Daily Times-Gazette, 7 Jul 1953, p. 2

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2 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Tuesday, July 7, 1953 BIRTHS GEMMELL--Mr, and Mrs. G 1l- wish to the arrival of a son, Brian Harvey, on Monday, July 6, 1953, at the Oshawa General Hospital, a brother for Beverly. Mother and baby both doing well. HANCOCK--Mr., and Mrs. Ross Han- cock, (nee Leta Christie), are happy to announce the birth of their twin daughters, Lynn Elda and Carol Lula, at Toronto Western Hospital on Tues- day, June 30, 1953, sisters for Jean Elaine. Mother and babies well. JOHNSTON--Robert and Ruth Johnston, (nee Kelly), are happy to announce the birth of their son on Saturday, July 4, 1953, at the Oshawa General Hospital, 'a brother for Steven. PUGH---Mr. and Mrs. Lance Pugh (nee Le Feaver) are happy to announce the birth of their daughter, Saturday. July 4, 1953 at the Oshawa General Hospital. Mother and baby both fine. TAYLOR--Mr, and Mrs. Ralph Tay'or, (nee Isobel Hambly), wish to an- nounce the arrival of a son, Lawrence Miles, on July 6, 1953, a brother for Douglas. At the Oshawa General Hos- pital. Mother and baby doing well. DEATHS ASHMAN--Entered into rest in the Middle Green Nursing Home, Bow- manville, Ont. on Monday, July 86, 1953, Thomas Ashman, (313 Athol St. East, Oshawa), beloved son of the late Mr. and Mrs. John Ashman, in his 90th year. --Funeral from the Armstrong Funer- al Home, Oshawa, Wednesday, July 8, service at 1:30 p.m. Interment Eden Cemetery, Cambray, Ont. ' HALLMAN--Entered into rest in the home of his son-in-law, Mr. Frle Stauffer, 338 Colborne St. East, Osh- awa, on Monday, July 6 1953, Ephraim G. Hallman, beloved . hus- band of the late Matilda Clemens, in his 83rd year. Funeral service in the Armstrong Funeral] Home. Oshewa, Wednesday. July 8, 10 a.m. Also in Roseville Evan- gelical Church, 2:30 p.m. Interment Roseville Cemetery. (Formerly of 339 Gibbon St.) HAWLEY--Suddenly in Oshawa, on Mon- day, July 6, 1953, Manley V. Hawley, beloved husband of Sarah Sweet, father of Mrs. R. Vallieres, (Lena), Mrs. G. Ball (Gladys), Kendal Ont.; Mrs. Irwin, (Lillian), Oshawa; Mrs. C. MacDermaid, (Marguerite), Sault Ste Marie; Harold of Napanee, Percy of Saskatchewan, in his h year. --The late Mr. Hawley is resting at Luke-McIntosh Funeral Home. Service in the Pentecostal Church on Friday, July 10, at 2 p.m. Interment Mount Lawn Cemetery. Queen Mary Lodge, L.T.B.A., service on Tuesady evening at 7 p.m. Enterprise L.O.L. service on Tuesday evening at 8 p.m. IN MEMORIAM For us just over the --Always y Daddy, Marilyn and Douglas. LOBODIAN--In loving memory of a one sister, Sm. §ickedian, who assed away ly . Those whom we love go out of sight But never out of mind, They are cherished in the hearts Of those they leave behind. --Ever remembered by brother Peter, sister-in-law Joyce and neice Denise. KURELO--In loving memory of a dear father, William Kurelo, who pa away on July 7, 1944. Nothing can ever take away, The love a heart holds dear. Fond memories linger every day, Remembrance keeps him near. --Sadly and always remember- ed by sons Bill and George and daugh- ter-in-law Helen. SLOBODIAN--In loving remembrance of our di daughter, Anna, who went to be with Jesus two years ago, July 1951. a night, when the curtains are pinned eg 4 po i MO eyes, es 3 Ana are in Mount Lawn A lo 11, A little daughter we Joved) is waiting our darling Anna Hes. But the tears that we shed are in silence, And we breathe a sigh of regret, For you were ours, and we remember, Though all the world may forget. --Too dearly loved to ever be forgot ten by Mom and Dad and Daughters. OBITUARIES GILBERT STEENBURGH MARMORA -- The death occur- red at his residence at Cordova Mines on Friday evening of Gilbert Steenburg at the age of 73. He was the son of the late George Steen- burgh and Grace Kellar, and was born at Round Lake near Have- lock. For some years he conducted a general store at Cordova Mines, which he later sold to E. C. Pace. Next he carried on a trucking busi- ness and eventually moved to Mar- mora where