Daily Times-Gazette, 4 Apr 1955, p. 2

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BIRTHS Mr. and Mrs, Marlene Nattal) z THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Monday, April 4, 1955 (Reta) | Carmen W. | tice, Mrs. SIVITER Clarence (nee , on Saturday, April 2, 1955, the Oshawa General Hospital DEATHS { Tamworth and eight | dren. Rev. L. tice United Church will esidence, 35 Smith St. Port Hope, | So on Sunday, April 3, 1038, Joseph Bald- [ Wi .. beloved husband of Alice Roberts| tery. and dear brother of Mrs. James Nel son (Mary) of Port Hope. ¥ be in Mount ng at the Jex and Smith Funeral | I , Ontario St.. Port Hope, for serv-| . Tuesday, April §, at 2 p.m. Interment | John's Cemetery Port Hope. LOUIS HORNYAK Saturday morning. April 2, at hi AK -- Suddenly in Oshawa on | boarding house, 93 Bruce street of Louis Hornyak in his 55th year. «Funeral | The deceased had not enjoyed good y. April 2, 1955, Louis Hornyak 55 year al from Luke-McInto: on Tuesday, April 8, e's Greek Catholic rch for mass at 10 a.m. Gregory's Cemetery. to Ukrainian Interment st. | health for several months, ceased came to (.anada 30 year HOMPSON J oh's Peterborough; 1955, Pearl 68 year. in the Armstrong | of Hospital Leah | April 3, on in her al Service foreman of the 6 at 2 p.m. Interment Mount | Indiana and Peter of Cleveland. 1 Cemetery, Oshawa. | MEMORIAM IN quiem mass in St, George's Gre Catholic Church at 10 am, ol | Tuesday, April 5, conducted In loving memory of our | Rev. J. C. Pereyma. Interment wil mother, Elizabeth Turpin, whol he in St Gregory's Cemetery away four years ago, April = pr -------- ream 0p od : not gone from those she loved she travelled far, entered God's most lovely room, ft the door ajar back with memories, path she trod, the years we had with her, the rest to God remembered and sadly Reg., Ed. and Myrta : Said Neglected missed | schools, loving memory of a and grandmother, Eliza Turpin, who passed away April PIN In clubs in 22 communities g beauty that knew no Ruilé The association: decided to ap lear bright eyes, a tender smile point a committee trust in God, that all was right 4 to make some other bright | brief on the subject, to be or suffering one she knew |sented to Education Minister Dun tle act of love she'd do lo of self, but of the other fe said, well done dear mother embered and sadly missed Alice, son-in-law Frank, Eileen, and husband, Mrs ref hter ghter, cation, said there is policy for the gifted The surveys showed that acceler- ation in the elementary grades was the most common method of deal- RPI In loving memory of our grandmother, Elizabeth Turpin, passed away April 4, 1951, 4 s ago warming ways and smiling face, a pleasure to recall, had a kindly word for each died beloved by all wingly remembered by Betty, N ing with such children Several | segregation of the gifted Ont., favored it Also surviving are three sisters, Ruth Cole of Toronto, Mrs. are | Jordon Detlor (Nora) of Peterbor- to announce the birth of thelr | ough and Mrs. Nellie Hughes of 8 grandchil- M. Somerville of Cour- conduct the memorial service at the Arm- strong Funeral Home at 2 p.m. PALDWIN -- Passed away at his late | ,, Wodnesday, April 6. Interment Lawn Ceme- riends are asked not to call at | the funeral home until Tuesday The death occurred suddenly on Born in Czechoslovakia, the de-| nia pumber of years he had been No. 2 coreroom. He is survived by three brothers, Home Oshawa on Wednesday | Alex of New York State, John of The remains will be at the Luke- | McIntosh Funeral Home for re- ek | n by | 'Bright Children - | East to prepare a| peak, pre- -| tributions to halt Red aggression Delegates from Sault Ste. Marie, pearl | school there with a class for chil- | dren with IQ's over 130. Teachers i said these pupils have been able position Labor party, criticized the | coasts Sein} of Oshawa and one son, Thompson of Cour-| | Italian Premier Scelba, right, s| begins his official visit to the |ago and for 29 years had been an| United States with conferences Entered Into rest in St. | eployee of Fittings Limited. For | wt the White House at which he reviewed, with President Eisen- hower "general international problems affecting the peace and security of the world." Present PREMIER SCELLBA CONFERS WITH EISENHOWER at the conference was Mrs. Clare Booth Luce, U.S. ambassador to taly. --Central Press Canadian 'Philippines Death Toll Reaches 432 MANILA (AP)--The death toll | froh the worst quake of the cen- | tury in the Philippines reached 432 Sunady, the Philippine News Ser- | vice reported. The Philippine Red