Daily Times-Gazette, 21 Jul 1953, p. 4

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am En PAS, - bd » » i A comparative lull fell over the Sata = CEOS eh BE I Ne Ne EE 3idVS OAD IW * Ld ¥ * 1 . ' ¥ "1. H. ORMISTON Editor and Manage: PHONE 703 WHITBY AND DISTRICT NEWS 4 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Tuesday, July 21, 1953 UNION PRESENTS CHEQUE «un wAITBY ARENA Whitby, a member of the Local, brought the matter of the arena before a memberhip meeting in the Motor City, with the success- ful result already noted. Mr. Bentley is seen here presenting the thousand-dollar cheque to Donald A. Wilson, treasurer of Last week the United Automo- bile Workers' Union, Local 222, Oshawa, which has many mem- * bers in Whitby and district, pur- chased shares to the value of one thousand dollars in the new Whit- by Community Arena to be erect- ed this year. Robert Bentley, of WHITBY DAY BY DAY Accounts of social events and news items of local interest and names of visitors are ap- preciated. PHONE 703 - The Red Cross wishes to thank Mrs. Dixon for a cash donation to the Loan Cupboard. 62 Houses Under Construction In Whitby This Yr. Building permits have been issued in Whitby for more than 60 houses so far this year reports Building Inspector Gordon Davis. Up to last night, permits were issued for the construction of 62 new houses in Whitby. According to figures compiled by the Building Inspector up to Monday evening, permits were issued for 62 houses, estimated to cost $525,700. There was one per- mit for a funeral home valued at $40,000. One store permit i d for a store to cost $28,000. the Arena Board, in his office at the Whitby Motors. The framed picture on the wall is one of the junior OHA group hockey cham- pions of 1909, of which, inciden- ally, Mr. Wilson and F. J. Mec- Intyre, president of the Arena Board, were members. Photo Scott Studio, Whitby. 2 Polling Places In Whitby For General Election Aug. 10 When the electors of the Town, No 4 - A. and B. North End of Whitby go to the pools on|Motors, 616 Brock Street North. August 10th for the general elec-| No 5 - Stewart Miller, house, tion twelve polling subdivisions 153 Perry Street. will be provided for their conyen-| No 6 - A. and B. Dundas Street ience. In four of these places there | Public School will be double polls. . No 7 - Council Chamber In the by-election of 1952, there were only eleven polling places. Time was when there were only half that number, but Whitby is 'growing rapidly, and more people moving in all , are the time. 'Furthermore outlying sections of the town are buil up. The following is a list of polling places and their location; No 1 - Heard's Garage, 121 Brock Street North. No 2 - A. and B. .orne Bradley house, 500 Walnut Street. No 3 - Mrs. Richard MacCarl, house, 215 Wellington Street. U.S. Claims 131 'Migs Shot Down 'By GEORGE McARTHUR ¢ SEOUL (AP)--The United States| In the same period, more than Sth Air Force today announced a |tWo months, Allied Sabre pilots de- 65-to-1 victory margin over Com- |Stroyed 131 of the sleek, swept-wing munist MiGs met in the last two | MiGs, the USAF said. The period - months of flashing aerial battles |included a record day--June 30-- high over northwest Korea. when 15 MiGs were destroyed. Seveaty four were shot down in une. George, house, Dundas Street East. No 9 - A. and B., United Church Sunday School No 10 - Baptist Church Sunday School . No 11 - St. John's Sunday School, Port Whitby No 12 - Brock Street Public School by deputy returning officers and poll clerks, and of course, there will be the usual army of scrut- ineers on the job. J front after savage hill clashes between the Communists | In Tokyo, U. S. Far East Air | and South Korean s as truce | forces reported 27 U. 8. Superforts | preparations proceeded busily at Smashed at two Communist air- anmunjom. | fields Monday alight iB the Sinuiju ... | area of far northwest Korea. Crews Announcement of the aerial vic- | 00 ted" Communist night fighter fory or with she Ysciomure that |and anti-aircraft opposition. The 5th air force reported 1,069 down. Monday--the first since May | Ihe y 17 -- with one pilot blasting two | Missions flown by landbased Allied MiGs out of the sky before he went | Planes in 24 hours ended at 6 a. m. down. ' An