian destroyer had a only thing that could be takeNigireet' 16 years. be wrapped, many of the more no last-minute shopping rush. The populated areas of the country re-|outlook is for mild weather. A wry that is sordid, selfish and low, and gives it a new birth of love, consideration, kindness and concern for others, there is a greater function that lifts life out of th. sordid, which is the source of our trouble and makes it possible to carry out the spirit of Christmas throughout the entire year. This I think is the main message of Christrias. Textile Strikes Talks Break Off QUEBEC (CP) -- Talks called by Labor Minister Barrette to dis- cuss a formula aimed at settle- ment of the turbulent Louiseville, Que., textile strike broke off Tues- day after the Canadian Catholic Confederation of Labor a counter-proposal submifted by Associated Textiles. Mr. Barrette said the CCCL had accepted the settlement formula he proposed with a few minor changes but the company refused to accept it and offered a counter-proposal instead. It was not known what action Mr. Barrette would take now. ejected | Suddenly a 4 | | RH rand Pleard, president of | | e L, said the labor organiza- ] tion will wait until Mr, Seana | DIES SUDDENLY reports to Premier Duplessis and| William Leroi Dibbon, science Bishop Pelletier before deciding if | teacher in the local secondary a strke should be called. { schools for the past 22 years, In a later statement the CCCL| who passed away suddenly' in | sald that if the strikers are without | Virginia yasterday while on a| "any recourse, the committee | holiday trip with his wife, He | formed by last week's plenary{ was 47 years old. session will meet immediately to| = "or iis i ue ro FISH STORY ABOUT JELLYFISH - turn to work of strikers should | be assured as soon as possible and | A. biologist from the Solomon lands says that whatever you've | {sary steps to settle the dispute. | field day. |away from them would be their North Korean junks, which were (homes, which could be rebuilt in found to be mine layers, we re short order if damaged by fire or blasted out of the water by the!war missiles. Paper and wood, Canadians. Survivors from the with grass on top was the typical shattered pieces of wood and paper | South Korean home, he added. were then brought aboard, the Osh-| Several North Koreans were tak- awa seaman stated, and were held en aboard Canadian ships; survi- as prisoners. |vors of junks and other small ves- Small islands that housed loyal jsels destroyed by the Nootka's South Koreans were protected by |large guns. These men were cloth- Canadian and American ships. |ed in Russian uniforms, the sailor 2. Ann Nichols, 82 Royal Street, years. 3. Mrs. Olive Wood, 183 Rox- | borough Avenue. | 4. Mrs. Ellen Kucherik, 262 Con- {ant Street. | 5. Mrs, M. Fice, 350 Elmgrove Avenue. x [17 | port unusually high temperatures and a scarcity of snow. In Eastern Canada, rain and fog disrupted airline schedules, causing many to face the prospect of spend- |ing Christmas away from home. | In most areas the spirits of mer- | note sounded when southern Saskat- |chewan dance halls boosted prices | for the Christmas season. | Winnipeg is one of the few places | where Santa will get frost on his beard. Temperatures are expected | to drop gradually to 10 above zero. | Cheques are being sent today to | chants are soaring with the tem- | There may be an odd flurry, but {the ten winners of the contest. The | Times-Gazette wishes tc express | its thanks to all entrants who con- | peratures. Brightly decked stores from Vancouver to Halifax report record sales as the open weather Rubber floats were sometimes set | mentioned. They also were using tributed to making this contest a brought out droves of sheppers. adrift from the rugged coastline, | Russian machine guns. : These Communist - inflated tubes| Seaman Baker is on 44 days | carried spies to the many islands leave and will return for duty on | under South Korean rule. It was the Nootka. Pope Pius Assails Use of Money, Guilt 55 wydwyd pope bdcast bgt dec24a . "society is not a machine;' even | | | highly successful event. BIRTHDAYS Congratulations are extended to the following readers of The Times-Gazette who will be cele- brating their birthdays on Christmas Day. R. J. Hyndman, Street. Mrs, Joseph De La Porte, Bloor Street East, and to Mrs, 108 Celina Christmas decorations are in abun- | dane, not only on business premi- ses but at some private homes | where evergreen trees sport strings | of colored lights. | British Columbia reported snow {in the interiop, but green weather {around Vancouver and Victoria | where thousands of loggers pour |into the cities from Vancouver Is- [land and upcoast camps. | No snow is in sight in the Ed- |monton area and little is left that {had already fallen. Celebrations 'no major snowfall was expected. Christmas will be mainly a stay- {at-home affair. Hockey games are | scheduled for Boxing Day afternoon and evening. An on-and-off drizzle in Toronto and freezing rain and snow in Mon- treal caused jammed pre - Christ- | mas trasportation. Aircraft were | grounded in both cities. An iey, snow-covered surface