he carried the mail between this village and Bonarlaw Station and also ran a taxi busi- ness. About two years ago he bought out the business of Ross Barrons at Cordova, thus returp. ing to his former store. He wl, overtaken with ill health some months ago and gradually grew OSHAWA AND DISTRICT COLLEGIATE PROMOTIONS The results of the promotion ex-aminations at both the Oshawa Collegiate and Vocational Institute and the Oshawa Central Collegiate Institute will be published in to- morrow's issue of The Daily Times-Gazette. STEEL IN EYE A piece of steel, which lodged in his eye, while he was working on a welding job 'at McCallum Transport Limited, took John War- szowski, 51 Colborne Street East, to- hospital #t 3.30 this morning. The tiny splinter was removed by Dr. R. S. Edeson, and, after treat- ment, the welder was allowed, to go home, y TWO FIRE ALARMS Headquarters. firemen were out to two fires overnight, both of which were but on arrival. Their first call, last evening, took them to the home of Mac Pentland on Ritson Road North, caused by burn- ing grease on a stove. The second, this morning, was to a burnin, car at the Four Corners. Amount ol damage was negligible. VISITORS AT ROTARY Visitors at the luncheon meeting of the Oshawa Rotary Club yester- day included Bruce Hogarth of Pickering and Cecil F. Cannon of Toronto; and Rotarians C. O. Thomas of Whitby, J. Boyes and Cyril Morley of Pickering. | LICENCES GRANTED Transient traders' licences have been granted to Mrs. Jean Pea- cock to open a millinery shop at 139 King Street East and to Amos Rubin to open a hardware store at © Church Street. EXCAVATION STARTED Excavation for the erection of the McLaughlin Memorial Library, Centre Street, was commenced this morning. The job -of wrecking the house, immediately north of the Canadian Legion Hall, is also} under way. Screaming Women Riot In Prison JESSUPS, Md. (AP)--A score of state troopers used clubs and fire hoses this morning to break up a riot of 53 women at the Maryland state reformatory. The police moved 25 of the women to another cottage and ap- parently had the others under con- trol after being held at bay for four hours. The women had barricaded them- selves in the cottage and warded off lice with pieces of broken furniture, crockery and makeshift knives. Two women attendants, locked ssed |in their room during the outburst at the reformatory 10 miles south- west of Baltimore, were released unharmed by the troopers. State Police Lieut. Martin M. Puncke was slashed on the arm in an earlier attempt to break into the rioting cottage. Six troopers had forced their way into the cot- tage previously but had to retreat in the face of the screaming mob of women. New Ship At Metcy Of Elements PUSAN (AP)--U. S. Navy small craft r-moved 47 crew members from the grounded American freighter Cornhusker Mariner to- day, leaving only the captain and six men aboard the ultra-modern cargo carrier. e 14,000-ton freighter, leted last year at a cost of §7:000,000. was slammed by heavy seas into Lighthouse Rock off Pusan harbor early today. Two tugs put lines aboard the high-speed freighter in the morn- ing and were trying to hold her from pounding to pieces on the rocks. The navy said the ship was in "dangerous con" "*'on," but there was a C:2ace to save her. One of the res¢ued cr>'v mem- bers said four of the seven hclids and the engine room were flooded. com- of New York My freighter is operated by the +"Reas Shipping Co., for the U. S. government, worse. Mr. Steenburgh was of a friendly Jisosition and had many friends both in Marmora and Cordova. He was a member of the Uni Church. He is survived by his wife, three sons, Arthur Cordova Mines; Carmen and Earl of Osh- awa, and two daughters, Mrs. Charles Chard (Ida) of Cordova Mines, and Mrs, Sanders Evelyn) of West Port. The funeral was held Monday, ledving the residence of his broth- er, Charles Steenburgh, Cordova Mines, for St. Andrew's United Church, Marmora. Burial followed in Kellar"s Cemetery, Healey Falls. MANLEY VICTOR HAWLEY A machinist at Fittings Limited for the past 25 years, Manley Vic- tor Hawley, husband of the former Sarah Sweet, 106 William Street West, died suddenly while working at the plant yesterday morning. He was in his 65th year. Born at Strathcona, Ontario, the deceased was a son of the late Thomas and Kathleen Hawley. He was married at Napanee in 1909 and had lived in Oshawa for 25 years. Mr. Hawley was a member of th Oshawa Pentecostal Church; Enterprise Lodge, No. 2167; Queen Lodge. No. 55, LTB and of the Unit- ed Steelworkers of America. Besides his wife he leaves to mourn his passing four daughters, Mrs. R. Vallieres (Lena) and Mrs. G. Ball (Gladys) both of Kendal; Mrs. W. Irwin (Lillian) of Osh- awa and Mrs. C. MacDermaid (Marguerite) of Sault Ste Marie and two sons, Harold of Napanee and Percy of Saskatchewan. Ako surviving are three sisters, . P. Van Luven of Oshawa, Mrs. A. Reed of Wilton and Mrs. 8. Kelley of Napanee; two broth- ers, Clarence of Toronto and Harry ted | 10. Interment will Mcintosh Funeral Home for serv- fce in the Oshawa Pentecostal Church at 2 p.m. on Friday, July be in Mount Lawn Cemetery. The members of Queen Mary Lodge will hold a memorial serv- ice at the funeral home at 7 p.m. today while the members of Enter- prise Lodge will hold a similar service at 8 p.m. today. THOMAS GEORGE ASHMAN The death occurred at Middle Green Villa Nursing Home, Bow- manville, on Monday, July 6, of Thomas George Ashman, 313 Athol Street East. Mr. Ashman had been in poor health for the past four years. He was in his 90th year. A son of the late Mr. and Mrs. John Ashman, the deceased was born in Victoria County on July 23, 1863. Never married, he had been a resident of Oshawa for the past 22 years. He was an adherent of King Street United Church. Surviving are a sister, Mrs. James Butterworth, with whom he made his home. Stanley M. Myers, Kingston Road East, is a nephew. The funeral will be held from the Armstrong Funeral Home at 1.30 p.m. on Wednesday, July 8, followed by interment in Fden Cemetery, Victoria County. Rev. M. A. Bury, minister of King Street United Church, will conduct the services. FUNERAL OF MRS. MARY ELLEN LONGBOTTOM Rev. S. C. Atkinson, minister of Albert Street United Church, con- ducted the funeral service at the Armstrong Funeral Home at 2.30 .m. yesterday for Mrs. Mary El- n Longbottom who died on Sat- urday last. hi pallbearers were H. Knight, H. J. Bathe, H., Gimblett, H. A. Alexander, S. Usher and W. Holly-! of Napanee; 20 grandchildren and | head at grandchildren. will rest af the Luke Interment was in the Oshawa Union Cemetery. Sickness Strikes Tories LONDON (AP)--Harold Macmil- lan, mentioned as a possible re- placement for ailing Foreign secre- tary Anthony Eden, will enter a London hospital tonight suffering gall bladder trouble. This also was Eden's complaint. Macmillan, miniter of housing in the Churchill government, goes into St. Thomas's hospital for fur- ther observation. Eden, recuper- ating in the United States from a gail bladder operation, is expected ack in public life in the late au- tumn. Conservative party circles be- lieve his return will herald a cab- inet reshuffle. Best Conservative bets are that Eden will become full time deputy prime minister. Fourth Highest Climbed KARACHI, Pakistan (Reuters)-- An Austrian-German expedition has reached the top of the 26,620- foot Himalayan peak Naga Parbat, the world's fourth highest moun- tain, it was learned here today. Leader of the team of victorious climbers was 52-year-old Peter Aschenbrenner, veteran of two previous expeditions to the western Himalyan peak. : Aschenbrenner was one of two European survivors of the 1934 disaster on Naga Parbat, when nine lives were lost after the climb- ere had reached a height of 25,600 eet. GM TERMS (Continued from Page 1) cover most of the major points of possible conflict between the company and the union, there would be specialized local applica- tions to be worked out in each case. Union officials said today that it was likely that a series of meetings would be held between company officials of the Oshawa' plant and officials of Local 222 to iron out any local angles. General Motors of Canada Limit- ed issued a release this morning covering parts of the contract. Un- ion officials said that Local 222 was not prepared as yet to issue a statement but that once all phases of the contract were com- pletely understood a comprehen- sive statement would be made. Although no elucidation could be obtained this morning it was as- sumed that a master contract which would supercede all other agreements would mean that in the event of a strike in one of the GM divisions there would be a walk-out in all. The obvious ad- vantage from both the company and union standpoint was the cut- ting down of lengthy negotiations which now must be repeated in each of the plants. Another over- all effect would be that the mini- mum rates, now in the neighbor- hood of $1.51 an hour, would apply in all plants. COMPANY STATEMENT The statement issued by General Motors of Caada Limited this morning was as follows: Improvements in the five-year agreements between the UAW-CIO and the four General Motors com- panies operating in Canada were announced here yesterday follow- ing several weeks of discussions. All four contracts which were sign- ed at various times between 1950 and 1952 will now terminate on the same date in the summer of 1955. Revisions in the contracts affect the wages of an estimated 20,000 hourly rated workers employed by General Motors of Canada, at Osh- awa and Windsor; The McKinnon Industries at St. Catharines and Grantham Township; Frigidaire Products of Canada, at Scarbor- ough and Leaside in the Toronto area; and General Motors Diesel, at London. The adoption by the Dominion Bureau of Statistics of the Con- sumer Price Index based on price levels of the year 1949 in place of the former Cost of Living In- dex based on 1935-1939 prices pro- vided the companies an the, union with an opportunity to arrive at practical solutions of problems which could not have been/foreseen when the individual contracts were originally signed. As a result, the contracts now have been co-ordin- ated and unified. DUES DEDUCTION Among the amendments announc- ed today was a common arrange- ment for the deduction of union dues at all four companies which is considered to be an improve- ment over present methods. Another amendment to the four contracts -- which now become basically a single master contract with specialized local applications --is the incorporation of all but five cents of the cost of living al- lowance into the earned rate. The review of this, the well-known GM "escalator clause," will continue to be on a quarterly basis. IMPROVEMENT The annual improvement factor of the original agreements which recognized that a continuing im- provement in the standard of liv- ing of employees depends on tech- nological progress, better tools, methods) processes and equipment and a co-operative attitude on the part of all parties in such pro- gress is increased from three to four cents. Increases for certain categories of hourly rated employees of all four GM companies ar also incor- porated in the amendments. ° Union members will voté on the acceptance of the amendments at an early date. ONCE TAUGHT IN CHATHAM WINDSOR, Ont. (CP)--Mrs. Alan C. Bell, a resident here for the last 30 years and former teacher at Queen Mary School, Chatham, died Sunday night following a lengthy illness. Survivors include her husband, a son and a daughter. SUPEATEST (3 1:7. W 185.1 WORKMEN'S COMPENSATION BOARD APPOINTMENTS Two appointments were an- nounced recently by E. E. Spar- row, chairman of the Women's Compensation Board. S. R. John- ston (right) was appointed solici- tor to the Board and H. W, Forster, secretary. Mr. John- ston was born in Cheshire, Eng- land of Canadian parentage, and lived in Sault Ste. Marie prior to joining the Board 31 years ago. Before being appointed solicitor to the Board, he was secretary and solicitor for 17 years. He is also vice-chief of the newly-creat- ed review board, a system of appeals developed by the Work- men's Compensation Board. Mr. Johnston is a graduate of Os- goode Hall. Born and educated in Toronto, Mr. Forster has been with the Board for 29 years. He was assistant secretary for two years prior to his appointment. Fifth Soviet State Eases Up On VIENNA (AP)--Prague radio an- nounced today that the Czecho- slovak government has decided to annul a decree that made it a criminal offence for workers to stay away from their jobs without good reason. The law had been enacted be- cause of widespread absenteeism following riots and disturbances in the country last month. The annulment made = Czecho- slovakia the fifth East European Soviet satellite to modify its policy on the handling of its restless work- ing millions. East Germany and Hungary have announced a slowdown of agricul- tural collectivization, less police terror and a return to some degree of private enterprise. Romania has dipped into food reserves and announced new in- creases in food rations. Albania Workers (late in June wrote off charges {against peasants who failed to fill | their quotas of grain, eggs, wool and meat in the 1949-52 period. Only. Poland and Bulgaria have yet to take steps to counter the public unrest which has erupted in |open rebellion in East Germany and Czechoslovakia, and has pro- | duced rumors of similar unrest in the other Red-ruled countries. The Prague broadcast said the Communist cabinet abolished the law against absentee workers Mon- day after the central committee of the Czech Trade Union Federation | declared the law was "unneces- | sary" and said it would take over responsibility for ending absen- teeism. Under the decree, workers who stayed away from their jobs four times received terms in forced- labor camps. Two Jacquelines Battle For Air Record In Jets By THE CANADIAN PRESS Canada has been dragged into aviation's battle of the jet-pro- pelled Jacquelines. The flying wo- men's rivalry has been pushed through the sound barrier by a Canadian plane. In California, Jacqueline Coch- ran, 43-year-old wife of an Ameri- can millionaire, flew a Canadian- built F-86E Sabre jet fighter faster than sound. But probably more important to her was the fact it went faster than the other Jacqueline. Jacque- line Auriol, 35, daughter-in-law of the president of France, had had the temerity to steal Miss Coch- ran's women's speed record. Chances are Mme. Auriol now will get herself another jet and do some supersonic hair-pulling of her own. WENT TO CANADAIR The inside story of how Miss Cochran got hold of a Canadian Sabre has not been told. She tried to get a Sabre in the U.S. but couldn't so she came to Canada. She tried the RCAF and was turned down. Then she went to the Canadair plant in Montreal which builds Sabres and finally became a consultant to its directors. After that it was easy. Technically she took the Sabre south to make some tests that couldn't be made here. Jacqueline Cochran has been used to getting what she wants since she took her first solo 15 Jeary ago while working at" a auty parlor. She went on to head her own cosmetics company, be- come director of an airline, marry Floyd Odlum, multi-millionaire fi- nancier, start a big ranch with him and dominate women's fly- ing--until Mme. Auriol came along. The Harmon Trophy, awarded by the International League of Avia- tors to the world's outstanding wo- man flier, stood on the Cochran sideboard from 1937 to 1950. In 1938 she won the Bendix Trans- continental Trophy race against a field of men and became the only woman to receive the Billy Mit- chell Trophy as the outstanding pilot of the year. That was the year the other Jacqueline, a shy girl of 20 un- heard of in the aviation world, married Paul Auriol. There was a child the next year and another three years later. While Jacqueline Auriol lived the Guict life of a wife and mother, acqueline Cochran was organizing a group of American women pilots to fly with the British Air Trans- port Service in England, became director of U.S. Women's Air Force service pilots (the Wasps), and in 1945 was awarded the Distinguished Service Medal. In 1947 she established two world flying records which still stand, and in 1948 she set two more. MME. AURIOL'S START That year Jacqueline Auriol, 30, with her children in school most of each day, took flying lessons. In 1949 she gave an exhibition of stunt flying at Paris. A few days later she crashed into the Seine on a routine flight. Her face was badly smashed but she flew again even before sur- geons had finished a series of 22 operations on her. May 12, 1951, Mme. Auriol broke the world speed record for wo- men, averaging 509.245 MHP in a Vampire jet fighter over a 100- kilometre circuit. The Harmon Trophy went to France. Last De- cember she raised her record to 534.375 MPH and was awarded the Legion of Honor. Jacqueline Cochran already had the Legion of Honor and the honor- ary wings of the French, Turkish, Chinese and Spanish air forces, but she no longer had the record. So last month in her Sabre, above the Mojave desert, she be- came the first woman to fly through the sound barrier. In making the 100-kilometre circuit at 652.337 MPH she not only re- Zained the women's record from Jacqueline Auriol, but exceeded the men's record as well. It looks as though the Harmon Trophy will be on the Cochran side- board again. But for how long? Cement Mixers Grind On TORONTO (CP)--Toronto's four ready-mix concrete companies o| erated on a normal, full-time basis Monday for the first time since June 22 when 500 truck drivers went on strike. The tie-up, which slowed or halted millions of dollars worth of construction projects and made idle 7,000 building trade workers, ended Friday, following several days conciliation talks. The new contract provides for 10 cents an hour back pay dating from May 9, 1952, when the old apreeyent expired, to the day when the strike broke. WARMING UP By Canadian Press Staff Writer With voting day little more than a month away, the federal election campaign warmed up Monday night. Liberal, Progressive Conser- vative and CCF speakers fired mutually-critical broadsides on taxes, world trade, Communists and even the kitchen sink. CCF leader M. J. Coldwell, cam- aigning in Saskatoon, brought the itchen sink into election promi- nence. He said in a national radio broadcast recorded for broadcast from Ottawa, his party will pro- pose, if elected, a host of social benefits, including a "good kitchen sink and a first-class bathroom" in every home. TAX THE RICH The CCF, he said, makes no | "political promise" such as the | $500,000,000 tax-reduction program {of the Progressive Conservatives. | His party favored shifting the tax | burden from the low-income groups to the shoulders of the high-income earner--"to those who are best able to pay." Meanwhile, Donald Fleming, | Progressive Conservative member of the last Parliament, aimed a fiery barrage at Prime Minister St. Laurent and Trade Minister Howe in a Galt, Ont., speech. He referred to Mr. Howe as "Clarence Dictator Howe," sub- stituting Dictator for Mr. Howe's middle name of Decatur. Of Mr. St. Laurent, he said: misled by these pictures of a kindly gentleman going around patting "Don't be |$28 Personal Attacks Start With Election Month Off children on the head and kissing: i babies." , 8 JUICY PAYOFFS Hon. George Drew, Progressive Conservative leader, said there have been "juicy paments to some . . . prominent friends of this government. Before they tell you there can be no reduction in taxes, ask them what they are doing to end waste, extravagance and inef- ficiency.'> : The $500,000,000 ta x-reduction program "won't be done by a gov- ernment which spends $10,00,000 to tell you what good boys they are, $50,000,000 on travelling and ,000,000 on professional services which could be performed by the civil service." "THE WEATHER TORONTO (CP)--Official fore- casts issued by the Dominion pub- lic weather office in Toronto at 9.30 a.m. Synopsis: The weather cleared over Southern Ontario Monday with the arrival of drier and slightly cooler air from the north- west. However, this fine weather will be short-lived as another band of showers and thunderstorms has already entered northwestern On- tario preceding the arrival of a new outbreak of cooler air. This unsettled weather will reach the Bault Ste. Marie-Kirkland I.ake area by afternoon and the southern part of the province tonight. Wed- Besday's Soa her iki be notice- ably cooler but skies will again clear except in/ihe Rake James Bay area. Regional forecast midnight Wednesday. Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Niagara Lake Ontario, Haliburton, southern Georgian Bay regions; Windsor, London, Toronto, Hamilton cities: Sunny today. Cloudy with a few showers tonight. Sunny and cooler Wednesday. Winds west 11 today, north 15 Wednesday. Low tonight and high Wednesday at Windsor, Toronto, Hamilton, St. Catharines and Trenton 55 and 75, London and St. Thomas 50 and 75, Wingham and Muskoka 50 and 70, Killaloe 45 and 70. Summary for Wednesday: Clearing, cooler. valid until land Lake regions; Sudbury, North Bay cities: Sunny this morning. Cloudy with a few show- ers or thunderstorms this after- noon and evening. Clear and cooler tonight and Wednesday. Winds west 15 today, north 15 tonight and Wed- nesday. Low tonight and high Wed- nesday at. North Bay and Sudbury 50 and 70, Earlton 45 and 65. Sum- mary for Wednesday: Clear, cooler. TORONTO (CP)--Observed tem- peratures bulletin issued at the Toronto public weather office at 9a m. Min. Max. Dawson Victoria Edmonton Regina Winnipeg Pt. Arthur .... White River ... Kapuskasing .. S. S. Marie North Bay .... Sudbury Muskoka airport .. Windsor London Toronto . Ottawa Montreal (Continued from Page 1) talks. On July 8, 1911, three U. S. officers flew to Kaesong to open talks the world hoped would lead to a speedy peace, Gen. Mark Clark, UN Far East commander, asked the Communists June 29 to sign a truce even if Rhee refuses to go along. So far they have not answered. President Eisenhower's truce en- voy, Walter Robertson, did not meet with Rhee today. Their talks are deadlocked as a result of Rhee's insistence that the U. S. agree to resume fighting if a post- armistice political conference fails to progress toward peaceful unifi- cation of Korea within three months. A well-informed South Korean source said Tuesday that Rhee has rejected U. S. compromise plans so far because they offer him nothing concrete. OK 4 LIQUOR LICENCES TORONTO (CP) -- The Ontario liquor licence board announced Monday approval of four new lic- ences in Medora township, Perth, Cumberland township and Wind- sor. The Northernaire hotel in Me- dora was granted dining room and public house licences; the Links o'Tay Golf and Country Club in Perth was granted a restricted club FOOD MART ROBBED COLLINGWOOD (CP) -- Police here are investigating a week-end robbery at the local Dominion food store which netted the thieves $4,000 in cash. The loss was dis- covered Monday by store m Frank Abercrombie. A door at the main entrancé was jimmied and the safe smashed with a sledge hammer. Northern Chile produces large quantities of nitrate of soda from natural sources. INI VAIN 1 with an HFC loan! So quick! So convenient! Thousands pay bills this modern, businesslike way. So can you , - . today! Loans for any good reason! $50 to $1000 on your own signature. No bankable security needed. Up to 24 months to OUSEHOLD FINANCE y repay. 25th year in Canade C. H. Brook, Menoger 11% Simcoe St. South, 1 ; the Edgewater Hotel Cum- berland township, was granted a dining room licence; and the Sky- line Club in Windsor was given a club: licence. Northern Georgian Bay, Kirk- | BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT Than Go By BOB JOYCE Canadian Press Staff Writer MONTREAL (CP)--The world's scheduled airlines | year. | A report on civil aviation in 1952 | by Dr. Edward Warner, president {of the International Civil Aviation | Organization's council, shows that | civilian airliners flew farther, car- jried more passengers and cargo, and touched higher speeds in 1952 than ever before. The report, an appraisal of pro- {gress made in civil aviation since 11944, was published in the current issue of the ICAO Bulletin. During 1952, despite an oil strike lin the spring which curtailed air- 'line operations in North America, ! scheduled airlines carried 13 per j cent more passengers and flew five (per cent more freight-miles than {in 1951. | The passenger movement alone 'was equivalent to transporting the population of Greater London or [Greater New York from Montreal to Europe. Last year airlines carried 2% times as many passengers and five times as much freight as in 1946. In 1937 freight operations were so negligible that no accurate figures are available, but the ber of | | {travelling and shipping by air." | Airlines also have attracted new | customers by off-season reductions, More People Fly ® By Train ons for the increase in traffic, listed improved equipment, better navigation aids and operat are growing | methods, all of which contribu bigger, better and faster every lo regularity, increase in speed ian | But, he said, "the largest single | factor has undoubtedly been the i simple, gradual habituation of trav- in economy. ellers and traders to the novelty of excursion rates, and tourist fares, the latter being introduced on North Atlantic services during 1962. Today in the United States one of every three persons travelling more than 120 miles by paid trans- port goes by air, and airline pass- enger-mileage is 20 r cent higher than that of Pullman rail service. In 1946'it was only one- third the Pullman mileage. Elsewhere in the underdeveloped | areas the airplane, the report says, has opened new ways in world |trade, permitting goods to move where slowness, hazard, cost, or sheer awkwardness of transport in the past virtually prohibited their shipment. The year saw the 'start of the world's first scheduled jet opera. tion, British Overseas Airways Comet service between London, Joh burg, India and Singa- passengers today is 17 times as great as then. Dr. Warner, exploring the reas- pore, and trans-Arctic flights Scandinavian Airlines between Los Angeles and Copenhagen. Man Hunt In Kenya NAIROBI, Kenya (AP)--British | officials reported today their forces | killed 241 native terrorists and captured 193 suspects in an all-out offensive against the Mau Mau deathmen seeking to drive white settlers from Kenya colony. The operation, from June 23 to July 5, was the biggest staged by British and supporting native troops and police since a state of emergency was declared in the East African colony nine months ago. Twenty-eight of | forces were killed. The operation's bag brought to more than 1,100 the number of Mau Maus claimed dead since the emergency's start. the security Distillery Strike Off WINDSOR, Ont. (CP)--Employ- ees of Hiram Walker and Ss, Ltd., who threatened strike action several weeks ago to enforce wage demands, have reached agreement with the company, it was an- nounced Monday. Under the new contract signed between the company and local 61, Distillery Workers Union (AFL), male help will receive a 10-cent hourly increase to bring thelr basic rate to $1.59 an hour. Female em- ployees received a 16-cent increase to bring their basic rate to $1.25. Tradesmen received an 18-cent boost to $1.90 an hour. " The increases are retroactive to an. 1. Now Many Wear FALSE TEETH With More Comfort FASTEETH, a pleasant alkaline (non- acid) powder, holds false teeth more firmly. To eat and talk in more com- fort, just sprinkle a litte FASTEETH on your plates. No gummy, gooey, pasty taste or feeling. Checks "plate odor' (denture breath). Get FASTEETH at any drug store. "UNIONS (Continued from Page 1) gates about Russian oppression during the anti-Communist rioting. The delegates from 52 countries voted unanimously for rank-and- « file measures to raise moral and financial aid to East German "vie- tims and refugees from Soviet per- secution and tyranny." The AFL - CIO telegram said: | "We ask that our government {press for immediate negotiations for free elections in a united Ger- many, and for the establishment of free political parties and free trade unions, and for the immedi- ate liberation of German workers imprisoned by the Soviet occupa- tion authorities for their resistance on June 17." 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