overcast hampered air strikes later in the day. Most of the g round fighting cen- |tred in the still-unsettled Kumsong | sector of the central front where Chinese divisions ripped into Re- W. C. Town & Sons Feed Cows 'Vitamins For Health No 8 - A. and B.,, Mrs. Norman | / |ease at the Association's annual Each poll will be well manned | Peeting. TORONTO (CP)--A group of doctors said Monday that brucello- sis, a costly cattle disease, can be beaten if there is close super- vision of herds and an extensive educational campaign to make dairymen more aware of the dangers to their animals. The doctors, a special research committee for the American Vet- erinary Medical Association, told of their plan to eradicate the dis- Calves should be vaccinated and all reactors eliminated to protect other cattle in the herd. Research workers from the On- tario Agricultural College in Guelph reported that prenatal deaths and abnormal offspring can result if pregnant animals aren't fed enough growth-producing vita- mins. Tests showed rats, fed a ribolfavin deficient diet, had re- Productive troubles and smaller lit- ers. Dr. W. C. Reid of Fort Erie, Ont., said that although antibiotics |are one of the greatest aids in | combatting diseas:, they are not the final answer to animal-disease control, It should not be forgotten, he said, that supportive treatment is necessary In assitsing the new drugs. HOODOO VANQUISHED AUCKLAND, N.Z. (CP) -- Cabin D-87 on the liner Rangitiki has disappeared, While the ship was bound for England last year a man was found hanged in the cabin. On the next voyage a young public of Korea lines last week. | When the ship returned here there |was no D-87, but the cabins on each side were larger. Whitby Classified woman occupant disappeared. | Permits were issued for 29 re- pairs and additions, estimated to cost $9,445. One of the largest per- mits was issued for the con- struction of the registry office addition, in the amount of $166,400. The largest project for which a permit has been issued this year is the construction of the new h school, a permit issued this month, estimated to cost $528,280. Permits issued this year, say Mr. Davis, total $1,319,475. 4 A NICE CATCH FROM ALGONQUIN PARK Al. Lawrence, left, and Jimmie Fraser, of Wing Orchards, beam as they hold the limit at the end of a fishing trip in Al- gonquin Park, the two district men, accompanying Norman Ir- win on a fishing trip to the Park last week, took their full limit in two days fishing. Their catch, when cleaned, weighed a total of 53 pounds, says Mr, Irwin. Incidentally, a trip by air to Algonquin Park for two days' fishing awaits the winner of a draw being sponsor- ed presently by the Arena com- mittee. The winner will be taken into the Park by air by Mr. Ir- win, who contributes' the trip to the fund, where he will be led to the finest fishing waters of R..L. ROBERTSON News Editor PHONE 703 the park by an able guide. This is the second trip offered in Whit- by. The entire proceeds of the draw are turned over to the Arena fund. Photo by Scott Studio, Whitby. Bad AsEa HAMILTON (CP) -- CCF leader M. J. Coldwell says the only way Canadians can get a government dedicat the building of a new social order is to elect the CCF party in the Aug. 10 election. He also said in a recorded broad- cast over the CBC Dominion net- work that the Liberal and Pro- gressive Conservative parties "are financed by vested and privileged interests." The broadcast was part of a meeting attended by about 350 per- sons in a school here. A portion of the meeting was recorded on kine- scope film for televising later. Mr. Coldwell said Canada "has ut up with Liberal governments ong enough" and since the Pro- gressive Conservatives "are the same kind of a party" they would be no better. He added: "The only way Canadians will get the kind of government that gets things done on behalf of the people--that pl h needs before private profit--that means not just a change, but a change for the better--that is not just another government but a govern- ment dedicated to the building of a new social order--the only way Canadians can get that kind of government is to elect the CCF." Although his party was yet,to hold federal office, it *may judlly claim to have improved the whole pattern of