brought a {rash of accidents to Montreal. The Kingston area had a few inches of. snow, but rain threatened to re- {duce it to nothing by Christmas i Day. | No snow was reported in Halifax, | Sydney or Gander, but an Atlantic The mediation talks were called! The CCCL said "full responsi- {the government should take neces- heard about a jellyfish stin; being ROME (AP)--Pope Pius ad- in the economic field it is not a | dressed his 14th annual Christmas machine, E. Holbrook, 198 Nassau Street, |are to be quiet, confined mainly storm was expected to provid who is celebrating her birth- 4 A P P ea Ito church groups, private parties | white blanket for Prince Edward last Wednesday after Premier Du- bility' for the breakdown of the | fatal is just a fish-story. It's very plessis and Bishop Georges Pelle- negotiations rested with the textile | painful, he says, but it won't kill tier of Three Rivers conferred on company. | you. the strike situation. Las* Sunday,| Associated Textiles also issued a| But what you've heard about at a mass meeting of some 200 statement, which said that "the ac- The Times-Gazette Classified ads representatives, the CCCL decided ceptance of the Barrette proposal hocking on to exactly what you're to call a genéral province-wide represented an unsurmountable im-! after, is positively true! strike of its 90,000 members if the possibility." | If you need new living quarters, talks with the labor minister failed.| The company also said the tex- good workers, mis._llaneous The strike, over wages and work- tile industry was in a "depression" | articles, or a job for yourself, a ing conditions. began last March. and that this question should have | Want Ad catches what you want! Following breakdown of negoti- been discussed in the talks. | Phone 3-2233 for an ad-writer. Canucks Watch Through Night Same As Usual Christmas Eve By BILL BOSS | sight. In his special winter. cloth- | It sounds Bleak. Canadian Press Staff Writer ing he won't mind unduly the 20-| Actually, there are little touches IN KOREA (CP)--Santa Claus above-zero cold. The moon will of home sprouting. has a free bottle of beer for each gleam on the patches of snow in| The three or four soldiers shar- United Nations soldier in the front no man's land and perhaps willing each bunker have pooled line in my aréa this year. And silhouette Chinese Communists try- | Christmas cards and strung them | plea for paece today to the world's.,/ Voicing criticism of economic | "poor and oppressed' and ,criti- | organizations on both 'this side | cized communism for its attack on jand that side" of the ocean--ap- | the Christian faith and capitalism parently the communist and non- | because it has not done enough communist worlds as well--the | '0 improve man's economic lot. |Pope said industrialism has] Replying to the Christmas greet- | brought benefits to the people, but | ings of the College of Cardinals, it now tends towards an impersonal | the Roman Catholic Pontiff's mes- development of man that tyran-| sage to the Christian world was nizes the human spirit. | broadcast (at 5 -a.m, EST) in| 'The technicians of production | Italian over the Vatican radio. The | radio planned to repeat the speech at 45-minute intervals in transla- -- tions into 23 other languages. T The modern world, said the Pope, | ces two grave difficulties--a dif- | ficulty of economics and a diffi-| culty of conscience. | The difficulty of conscience, he | said, is caused by a condemnation | of the Christian faith, which has led to the torture of men. This was interpreted as a clear refer- ence to communism and the per- secution of the church in the coun- | | { | | POPE PIUS ASSAILS i (Continmed on Page 2) | day today. and special christmas services. 'Island and part of New Brunswick, The Bright Side Of Christmas From All Around The World By THE CANADIAN PRESS citizens pitched in with Negro cit- It has not been the best of years | izens to restore it for Christmas. {in many ways, this 1952. But North | ; : | Americans around the world are | CHICAGO--A 27-year-old Woman intent on giving it the happiest Polio victim, confined to an iron | possible ending with the merriest lung, faced eviction from her home | possible Christmas. * |with her six-year-old son. The 2 BGO | pias are they doing? The record neighborhood came to her aid. Thus { , | far $1,300 has been raised. {| MONTREAL -- An RCAF North | ! Star was ferrying 17 wounded Can-| g ladian yeterans of Korea from the children will be entertained at par- | West coast so they can spend | ties by charitable organizations. | Christmas at home. FRANKFURT -- Several thous- NEW YORK -- The U. S. Air and German orphans were assured NEW YORK -- At least 100,000 | that's about all. ing a patrol into UN -territory. from 'timbers. They have impro- tries communism has conquered. For soldiers manning the out- At daybreak he will break off {vised paper bells and decorations | Turning to economics, the Pontiff posts and main United Nations de- his watch, leaving only the watch- ence, | from gift wrappings and hung them said much has been done to try to | it will be business as usual ful outposts on guard, and go to