Cross said 12,000 were homeless. It estimated 300 injured. But Philippine News Service said the number had risen to 2,000 as fresh reports 'came in from remote districts. Hardest hit in Friday's great quake was the Lake Lanao dis- trict in northern Mindanao, second largest island on the Philippines. Most of the casualties came from this region, where the earth cracked open, stone buildings came crashing down and sleeping villag- | ers were swept to their deaths by | a tidal wave. | | | Australians Plan Forces For Malaya | CANBERRA (Reuters) tralia today announced that she $will send land, sea and air forces | to Malaya to fight alongside British | and New Zealand troops against Communist terrorists The announcement 1 served as a | TORONTO (CP)--Bright children | reply to an appeal of State Secre- are among the most neglected in| tary Dulles of the University Women's |to the Clubs of Ontario decided Saturday | powers at the Bangkok conference after hearing reports of surveys by | last February the United States seven other Manila pact Dulles declared that S. striking force in the Far had exceeded its wartime and urged the other allies | to make their own military con- the U | Prime Minister Robert G. Men- A. Van Every, a member | zies replied today by pledging to of the south Peel board of edu-|send an Australian infantry bat-| tor $1,000,000 to begin a full-scale | no over-all talion | Malaya. The battalion will join | British and New Zealand troops in a new brigade of strategic re- serves Menzies told a press conference as soon as practicable to reports criticized the | his country will also send to Ma- | laya two fighter squadrons and one | Cooper, Quoddy power would de-| bomber squadron and two destroy- There is a high | ers or frigates with an annual visit the sea by an aircraft carrier. Herbert Evatt, leader of the op- plan to send Australian troops to CARD OF THANKS | ir ¥aciich ana need ess time on Malaya of at AT Qt We "we shall not Rov he pallbearers were N. Atters- W. Dowton, H. Dowton, G wton, M. Moffatt and A. Tuson PEARL LEAH THOMPSON llowing a short fllness the occurred at St. Joseph's tal, Peterborough, on Satur- April 3 of Mrs Pearl Leah ompson A daughter of the late Mr. and John Lott the deceased was at Tamworth on March 23, She had lived in Peterbor- h for some years and previous: n Oshawa She leaves to mourn her passing wighter, Mrs. Alfred Wilson drill Mrs. James Anderson, 89 Roxborough| ~The teachers added that the stu- , and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Wallis| dents have more time for French \ to express their thanks and appre-| conversation and art appreciation tion to their many friends and nei#h-| and are doing special projects in for beautiful floral tributes, loan of | cnnial studies. and expressions of sympathy in| sian, recent bereavement in the loss of a loving husband and father. They espe " cially wish to thank The Canadian Order Foresters, Doetors Ruddy and Lind 'Union Local and Luke-Mcintosh Funeral Home oBITUARY Heads Back FUNERAL OF | MISS MARY COTTER i Requiem mass was held in St. | om Pe Gregory's Roman Catholic Church | 10 am. on Saturday for Miss | Officials of Oshawa's local 222, ry Cotter who passed away in| UAW (CIO), back from the auto- Michael's Hospital, Toronto on|workers annual convention at 1esday Cleveland, said today their union » mass was conducted by Rev. | will be solidly behind international Dwyer and interment was | president Walter Reuther in his Gregory's Cemetery fight for the guaranteed annual pallbearers were A. C. Love, | wage rks, J. Judge, E. Clarke, L Reuther predicted the UAW wath and W. Murphy would "meet powerful foes on the many mass cards and floral | field of battle' when bargaining utes indicated the high esteem | begins with General Motors and I rich the deceased was held in| Ford he community, "But," he said, n Oshawa fail.' She leaves to mourn her passing UAW COMMITTED . The UAW is committed to strike Fl NERAL OF action to back up its demands for JAMES ANDERSON the year-round pay plan, plus im- funeral service for James proved pensions, tightened senior- erson, 89 Roxborough street, | {to and higher wage rates. Russel died on Thursday last in his| Nj Neil, president of Local 222, r, was held at the Luke -|¢aiq {he autoworkers "want sh Funeral Home at 3 p.m. | baqce and will "try every pos- urday. sible means" to avoid strike ac- H. D. Cleverdon, rector of | ion He added, however, that all st Memorial Anglican Church, | (JAW locals -- including his own-- mducted the services. Interment ,.. pledged to back the inter- . in the Oshawa Union Ceme- | | .{isnal union's demands A significant feature of the con- vention was authorization temporary tripling of UAW dues to $7.50 a month. The increase, ef- fective immediately, was made MRS, I ath 000,000 strike fund for this vear's a The international organi- than one million months ation has more members HUGE GULF The gulf of Mexico is a placid sea area of 700,000 square miles A | In a statement, Evatt said: "The Labor party believes some attempt | should be made now to settle this warfare either by some form of | agreement or merciful amnesty, by a quicker grant of self-govern- ment for the Malayan people and by the eradication of poor working conditions in the rubber planta- tions." to the dispatch of troops as "de- testable and unaustralian" | said it made him ashamed OSHAWA AND | DISTRICT Menzies described the opposition | | great tides rise and fall in a bay |on the eastern edge of | There ma may some day har- electricity. The bay's quoddy, a melodic Micmac Indian word meaning 'the place where pollack are found," the National Geographic Society says. Maine people, however, hope to take more than fish from Passama- quoddy. They see in its surging tides highest in the country - energy First proposed in the 1920's and actually begun in the 1930's, the "Quoddy" tidal power project is again 'in the news. President Eisenhower has asked Congress survey with Canada, recommend- ed by the International Joint Com- mission on United States - Cana- dian Boundary Waters As originally conceived hydroelectric engineer Dexter by P pend upon huge gates swung by Towering tides are pulled by the {moon and sun against the rock of Maine and Canada's Maritime Provinces. In Passama. | quoddy Bay they range from 13 to 25 feet, averaging 19 feet. Under the power plan the bay's island studded be locked _by sea gates that would open as high tide neared and close|of San Jose and Deseado River. again as it turned. The trapped |Some engineers think the Hudson as dro electric turbines driving elec-| much power from the tides as Pas- in a far more Below the power dam would be industrialized area. There are also Passamaauoddy and | basin, Cobscook Bay, which would | farther north in the Bay of Fundy, |be kept at the low-tide level by|where the spring tides sometimes doors opening outward on the ebb- water would flow out through hy- | tric generators. a second gate - controlled pool or Toronto Unit Tops Passamaquoddy. Power From The Maine Tides WASHINGTON -- Twice a day |ing tide and closing on the flood. | Thus the difference in tide level Maine. | would be maintained between the two basins. An enormous unfailin Aus-| ness the moon and the ocean for|flow of water would continue 24 | hours a day through the penstock name is Passama: | of the power plant. Such a sys- moon' {tem for "harnessing the |would yield, according to recen | estimate, some [| watt - hours of electricity pe | year, u third the output of Hoove am. | President Franklin D. Roosevelt {who had a summer home New Deal's most controversia | projects | A village was built | War II, it is privately owned to | day, a neat settlement not fa from Eastport, Maine, whose peo- to keep | ple have largely helped | the Quoddy project alive. | Some time sg |to harness the | southern England. The | River and the waters | Mont St. Michel on the shores ol Severn River northern France might be develop- |ed for huge amounts of tidal pow- |er, although the latter projec entrance would | would need a dam 14 miles long. Argentina has studied its Gul | River could produce almost : samaquoddy, and | sites other than rise more than 50 feet | 'Drama Festival FIRST FIELD DAY The recently formed Oshawa Na- | turalists Club held its first field day on Saturday afternoon cover- ing Oshawa Harbor and the sec- ond marsh. Over 25 varieties of birds were identified. It is planned to hold another field day on April 16 when a bird count will be made. SEEK MORE WORKERS General Motors is still seeking Playcraftsmen play now is eligible factory workers for Oshawa from |to enter the Dominion drama festi- the Lindsay area and within the | past two weeks some 180 have { hired through the employment of- | fice there, Manager H. C. Brown | said. It is hoped to provide 20 more within the next few days | CHARGE NON-SUPPORT | Adolphe Eyman, address un known, was remanded until May 9 on two charges of neglecting to | provide the necessities of life to | his wife and children by Magis- trate F. S. Ebbs. The accused is of a free on $5000 bail. FREE ON BAIL William McMurray, 515 Durie til April 15° by Magistrate F. S ON $2,000 BAIL H. Bernard Arnedt, Hamilton, was remanded until April 15 | by Magistrate ¥. S. Ebbs and | placed on $2,000 after he was ar- ranged in police court Monday on | a charge of car theft. REMANDED IN CUSTODY Daniel Hoover and Henry Hoov er, both of Toronto, were remand- ed until Tuesday at Whitby | Magistrate F. S. Ebbs | court Monday. Daniel | with having a disturbance. Henry is charged with causing a disturbance. The two men were remanded in cus-| tody unless ball of $200 each is | secured. FOURTH OFFENCE Donald Dominic Fluery, 32 Wind- | | sor avenue, Ajax, was fined $100 | and costs or three months in the county jail after he pleaded guilty before Magistrate F. 8. Ebbs to a | charge of being drunk. This was the fourth offence of drunkeness in police in charge ° | against the accused WILL APPEAR APRIL 7 # | Bonar Bell, 805 King street east, HAS HIS OWN VIEWS ON WAR SCARE In one of its rare instances of ain's UN representative, chats with Gen. E. L. N. Burns of Ca nada, who headed the Palestine truce commission. Sir Pierson led the debate on the proposed resolution which criticized Isra el representative Abba 8. Eban for failure 'to show some ex- pression of regret' for the arm- ed assault, at the UN in New the 11 nations of the Se- v Couneil voted to condemn 1 for the Feb. 28 attack on Egypt-controlled Gaza strip r to the voting of the cen- resolution sponsored by the , Great Britain and France, Pierson Dixon, at left, Brit- | animity York Isra the 1 8 was remanded until Thursday, | April 7 by Magistrate F. 8. Ebbs on a charge of assault. The accus- | ed did not appear in court GETS THREE MONTHS | | Arthur Lancotte, 52, address un- known, was sentenced to three | months in the county jail by Mag- | istrate F. 8. Ebbs in police court | Monday on a charge of vagrancy. | The accused pleaded not guilty to | | the charge and told the court he | | was just trying to get out of town Memorial Service ® Monuments @ Markers NO. 2 HIGHWAY DIAL 3.9004 E. OF CITY LIMITS ANY TIME TORONTO (CP) -- The Toronto Playcraftsman won top honors for the best play in the central On- tario drama festival Saturday night for their production of "The Country Girl." It was the second successive win for the group which scored last year with 'Rose Tattoo." The val scheduled at Regina in May Announcement of the Calvert Trophy award winner Saturday night, by adjudicator Andre Van Gyseghem, drama in Toronto. Six Sudbury and Barrie competed for festival honors The central Ontario festival was | the last of 12 regional festivals held in Canada this year BEST ACTRESS Frances Tobias of Toronto won | the best actress award for the | second year in a row. She played the . disappointed wife in 'The with the intention of raising a $25-| Street, Toronto, was remanded un- | Country Girl." Best wound up a week of | mance' the Toronto Dramatic Club's presentation of | "Uncle Vanya." The festival ended night with the Sudbury Theatre Guild's offering of "'Antig one." Their production was the modern Jean Anouilh version of the Sopho- cles tragedy which was popularized in France during the German oc cupation of the Second World War The play symbolyzed freedom to | Frenchmen of that day. PRAISES GROUP Mr. and skilfull production.' characterization he said had sta { ture and dignity He lauded actress Helen Grenon | for her "sensitive, sincere perfor as Antigone but the part. He found Ken Garder, melodramatic the emotional '"'He pulled out al stops in $2 Mask May Stop Atomic Dust, Gas CINCINNATI (AP)--A $2 mask| one, they explained, is the elimina- | mass producibility are of para- | developed by the army is being| tion of a relatively high cost metal! mount e | tested for possible use in protect | 'canister' ing civilians against inhaling poi-| son gas, germ weapons and radio- | announced today. i Researchers Bernard Siegel' and cal Centre, Maryland, reported | that if test models meet protective requirements, the masks could be quickly mass-produced. They ad- dressed the 127th national meeting | of the American Chemical Society. The low cost of the mask figured at between $1.50 and $2 compares with $14 for the standard military mask and $8 for a pre- viously developed mask for eivil- | ians, they said. { Key to the cheapness of the new | Double-door sealed unit. warranty, TORONTO Ask fo © REFRIGERATORS © KELVINATOR Still under manufacturer's .'e BARGAIN eo 1580 Eglinton Ave., West gases or filtering out germs and radioactive materials. by | active dust, two army scientists MASK IN FILTER Instead, much of the face piece | a I . ! 3 ( the mask itself constitutes the | atures. liquor and causing | Frank Shanty of the Army Chemi-| "filter" --a fibrous mat forming a| -- pad and containing an absorbent | of Itch. Itch: cua Very first use of soothing, cooling liquid D. D. D. Prescription positively relieves raw red itch---caused by eczema, rashes, scalp irritation, chafing other itch troubles. Greagelest, stainless. 30e, tia) Dottie must satisfly or money back. Don t sufier ¢ out qraggist for D.D.D.PRESCRIPTION 17 Cu. FEET like new. RU 1-0047 r Ted 1,310,000,000 kilo- on an untapped source of industrial | Campobello Island just over the | border in New Brunswick, saw the | potentialities of Quoddy"s tides and made their harnessing one of the to house construction workers before the project was finally abandoned in | 1936. Used by the Seabees in World : Only a few places in the world | can capture the tides for power. a plan was made in Rance around University Alumnae Saturday | blew Little | Van Gyseghem called the Toronto | Sudbury performance a "sensitive {drama groups and companies from | Their he said she lacked proper vocal range for who played the male lead of Creon, too the first actor was Ron Hartmann |scene and wes unable to follow it bargaining effort. UAW officials | Ebbs on a charge of illegally pos-|for his part of Uncle Vanya in up," Mr. Van Gyseghem said. here said the fund now stands at| essing fire arms. The accused is - - -- - - only $7,000,000 but will be built to | free on $2,000 bail. . the prescribed level within three | for absorbing noxious | things required in a military mask airborne | must be. compromised. These in-| _ Property damage was in the mil- | lions. The Philippine Red Cross hur- | ried food, clothing, medicine and | tents to the stricken areas. | OCVINEWS BY RON OKE { For the students of OCVI, the arrival of spring with its balmy | breezes was topped off by the ar-| rival of their talented visitors from the south--the national and | state championship school band] from Hobart, Indiana. Attired in | blue and gold uniforms, this 80- piece band gave a delightful hour of concert music to the students Thursday afternoon. The musical renditions were gratefully accept-| ed and they also started Ocavite minds wondering, "Why haven't we something like this?" | FRENCH CLUB | A rousing and spirited closing of the year's activities for the | French club was held at the | home of the club sponsor Miss] Edmondson last Monday in the form of a French speaking party. | A pleasant mixtuer of games, | songs and skits made the even- | ing very enjoyable. Speaking of French, two stu-| dents of the :chool, Barbara Hall| and Dell McKay will have the opportunity to use thier knowledge of French when they take part| in the "Visites-Interprovincial" during the Easter holidays down in Quebec city. The visits between | Quebec and Ontario are an effort] to draw the students of the two| provinces closer together. SPORTS Another congratulation to the bantam basketball team, who fin- ally gave OCVI the distinction of | having a championship basketball team after a period of long, long waiting (e.g. 10 years). Two weeks ago in the District] Volleyball championships at Cen | tral, the OCVI seniors completely dominated the series. The strong Ocavite junior. and intermediate teams ended up in a tie for third place in the seven-team round robin affair. L] 2 Ss t Tr T 1| | f t f will week. But and 1 next say more about the outstanding yellow streamers and the count- less number of balloons should be | poted. 1 managed to count up 133 balloons floating around in the au- ditorium but that doesn't include the 60 or so 1 didn't count and the other 84 out in the hallways. | The students with the purple tint f| to their skin and the sunken eye- balls are probably the ones who them up. : 13 HORSES BURNED AURORA, Ill. (AP) Thirteen harness horses were burned to death Friday night in a fire at Aurora Downs, a one-mile track four miles north of Aurora. One| 18-stall barn was destroyed. Cause | of the fire was not determined. Loss was estimated at $80,000 to NATO Costs | | Variety night wa sheld April 1|committee will reject a proposal to that | decorations of purple, green and! Matsus, $100,000 by owners. chemical. The face piece is at-| tached to snug-fitting plastic ma-| terials which = make the mask] cling to the face and head. A! harness holds jt on the head Plastic lenses are used for" eye- pieces. The whole device ¢an be machine produced | The researchers said work is! also underway looking toward the development of a new military | mask that would have 'major im- provements in protection, vision compactness, speech transmission, wearability and comfort." | "The need for suhc improve- | ments is seriously emphasized with the advent of newer, more toxic hazards to which both 'the mili-| tary and civilian population may | be exosed.'" | But they said in the develop- ment of a protective mask for civilians--' 'where low cost and 1 | importance"--some of the clude ruggedness, long period | wearability, and eye-pieces that won't cloud up at low temper- speedy approval on home or modernization loans, Conveni- ent all-in-one payments arranged | to suit your income. Let's talk. BELLVUE FINANCE CORPORATION LTD. 29% Simcoe §. PHONE 5-1121 | ridge, a flight cadet stationed at 'Too Busy To Talk Now, Dulles' Reply To Japs urgent, U.S, officials in Tokyo have refused to grant a cut in Japan's share of the cost of stationing U.S. troops here. Japan's proposed budget is ba on a cut, NEWS LEAKS OUT TOKYO (AP)--U.S. State Secre-) Dulles sald today his schedule tary Dulles today declined an|would not permit adequate time to abrupt Japanese request for im- | prepare for talks now but sug- mediate top level policy talks in| gested a later date. Washington. Authoritative sources said lead: Opposition politicians herelers of Hatoyama's Democratic pounced on the turndown as a slap | party had decided on a political at the conservative government of | gamble--to try on short notice to Prime Minister Ichiro Hatoyama.|send a special envoy to Washing- Newspapers talked of a possible | ton. They wanted him (1) to "sell" political crisis. Government leaders |the new prime minister to the discounted this and admitted they | United States, (2) to get America had not given the United States|to temporarily let up on its pres- enough notice. sure for Japan to rearm faster Only Friday, Japan had pro-|and (3) to try to get America to posed sending Foreign Minister | "understand" Japan's need to re- Mamoru Shigemitsu to Washington | sume relations with Wer Commun- this week to try to iron out grow-|ist neighbors, Russia and Red ing differences between the United | China. Washington reply a 'disgrace and States and Japan, especially on re-| The government felt a new ap-|a death blow" to the Hatoyama arming the former axis partner. proach on the defence issue wascabinet, Shots Wound Brother, Son Death Victim CHATHAM, N.B. (CP) -- The brother and son of a woman who was knifed to death last June re- mained in serious condition in hospital here today after a Sunday shooting. Aylmer Glidden, 51-year-old vioodworker, with a bullet wound near the heart, continued under police guard. His nephew, Floyd Russell, 23, suffered forehead and shoulder wounds. Police said three shots were fired from a .38-calibre revolver they identified as having been in Glidden's @ossession. The shooting occurred in a shed at the home of Glidden's mother, Mrs. Louis Glid- den. Britain Tops Atomic Race NEW YORK (AP)--An announce- ment by a British government agency here Sunday said atomic weapons developed by Britain "are thought t. have no parallel in other countries" The statement was issued by the British Information Service in con- nection with the arrival from Lon- don by plane of Sir William Pen. ney, director of Britain's atomic weapons research centre at Alder maston. The scientist, here to attend a nuclear weapon test in Nevada, de- clined to comment on the BIS statement. Tokyo newspapers be cleared with the United States. Hatoyama told riers he was disappointed at Washington's reac- tion but he: acknowledged Jana should have consulted the United States earlier. A government source said "the me minister does not consider r. Dulles' reply an affront." Socialist party leaders called the $1 Billion OTTAWA (CP)--Six years dgo( have built forces designed to make today the North Atlantic treaty was | war unprofitable to any aggressor, signed, setting up an organization | we have developed invaluable of Western nations with the hope| habits of inter-governmental con- of maintaining peace and freedom | sultation and co-operation, and we in the world. have strengthened Canadian defen- The North Atlantic Treaty Orga- | €8 agaist the increasing dangers nization has had its price in men | Of direct attack, and money. It has cost Canada| SIGNED IN 1949 about $1,000,000,000 for mutual aid| The treaty was signed in Wash. in the form of arms and equipment | ington April 4, 1949, by Canada, to European partners in the| Belgium, Denmark, France, Ice- defence pact jas i laty, Lixerbourg, the Ne. The RCAF has sent an air divi-| therlands, Norway, Portugal, the glon to Europe and is training | United Kingdom and the United NATO fliers in Canada. The Cana. | States. Turkey and Greece joined adian army has an infantry bri- the alliance in 1952. West Germany gade in Germany will become a member if the Lon- The end is not in. sight. But don-Paris agreement on rearming External Affairs Minister Pearson, her is approved by "all NATO who signed the treaty for Canada countries, says the NATO contribution is a | wl Jait of one task Jhat it prite that must be paid for free- the 1st.Canadian Infantry Brigade Hy « ER in the Soest area of Germany is CREATED L NITY _ | now completing two years of over- Writing on NATO's sixth anni-|seas service. The 2nd Brigade, versary in the current issue of the d t with headquarters E external department's monthly | will replace the 1st when it sails bulletin, he says: for home this fall. ""It is good at this time to remind| The RCAF wings, in Marville, ourselves what NATO has meant | Metz and Gros Tenquin, France, for the security of our land, for | and Zweibrucken, Germany, are the solidarity of the Atlantic com-| equipped with Mark V Sabre jet munity of nations and for the | fighters powered by Canadian- peace of the world. designed and built Orenda en- "With our partners in NATO we! gines. Senator Would Oppose Any Ban On U.S. Defence of Chiang Isles WASHINGTON (AP) -- Senators | "defend Formosa' resolution sub- Walter George (Dem.-Ga.) and|sequently passed by Congress. William Knowland (Rep.-Calif.)| Morse's proposal was offered predict the Senate foreign relations | Friday in the midst of a barrage of criticism by Democratic sena- tors who classify themselves as liberals opposed to President Eis- enhower's handling of affairs in the Far East. Morse said the United States, in its policy on the offshore islands international law. ol 'Canada, the United Kingdom and France have made it plain they do not intend to support us," he said. His proposed resolution states that the U.S. "has no territorial rights or claims to the Matsu or Quemoy islands' and that U.S. de- fence of them 'subjects the United States to the charge of acts of aggression and involvement in a committee in approving the ' Chinese civil war." neath the rear wheels of a car from which she was thro#n as it skidded off a. highway and dropped down a 25-foot embankment near 'Brantford. John Paul McCuaig, 21, died be- neath a burning truck as flames forced back would-be rescuers. He was a passenger in the truck, which was in collision with a car near Arthur C. Sister, 4, 5 weir' Haliburton when hig car went out of control, crashed into a ditch and rolled on top of him. Henry E. Mulligan, 56, was killed when his half-ton pickup crashed into a tractor trailer near Burks Falls. HOSPITAL DEATHS Three men died in hospital of injuries suffered earlier in acel- dents, Harvey Smith, 29, died at Renfrew, Harvey Duncan, 33, died at Port Arthur and Antti Niemi, 62, died at South Porcupine. Eric Clayton, 13, was drowned when he plunged into a river near Lucknow, Ont., to recover his father's watch. He was hiking with a friend when he drop the watch. James McGarvey, about 70, died from exposure near Belleville, His body was discovered by a man out for a Sunday walk. ban American defence of the China coast islands of Quemoy and the George, who heads the commit- tee, said Saturday he is opposed to a proposal made by Senator Wayne Morse (Dem.-Ore.) to put Congress on record against use of U.S. forces to defend the Nationalist held islands. Knowland, the nate Republi- can leader, said He believes the proposal will be voted down '"'over- whelmingly." He noted that a somewhat simi- lar proposal by Senator Hubert Humphrey (Dem.-Minn.) had ben rejected 20 to 8 by the combined foreign relations and armed ser-| vices 16 Die Violent Deaths In East On Weekend Two men killed in the crash of | in a T-33 jet trainer were among 16 persons who died violently in east-| reported in Quebec. ern Canada during the weekend.| Traffic accidents took 10 lives, The aircraft buried itself in a|eight of them in Ontario. golf course Saturday about one|KILLED BY TRUCK mile east of London. The pilot was| Fifteen-months-old Philip - Bour- FO. J. A. Smith of London, a mem-| hon was killed when he was run ber of No. 420 reserve squadron. |gyer by a milk truck on Toronto His passenger was W. H. Could-|igland; Dorothy Smith, 15, was : ; killed when the car in which she Centralia. | was riding flipped gnd-over-end off A Canadian Press survey showed |a highway near Perth, 13 deaths in Ontario and one each! 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