Canadian life." The CCF, and the men and women who preceded it, had played a leading part in the struggle for family allowances, unemployment insur- ance, the rights of labor, federal aid for education, and the abolition of legal appeals to the Imperial "Tories And Grits ch Other" Privy Council. " "Time and time again, in scores of instances," said Mr. Coldwell, "the CCF party, and the men and women who preceded it, have pro- sed and fought for measures to prove our way of life over the bitter opposition of the Liberal and Progressive Conservative parties. But the social benefits Canada had obtained so far were still insuf- ficient. The CCF 'leader charged that "'old-line political parties have mil- lions of dollars to spend on elec- tion campaigns and most of it comes from big corporations." "Whether any strings are at- tached to such donations or not, the parties accepting money from such vested interests are placed under obligation to these same in- terests and I question whether they can, when in ofice, reach decisions impartially where these interests are concerned." Mr. Coldwell's appearance in this industrial city was his second visit to a Canadian steel centre. As he did 'when he spoke in Sydney, N. S., he attacked the steel in- dustry and said that between the world wars the steel companies, to keep up prices, expanded by only one per cent while industry expanded by 50 per cent. He said Canada was importing enormous quantities of steel from the United States. Ore from New- foundland was being carried to the U.S. past Cape Breton where hun- dreds of persons were unemployed. Only nationalization, he added, would give Canada the chance to develop the industry to match her resources. PANMUNJOM (AP)--New rumb- lings of opposition came from South, Korea today as Allied and Com- munist staff and liaison officers FRIGIDAIRE AUTHORIZED DEALER WHITBY PHONE 410 FINISHED WITH THE FAN? Sell it through a Classified ad in The Times-Gazette. Dial 3-2283 for | anything else, too! NOTICE: Classified advertisements for this columh must be in the Whitby oifice by 5 p.m, the dey preced- ng publicati RBOCK ioe on This T.aeatre is Air-Conditioned HOW PLAYING sv comeuere sow a0 i : NA 2, ong Sy 035 Galore / \\ os and} ROCKWOOL INSULATION, FIRE proof. Cool in summer; warm in winter. Free estimates. Walter Ward, Insulation Contractor, 204 Chestnut West, phone 2563, (Aug.21) DON'T SIMMER THIS SUMMER. IN- sulate now #@hith PAL-O-PAK. Do fit ourself or have us do it. Phone 2374. AL-O-PAK MFG. CO., Ltd. (Aug.2) put finish on a Korean armistice. All signs pointed to a cease-fire soon, Possibly within the week, but there was no indication just when the historic signing would come. 0 roup of staff officers and liaison H tticers recessed without scheduling further meetings. A second team of staff officers who were reported revising the truce line across Korea worked on into the night. South Korea's Joeign Tniuiste told reporters: his governmen might " he its attitude' toward WELLS DUG AND DEEPENED. SEP- tic tanks installed 'and cleaned. Phone 2961. Don Ferris, 639 Brock St. North, Whitby. (Augl2) FOR SALE---LARGE LOT NEAR NEW school, sewer, water. Write Box 541, Times-Gazette. (July27) LOT FOR SALE--60' x 142', NEAR new school in Whitby. Water. and sewer. Phone 2577, after 5 p.m. (168b) FURNACES -- PIPES, CHIMNEYS VA- cuum cleaned. Phone 2770, Whitby, 419 Ajax. (Augl?) WANTED---HOUSE OR APARTMENT IN Whitby or vicinity. Careful tenants with steady employment. Dial 3-7837, Oshawa. . ( FOR SALE-CHESTERFIELD CHAIR, like new; also library table. Apply 204 Byron South. Phone 700. (167¢ FOR SALE--BLACK MUSCOVIE DUCK. lings. Apply 1736 Brock South, Port Whitby. {167¢) FOR RENT--ONE LARGE FRONT room, furnished or unfurnished, light h 152 Brock North, (169a) h COLUMBIA PICTURE . FROM BOMBAY wre JON HALL wn cuistine anson - Lisa reamaoay.« oouoss &. xennor bang 48 Sarenn Pay by AOUEAT YALE LIBOTT + Produced by SAM KATZMAN + Directed by FRED F. SEARS . . ROOM AND BOARD FOR 1 OR 2 GEN- tlemen. Abstainers. Phone 902. (169b) FOR SALE--McCLARY ELECTRIC range, high oven, good condition; Mon- arch ice-box, 50-1b. capacity. Apply 1122 Brock South, (169a) TILES, LINOLEUM, RUBBER, MAS- tic, also inlaid linoleum, plastic "wali tiles, and congo wall. Free estimates. Phone 2215. (July2s) Auction Sale, Friday evening, July 24, of household furniture, the property of R. E. Sheridan, 1010 Centre Street South, Whithy--4-plece bedroom suite, .| soldiers. ) | revising the line that will separate obstructing a truce unless it gets prompt assurances from Washing- ton that Korea will be unified. He said South Korea also wants guarantees from the United States on how to stop possible new Red aggression. ' 'wo separate teams of staff of- ficers from each side worked al- most continuously in secret while nearby, a swarm of North Korean and Chinese workmen hurried to complete a building where the truce will be signed. The Communists labor troops worked all through the night under floodlights put up for them by U.S. of staff officers is One have worked on reporte Troup to opposing forces durin an ar mistice. They other group was be- lieved mapping the route to be used by neutral nation inspection and observer teams to and from the five ports of entry on each side. The feverish pace began Mon- day, a day after the Communists agreed to go ahead with final prep- S. Koreans Dicker Over New Truce arations for the signing of an ar- mistice. While truce sessions appeared to be progressifig smoothly, RoK leaders hinted new troubles. President Syngman Rhee himself has made no public comment on a Communist statement Sunday. The Red statement, revealing portions of secret Panmunjom meetings, disclosed the UN com- mand promised not to support any "aggressive action" by South Kor- ean forces after a truce. Rhee and government leaders let it be known they were awaiting a reply from Washington on questions they said were left unsettled after the conferences in Seoul earlier this month with President Eisen- hower's special envoy. Assistant state Secretary Walter 8. Robert- gon who spent 16 days conferring with Rhee and returned to Wash- ington with written assurances Rhee would not block a truce. What questions were left un- settled were not clear but a highly- placed source in the South Korean government said Rhee raised ques- tions which were beyond Robert- son's powers to give a final answe! while he was in Korea. ; The source said: "What we are primarily con- cerned about is a concrete U.S. assurance as to how Korea can be unified after a political conference, to 'be held after an armistice, fails." He said the U.S. has agreed to join South Korea in a walkout from the political conference if it makes no headway on the unification issue in 90 days. J Pyun told a reporter South Kore may "change its attitude" of not obstructing a truce unless assur- ances arrive from Washington on the unification question and guar- antees on how to stop possible Red aggression. May Have Conservation Department TORONTO (CP)--Fifty-one rec- kitchen suite, electric. range, new; ice- box; 3 end tables; radio and phono graph combined; floor lamps, table lamps; bookcase; easy chair; waghin, | machine. Many other articles, a lot of | nice things at this sale. Everything in | good condition. No junk. If you have a! | few things to sell phone us up. Sale | at 6:30. Mrs. E. Oke, clerk. Wm. Maw, | WJuly21,23) | y4Dhd {report on soil and water conserva- ommeadations are embodied ig a tion presented Monday to the pro- vicial government by the Conser- vation Council of Ontario. The council--representing some 100,000 members of agriculture, forestry and wildlife organizations --visualizes the farmer as the key figure in conservation. The solu- tion of flood control, erosion 'and soil fertility, all features of con- servation, rests 'with the farmer. The: report recommends that Agriculture Minister Thomas, re- cently named co-ordinator of con- servation for the province, be al- lowed to assume the' role in fact as well as name. Under him a de- partment should be formed to co- ordinate the several government departments concerned with con- servation. 'Better Traffic some | REVISING LISTS Sitting at his office for three days this week for the purpose of revising the voters' lists to be used in Whitby at the federal election on August 10, is Dun- can B. McIntyre, reeve of the town and former county warden. On Water Than Land MONTREAL (CP)--Canadian de-' partment of transport officials have put into operation a traffic-control system on Montreal's Lachine Canal which they hope will make lake skippers the envy of har- assed motorists. For though no one has yet | found an effective way of stopping week-end traffic jams on the city's road approaches, the transport de- partment believes now it will be | able to stop traffic snarl-ups on | Montreal's only effective" water link with the Great Lakes. Their solution: use high - fre- | quency radio telephones between ship and shore. MUCH TRAVELLED ROUTE How well it will work remains to be seen, but one thing everyone agrees on is that something had to be done. The seven-mil canal, | which by-passes the' stormy La- | chin Rapids to connect the port | of Montreal with Lake St. Louis to | the west, has become one of Can- | ada's most heavily travelled | stretches of water. | Congestion has brought traffic | complications in its wake, leaving | frayed tempers among canal men and lake skippers. At peak periods when heavy grain shipments are moving down the river, and empty ships are moving westwards, there are frequently queues at both ends of the canal as vessels wait, some- times for hours, to enter the locks. * Officials believe the new phone system--already in operation at Welland and at Cornwall--will ease | the position. With three men on | duty, each working an eight-hour | shift, captains will be able to] telephone the canal's traffic con- trollers as they are coming down the lake to find out how the traffic | is moving through the locks. =~ | Said Jean Carcelo, canal super- | intendent: 'We're just working in | a temporary set-up now, but soon we'll have verything ready to pass | on the information the captains re- | quire." | BUG INVASION LEAMINGTON (CP) -- Agricul-| tural representative Alexis Burnell | said during the week-end that | hordes of cinch-bugs are attack- ing corn crops in Essex County. The tiny, brownish bugs usually breed in wheat fields and then in- vade nearby corn crops. They, suck | the juice out of the corn and leave | it dry and unmarketable. . { MANY IMMIGRANTS STOCKHOLM (CP) -- Sweden, | which has 112,100 foreign workers | employed, 'was described as an | "immigrant country" by Per| Eckerberg, permanent secretary to { the Swedish government. He said | Sweden has pursued a 'policy of encouraging the creation of a com- | mon North European labor market. ' \ J Deputy Revising 0 licer Is Sitting In Whitby With the general election warm- ing up, voters in Whitby are in- vited to check the voters' lists to make certain that their names are on. If they are missing, the Re- vising Officer, Duncan B. MgIn- tyre, is sitting all this week to make revisions in the lists. On Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, he is receiving applications or jections to names already on the list. On Thursday, Friday and Sat- urday he will put on new names or strike off existing names as the case may warrant. To be eligible for a vote in the federal election at any of the Whitby polls, says Mr. McIntyre, a voter, must be a British subject; he must be a resident of Canada for at least one year; he must he must be a resident of the electoral district in which he votes since the date the writ was issued, which is June 12th; and of course, be a resident of the electoral district in which he votes since the date the writ was issued, above . proceedings, says Mr. Mc- Intrye. Among them is a ruling servicemen, no matter what age, are permitted to vote. Teachers, ministers and other persons whose occupation causes them to move from place to place may vote in the electoral district dn which they are resident at the time of the election. DUTIES OF REVISION As Deputy Revising Officer, Mr. McIntyre has several duties to per- form. One of the prime objects is to put persons' names on the list who have been inadvertantly left off by the enumerators. He will also correct the names which have been entered incorrectly, for example, the first name may be incorrect. He also corrects ad- dresses if an error has been made. Another duty is to strike off names fof parties who are not entitled to a vote in this district. Names may be added, said Mr. Mcintyre, if the voter appears be- fore Mr. Mcintyre personally and ives evidence of residence, etc. hey need not appear personally if another voter, who is eligible to vote in the same district, presents a document, called Form 15, signi- fying that he is an authorised agent of the person whose name is miss- ing. Or, if the person whose name is miss cannot be present be- fore the election to send an agent, a blood relative or his employer may fill out a form and have his name entered on the list. These forms, as mentioned above, are to be submitted to Mr. Mcintyre on the first three days of this week. To have a name struck off the list, the applicant must fill out a form known as the affidavit of objection. On this form, which is also presented to Mr. McIntrye in the first three days of this week, the applicant must indicate the reason why the name should be struck off. These reasons in- cluded: dead; not known to exist; not qualified to vote because he is not of the full age of 21 years and will not attain this age on or before polling day; not a Can- adian citizen or other British sub- ject; has not been ordinarily re- sident in Canada during the 12 months immediately preceding polling day; not ordinarily re- sident in this electoral district on June 12th; or is included in another preliminary list of electors for an- other Joling division. Electors who wish to have re- visions made in the preliminary lists are urged to make application for such revision before Wednes- day evening before Mr. Mcintyre at his office 141 Brock Street S., Whitby. Use Food By DON HAWORTH Canadian Press Staff Writer KIRKLAND LAKE (CP)--M. J. Coldwell, CCF leader, said Sunday | night North America's food surplus {must be used to relieve hunger in | the Far East if countries there are to be saved from communism. In a federal election campaign speech in this Northern Ontario gold-mining centre, he said Canada has more grain than she can con- sume. In the United States, a gov- ernment forecast had said, there will be enough grain at the, end of the present srop season to feed U. S. citizens until 1956. Meanwhile, taking the world as a whole, two persons out of every three went to bed hungry every night. Communists won support by promising a bowl of rice. For every $100 Canada spent on defence, she paid out $1 in aid to backward areas. Defence was nec- essary but the ratio was wrong. Mr. Coldwell accused the man- agement of gold mines at Timmins, 90 miles northwest of here, where at three mines men are on strike, of trying to break the union and to discard collective bargaining. He said' that during the last four years the federal government has paid more than $40,000,000 in sub- To Fight The Communists sidies to the gold-mining compan- ies. It was the CCF view that the companies should, in consequence, pay good wages and see that their workers have good housing. Some companies had not been doing these things, but had been paying in- flated dividends. Mr. Coldwell spoke in the gath- ering dusk to an m Of persons in a schoolyara. Harliey he drove out to a beach at Round Lake and addressed 300 from a pavilion verandah. At Round Lake he said that in Ontario and Quebec there was an accumulation of 30,000,000 pounds of Cheese when the season opened ay 1. He said that in eastern Quebec some farmers are offering to let Americans harvest their hay cro and take it away for $1 a load. He suggested that Canada should supply her 'natural' market for agricultural products in the United Kingdom and invest the sterling obtained in undeveloped areas. Mr. Coldwell flies south today. Part of his speech at Hamilton tonight will be broadcast on the CBC Dominion network and scenes of his meeting will be shown later on television. COBHAM, Surrey, England (CP) --Village name for nine-year-old Arthur Shearing is "the young birdman." Four years ago Arthur started exhibiting cage birds and now has about 80 awards including nine cups. All his pocket money goes on birds and seeds for his aviary, now holding 70. REG BRYANT ELECTRIC Wiring & Repairs 213 BYRON ST. SOUTH TELEPHONE 628 135 BROCK ST. N. Electric Stripper -- average cost BUDGET PLAN AVAILABLE T. C. MYGLAND Whitby Paint and Wallpaper Co. WHITBY FIRST CLASS PAINTING, DECORATING, PAPERHANGING Badly chipped or toc heavy layers of paint can be removed by Cedar-Line Your Closets with Cedarwall, PHONE 488 Sofe, ond no mess, $15.10 NOW -- FREE ESTIMATES S. F. RUTHERFORD

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