inside. Most company command sélve the world's unemployment | Thursday. {sleep in his bunker until noon. As everywhere else in Korea that | applies roughly to one man in| because his u tniis saving its three in my area. Others, '"the| Christmas fare until he leaves the men behind the men with the guns," enjoy the tented amenities he can have a bang-up treat. For of the rear areas, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. most it will be the urual meal Working days and community life. cooked in company kitchens and They're the Royal Canadian Ser- carried into the hills in thermos vice Corps, the Royal Canadian |boxes. Engineers and others who exist|{ And as a Christmas concession to keep the front-line soldiers fight- {there will be that free bottle of | peer, He will lie around in the after- aug, But to the front-line soldier in Korea--and one likes to think of jnoon, probably write home then | him as typical ---Christmas will be doze a little more, check and oil Just another day. his weapons and prepare, as on Like - the shepherds 2,000 years any other day, for nightfall and - Fee h Al Thea > 4m . BEV; UT Will WOWE WHVUBIVEY mie se sve smns meee. | posts, on the reverse slopes of posi- |enemy, have Christmas trees. | And approaches to somc front- {lined with evergreen boughs stuck into the ground--anything to syg- gest Christmas, One pseudo manifestation of the Christmas spirit has been studi- ously .dgnored. It is the Commun- ists' almost diabolicallv clever Christmas sentiments for peace among men, : Nightly, their patrols have been leaving bundles of Christmas cards in mo man's land. One collection CANUCKS WATCH (Onntinuad am Dasa 2) | problem, but more must be done. | His meal will be ordinary rations | tions and hence concealed from the These were his recommendations: | Superfluous luxury expenditures | {should be reduced. Capitalists line--if only for eight hours--and line battalion headquarters are | should put their money into use to | {aid suffering people rather than | | holding it in dead deposits. Where | private enterprise is inadequate, | | governments should intervene with public works. | He expressed hope that he would | see a reduction in what he des. | |cribed as the disproportionate lev- | lels of life between rich and poor | individuals and rich and poor | countries. ! But the Pontiff added the hope | [that 'this would not be brought about by mere "mechanization, for TTY T VIN "mE aAaaTn DUILVLD IOVLD William J. Holland, who prior to his retirement in 1933 was active in the building and con- tracting business died at his home 'here yesterday afternoon in his 78th year. Force had its own "Operation Santa ' Claus" -- flying home 56 wounded soldiers. | TOKYO -- Throughout Korea and Japan, servicemen are giving Christmas parties and gifts to or- ! phans. Some 60 show busines peo- ple gave up their holidays to en- | vert in troops. | {nated the skill of their hands as | Christmas presents to a brother {and sister, blind since birth with Laxbnmnnbe TE 4 | CR LRA CAC lw | cessful, the children may have 80 per cent of normal vision, ITTA BENA, ' Miss. After | white 'teen-age vandals wrecked a | nativity scene at Mississippi's new Negro college, hundreds of white a Ananatiane awa cua of Christmas gifts -- and U. S. Air Force officials were slightly red- faced. The truck bearing 18,000 presents for the orphans was re-! ported missing, and the air force offered a $1,000 reward or its re- covery, It was in a parking lot all the time, | WHEELING, W. Va. -- Radio sta- tion WWVA gave a special Christ- mos who live in the Hudson B#y area. The Eskimos love mountain music and sare always tuning in (Sots in ramata twadine nacte ta tha | station's powerful beam. TOKYO -- A C47 cargo plane dropped 100 pounds of candy bars by parachute to youngsters on a jan island off the Korean coast. The pilots got to know the children A z | --by their waving--during the supe ' ply run between Japan and Korea, GARDEN VALLEY, Tex. -- An aging couple began Dec. 15 giving | a 10-day party that attracted thous- {ands of youngsters. The couple {isn't rich, but merchants and friends helped make the party a success. HARTFORD, Conn (AP) -- Ja= cobs, Manufacturing Company is not mad at its 830 emnloyees who {have been out on strike for the last 15 weeks. Today the company I'sent 350 dressed turkeys to its idle employees, members of the Inter- 'national Union of Electrical Work= ers (CIO), SANDRINGHAM, England, (AP) Carel singers were chorusing mer- rily outside Sandringham House-- {the royal lodge -- Tuesday night | when a tall, handsome man steps 'ped out into the cold air. | "Wouldn't ybu like to come in?"* SAN DIEGO -- Two surgeons do- mas greeting to about 7,000 Eski- | asked the Duke of Edinburgh. "It {must be cold outside." { The 20 villagers from nearby i Dersinghm accepted and continued | their caroling in the drawing room, {led by plant nurseryman Lesue Tuck on his fiddle, The listeners included the Queen and her husband, Queen 'Mother | Elizabeth, Princess Margaret, the {Duchess of Kent, and the latter's daughter, Princess Alexandra.

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy