¢ ww naar PIMES GAZETTE, Saturday, May 2, 1955 ditorials Whe Dolly TimesGazette (Dshaws, Whitby) published by Times-Gazette Publishers Limited 87 Simcoe Street South, Oshawa, Ontario. ig Four Powers Will Try 0 Ease World Tensions Oblnsldent with an historic ceremony Which Austria was given back her free- #8 & nation came the announcement floviet Foreign Minister Molotov ap- of a meeting of the four Big Pow- ; the world at the highest possible » The statement by Molotov was ade from Vienna, where delegates of powers had assembled to sign an ' peace treaty and make it effect- #0 3fter 17 years of occupation, first By Nasis and then by the allied pow- @% Austria has again become a free na: ; The remarkable thing about this is @be fast that tha nations forming the Big Pour were able without much difficulty Go meek #n agreement on an Austrian (] O09 might well express the fervent thet similar unanimity might gov- the deliberations of the forthcoming of the heads of state of Rus- Dwitain, the United States and France. Selieve that talks of this nature, if in the right spirit and with the right aftifude, hold the only hope for world peace. The alternative to open dis cussion must eventually be open warfare, for it is certain that a cold war will not remain cold indefinitely. If it is not ended, it may well flare up into a shooting war, That depends upon the wllingness of the major nations to negotiate and the good faith which they are willing to bring to the discussions. Certainly, no négotia- tions will be successful if either of the parties should come with certain pre-con- ceived notions which they are not prepar- ed to change. Negotions must be carried out in a spirit of give-and-take, and even of compromise. If both sides insist on holding all of their present ideas, the talks will be pointless. But this much is certain, if the nations do not talk freely with each other, and thus work off a lot of heat that has been generated, that heat is going to build up and up until it explodes the cold war into a world wide conflict. Our view therefore, is, let them talk, and let's hope they reach a sensible conclusion. raining Pilots For Peace we Poy the past 27 years Canada's 38 slubs, all members. of the Royal "Flying Clubs Association, have end efficiently continued to per- ® Bational service by providing pilot for Canada's steadily expanding @amereisl and military aviation. A nec- part of Canada's economy, dedi- 0 the advancement: of aviation in #09 aspects, thehe clubs are sponsored gviation-minded citizens of their com- pAb who give freely of their tme and Pumeess knowledge to tHe efficient opera- @mp ond management of these training Te record in two world wars, as we im the field of civil aviation ine with achievement, Apart A 'military record in the development of Canada's vast sesources has been largely de- on eommercial aviation. Canada Sled ome of the world's most air ha Depel Canadian Flying Clubs, and the men who so unselfishly guide their destinies without remuneration of any description, have contributed throughout the years in no small way to this achieve- ment. Day by day training pilots for the airlines, for our armed services, for our northern exploration and development, these clubs have béen truly "training for peace", - During the last war these same clubs operated 22 elementary flying training schools for the British Common- wealth Air Training Plan and graduated some 41,000 pilots to advanced training units. Today, while busy with peace- time pilot training, the flying clubs and the men who direct them, stand ready for the defence of Canada and for the mainten- ance of peace. . This 'week has been declared National Flying Club Week across Canada in due recognition of the efficient and compe- tent training facilities established at the 38 non-proft flying elubs to whom Can- ada'owes so much -- a fact which is not usually clearly realized, 'Make It A Safe Holiday "nt 7" diy weekend brings us to the first Pw belidey weekend of the summer sea- $0 Ris usually a weekend of very pd Wwaffic on the highways. Thousands oneple make it the occasion for driv- 9 % their summer cottages to. open dam for the long season. Thousands more fale advantage of the lang weekend to go J motor trips. The net result is ot the highways are more than usually @ovded with traffic for the three-day * Amether result, and one which is trag- fo i» that on Tuesday the newspapers will g 8 reckoning of the number of killed and injured in traffic acci during the holiday weekend. The is usually a black one. It is safe & my thet on Tuesday morning there fF be reports showing that some 30 or poops have lost their lives in motoring between today and Monday 3+! These people will all be just ordinary #Ble Thoughts «We Grist @d 90:lay down his life. We can give one day ot a time for all good causes he good shepherd; the good shepherd lay- @ows bis lide for the sheep.--John 10.1}. layeth down his life for the sheep. wn, Daily Times-Gazette OR Eki LE Ps-ostets Whitby) ¢ (established @hoenicle (establishes J871) and the Whithy 1863) Is published daily citizens, people like you and me. They will be people who, when they started on their motor trip, had no thought of the fate that lay in store for them, They will have started off with assurance that they would be coming back again in safety. But somewhere along the way, something happened, possibly due to human careless- or. lack of judg- ended because of ness, lack of courtesy ment, and 'their lives these factors. The most tragic thing about this holi- day weekend record is that the great majority of these fatal accidents could be avoided by the exercise of proper care and eaution and observance of the highway iraffic laws. We suggest that each mo- Lorist, before starting off on hig holiday trip, should ask himself the question, "Am I going to be one of the victims of a high- way accident?" and answer it by resolv- ing to drive with such care and caution as to make sure his name will not appear in the list of dead on Tuesday next. Other Editors' Views TELEVISION AT THE TOWER (London Times) In consequence of a ministry of Works decision that they were not in keeping with the character and dignity of their surroundings, the muitiplicity of individual television aerials on the living quar. ters at the Tower of London have now been remov- ed. A central "communal aerial now suffices. It is invisible from any part of the ground, Editorial Notes A Toronto man walked the distance r ~ Likens Minister WATCH FOR THOSE COUNTER - PUNCHES, SON, THIS CHAP /§ No PUSHOVER / GALLUP POLL OF C ANADA Four In Ten Adults Have Never Be na: atre where live professional actors n pleasure of seeing a professional t production. en Inside Theaire Can't recall 5 per cent. Total 100 per cent. plane 15 a aot 2 shown In e gional areas of Canada' have much' the same story to nowhere else in Canada does the figure rise to /60 per cent. rained interviewers for + the Canadian Institute of Public Opin- fon asked a. cross section of the population, 21 years and over this question: : 'Have you ever attended a the- tell. do 8 COILS, i. ... :. Wie, C who live on the farms of country have very little op 7 | don't portunity to see proféssional the- atre, only a little more Ah a ro the people have had gxperionce, compared n two-thirds in have been staging a play of course mean movies', As a Canadian gition this is the Ay 74 TY who have know e JropyiLm A the largest cis vies. More than half the men and Yes, have atfended 59 per cent, women on Canada's farms have No, have not 36 per cent. never seen a professional group To Caesar's By PATRICK NICHOLSON Correspondent The <Gaselte orrAWE- Tne Gamite part- ies in Parliament are in the happy position of being able to say "I fold you se" to the prime min. ister. This situation would bring satis- faction to any mere mortal. But as politicians, these opposition MPs and especially that indefati- able needler Stanley Knowles rom Winnipeg, have the added y of being proved by the record be Sores in what is the big- gest Mralg t political scandal un- earthed here in years. And to crown their happiness is the fact that this e was QUEEN'S PARK Gemmell Leaves Mark On North By DON O'HEARN Bpecial Correspondent The Times-Gazette SUDBURY The late Welland Gemmell has left his mark on the North Local observers feel that PC's will be returned in pracitcally all 1i of the seats they hold here. And they give most of the credit to the deceased minister of lands and forests. RECORD SPEAKS There is nothing outstand| about the PC candidates in two Sudbury seats, ' On a straight man-to-man basis the Liberals might sven have an edge. But the Frost government record stands out North. after he was kicked out of th CCF party for alleged Com i U.K. Railwaymen Call For Strike LONDON (AP)--British ' railwa firemen and engineers today ealle a country-wide railroad strike for May 28, two days after the general election. At almost the same time, a dock union threatened to strike whose machination has proved to be a boomerang which should sever his political neck in almost apy democratic country under almost any government, Number One topic in Ot tawa today is of course the com- Jlicated spider's web in which the orable J, J, McCann has dis- honorably enmeshed either him- self or his cabinet colleagues or his business associations or all pisode off by a Liberal cabinet minister, .ainst four key British ports next three .donday, three days before the vot- ne rail strike threat sprang out of a demand for higher wages viewpots. ' ® heen He to v leading a. in the Sudbury area, making his } 88 an in- suranee agem. He s thr d a walkout at London; Liverpool, Manchester and Hull in an inter-union jurisdictional dispute. The walkouts would para lyze much of Britain's transport, Report Explosion Near Kilimanjaro here in the: § In fact you might say it stretches se ut. For largely through the ef- orts of Mr. Gemmell a great deal of money has been poured into northern Ontario in the past five vears. And a great deal of it has gone into roads. From North Bay to Sault Ste, Marie No. 17 High- way is now a very exceptional road. Also the government has [ished through the road from Sud- ury to Parry Sound These are things that the people can see and feel, even if it is in the seat of your pants. And the pundits believe that they will mean the difference on June $9. VETERAN BACK An upknown quantity in the pew Nickel-Belt riding is Robert lin The former CCF and indepen- dent CCF member is contesting the riding. ' Mr. Carlin of course, held the Sudbury seat from 1043 to 1048, being defeated by Mr. Gemmell ar- CCF wood, present sy: short five Shinute poo. fy 8 or three people crowded em and a few broad generalities ex- pressed in stilted ases isn't a has one Ww may 'and may not be done an it would seem wise for it to these and soe if 8 better ula couldn't be by on cation Minister Dr. Duniop dergoing heavy fire from both the and Liberals. He is pay- politic: now for reversi former Education Minister Dana Porter and goin back to the 'little ved 'sch house" a w, It i obvious when he s that it wouldn't go over too well on the hustings. IN DAYS GONE BY 50 YEARS AGO The editor of the Vindicator be- moaned the fact that, in an in- dustrial area, the schools were not teaching any trades, and that in Oshawa there were less than 25 boys who were apprentices, May 24th was a great day, be: ginning with a callithumpian par- ade, to Prospect park, where base- ball and lacrosse games followed. Athletic contests were held and fireworks in the evening ended the day of fun. Jack Challes was presented with a gold watch and a bouquet of roses on his retirement from the Anglican church choir as a boy soprano soloist. His voice was changing. ; An agreement was reached be- tween the Toronto and York Rad- ial Railway Co. and the epuncils of Pickering and West Whitby townships, for the entending of the radial line to the town of Whit by. B. H. Howard and Sons, paper hangers and painters, had a sale of wall paper at four cents a roll, The Vindicator announced that someone "had borrowed the loan of a $15 piccolo from the town hall" and stated that it had better h NAIROBI, Kenya (Reuters)--A om an {sor fri ntary --veport fr a I aon station today gave bi searchers their first concrete clue to fate of an East African E Alr- ways asenger plane missing singe ednesday with 20 al ly T report, brought here by tribal runners. said. an explos and fire were sighted on the squth- ern slopes of snow-capped Mt, jo manjaro Wednesday night about the rane the DC3 airliner disap. peared, A fleet of 17 planes which took off early today to continue the search for the missing plane was immediately diverted to the scene of the report. MARILYN, GUS, HONORED TORONTO (CP)--Honorary life memberships in the Ontario Socie for Crippled Children were oe sented rsday to swimmer Mar. fin Bell And her coach, Gus r. scrolls. at the society's annual meeting for 'distinguished service for their work with crippled ehils dren Bt the Lake Shore Swimming ub. Ce Sr cause for his thumb-sucking, I think you'll usually find a child of one, two or three, or even older, will suck his thumb when he's bored or tired. Maybe he's playing too hard, or maybe he's not playing enough. Watch him. If he tires too easily, slow him down a little. \ On the other hand, maybe he should be kept busier than. he is, Give him several toys to play with, keep his curiosity aroused, keep his hands busy. Frustrated youngsers sometimes suck their thumbs. It is important itl T be returned or the respons per. son suffer the consequences. The following advertisement ap- peared in the Vindicator: "The New Woman is a distinct creation of our couches. Make men feel like new also. The soft give- away variety exceptionally invit- ing where men or women begin to nod, We guarantee one - half hour's sleep on ome of these couches, after dinner, will work more wonders than the apothecary ever commanded. Rogers and Mc- Lean, Undertakers. Those who went sucker fishing proved to be the suckers. The music pupils of Miss Baim- bridge gave two recitals at Tod's parlors on King stret. FOR BETTER HEALTH 0 carefully all of your child's r ts and ti Don't come out with an automatic No" just because you're busy at the' moment. Here's another tip. Try giving him some chewing gum. Quite fre- uently this is an effective eure. r, if your child is old enough, try to reason with him. Maybe you'll find that rewarding him for not sucking his thumb will help him break the habit. QUESTION AND ANSWER BFX. Will you please tell me if an injury to the left breast might become serious, and is there any treatment? I am 17. Answer: Whether or not the in- Jury to your breast is serious de- ends upon its extent and severity. n order to be sure that no dam- age has been done, it would be well for you to have an examina- tion hy your doctor, : upon guaranty t ve Both were given hr For Js pest. a regular fea. re P tu y here have been opposition attacks the prime minister for per- mitting a member of his cabinet, namely Dr. McCann, to retain a directorship in a commercial un- dertaking. In this case, the dual is especially undesirable as Dr. McCanp, a director of the pany of Can- a, n be involved in the Ea toatmsebthiions ib be Made 10 esenta - ¢Cann, the minister of na- tional revenue, who assesses those for Auneention duties. ike Caesar's A cal minister, lie. must co of N Lk 4 the rimaes o t Ly & which the cabinet minister obtains te rets which have a com- as ie; so to Brotset them, selves, as i tradition that cabinet ministers id, on assuming of- fice, sever any connections whieh they might have with the world merce by yay of digeciatships. N meth even worse has Happened, The cabinet minister supervising the assessment of an estate, the Trust Company admin- of actors in "live theatre". qa) Per Cent Lk ; Yes No Farms a7 B58 Largest cities 69 25 hether it's because they efjoy the theatre more than men or have more opportunity to go, a notably larger proportion of women (4 per cent) have been to a profes. sional play than of men (58 per cent, . The increased ehances to enjoy "live" theatre that lies with me passage of time, is shown in the fact that 61 per cent of those Canadians who are 50 or over have anended a performance, compared ot With only 51 per cent of men and n women in their 20s, World Copyright Reserved Wife { &, istering that estate, and a pol itician interested in winning local election fight, have all g inextricably confused with each other hecause they ave all in ef- fect with Dr. MeCann, The company of which Dr. Me- SIGN FONDA Cann is a director, the Guaranty HOLLYWOOD ' (AP) Henry Trust Company of Canada, was Yonda Thursday was signed for the appointed administrator of the starring role of Pierre in an Italian estate of the late John Drohan, a Movie production of "War and lumber baron of the Ottawa Val. Peace." Audrey Hepburn Nd her ley. As minister of national rev. husband, Mel Ferrer, previously enue, Dr. McCann was head of the Were announced for the other top government department which as. oles. sessed the live Mr. Drohan for = income tax and the dead Mr. Dro. han for succession duties, CHARGE GUELPH DRIVER KITCHENER (CP) George PARISIAN POSTCARDS Thompson, 23, of Hespeler, w In one of these roles, or pes. fatally injured Thursday ~ night haps in both, Dr. McCann eame when his motorcycle was struck to see receipts among the late by a car pulling on to the highway Mr. Drohan's papers, showing that from a refreshment stand. Police he had made cash contributions to have charged the driver of the car, Jim Dempsey to finance his elec. 'Elna M, Pellin, 29, of Guelph, with tion campaign as a Tory candi- careless driving. date for the Ontario legislature, :) the very constituency which Dr. paris is cCann himself represents as a B on o Liberal in the federal Parliament, fm. aang A Road Not Dr. MeCann soméhow got photo- and Vendome Cinemas, stat copies of these receipts. They like lasting for a long time Jooks were significant because Jim t Dempsey had failed to observe the 4 he Sumber of people wailing legal requirement report re- reipt of these contpibutions, This is a fracture of the law of which most politicians of all parties are probably consciously or unconss ciously guilty at some time. i several ¥ ars were to slapse ore Dr. McCann did anything elassical * eternal triangle tl about these photostats. Them, on it nevertheless ends ra stron, the eve of an Ontario provincial man killing the youth in a mos fron, heh Ore Ci: Biting nay nd he gi) er Frost aside at the Dominion. b provincial conference here and, ac- completely out of her ming. cording to the natiopal Tory pres- ident George Hees, surreptitiou: showed him that. photostats wi all the seductiveness of a, Pa sian vendor of dirty pamicards,k rg 8 tion of he 0, Wi draw his support from the techn- ical lawbreaker Jim Dempsey. "La Strada", the Italian get in for each 'performance, I is a sordid and realistic story of a strong man who breaks chains across his chest in market square and at fairs, a brutal individual, a simple-minded waif girl and anothe er equally below average tightrg walking youth, While i# is ao & me, feminine role ig taken by a new comer, Giuletta Masina, ed ga the clown woman. In i. She has the natural face of a clown, nd some people hive gone.as far x She is certainly, not. pry hi I would not say she is Te he, Far from this act exterminating 18 2 yery curious, sensitive pers Mr. Dempsey politically, it has S0Bage with enormous ro rallied his supporters behind him 2 rag ed haircut and so disgu and may cost the Liberals the seat ingly dirty that she seems positive in the next federal election teo, 1¥ fo smell, even on the screen. still to be answerd is the ques. Her life with the brute in a filthy tion which may prove to nost Dr. trailer attached to a motor boke, McCann much more than the pro-- their only home, is unbelievable, verbial $64: Where did the per- HOUNDS FOR PUBLICITY sonality of the cabinet minist It is a to see that all Ita cease, and that of the trust com- ian girls sve not oy the Tallobrig i r over? pany direrior (ake ove masterpiece on other merits + hg PARIS LETTER By FRANCES KNECHT ; Special Garvespondent te The Times-Gazeite PARIS, France -- After a week of really summer weather, so hot indeed that bathing pools were crowded and tennis players queued up to get a court, back we are again to really chilly winds, heavy storm clouds and warm clothing. People are distinetly feeling the effects of such sudden changes, and one doctor put down the num- ber of suicides and other crimes to abnormal weather conditions. Paris, for some months now, has been undergoing excavations. One after another the pavements are being dug up to a depth of six feet. Walking out of my Jalevay the other day, I nearly feel into the Saping hole, which no one had Anoughi bridging until I protest: Apparently every 30 years or so the electric cables have to be re newed. It is certainly a big job, and lasted a two weeks around the Place Victor 'Hugo. It was very amusing to see the gangs of workmen, mostly North Afri- cans, threading the huge pipes un der what had me a bride--the little market of the Rue Mesnil. The poor men kept having apples and potatoes falling on their heads, while one narrowly missed having a whole crate of leeks crush him, Now the Boulevards are geting AGES Streets Torn Up Annoy Parisians the beauty of the star. \ We are all getting a little tired of publicity being given to "star lettes" as they are called, whose only talent seems to be a pretty face and a low-cut neckline, It seems to be the fashion at the mo ment for fond mothers to push their young daughters as prospec tive film stars with the help of a good publicity agent. One hears their names, sees their pictures in the paper and when they finally hold a tiny role in a film are found it The funniest sight 1 have seen ba. have no acting ability what- in a long time was the enormous : A heaps of sand and earth piled up Yethouté gong, quite 30 ar a3 in front of the cafe terraces, while Jogards the aan new comer nd the people Sipping heir apperitifa it is fairly evident ihat in spite of could scarcely see over. The *% her physical attractiveness, she terprising cafe. proprietors =~ A8C cooms to have -- reading between thought up all kinds o {rigs © the lines--a disagreeable nature, sisguise these aw iu Jeans, which and is not on speaking terms with business. They had draped them her colleagues. This kind of public be oo] sloth d had ity can 'do no one any good, and With preity eslored slo 5. ang ad from what I hear from the Cannes stuc rows Oo ols y film festival, she proved a disa top. Who says the French are not hive dil dl 1 Publicity oo ar piv ig LOR cariain. Bumber at all costs, can only, in the long of films to be seen in hig letters on Tun, Re Spiel IG De EO opogrn the boulevards and Chaps EY {hose three remarkable artists of ae any oe Stradg bear this out. Let us French. nl fact, they are a my- hope that more such 'films are on stery td mest French peopl: For example, at the Balzac Cine- ma is "Ca Va Barder?"" The Coli see is showing "Razzia Sur La Chnouf". At the Francais is "Du Rififi Chez Les. Hommes." This is the slang known only to the Spache population. A dictionary exisits for those not in the know. It seems we shall all have to buy one if we want to follow the present epidem- ic of gangster films. The biggest actual S SN oda Ey i Empire ot eons success in Grond Central Terminal Look For The Reason Prince « Bolidays excepted), - The Canadian Press, The Canadian Daily the Omtario Provincial Dailies sad the Audit Bureau of Circulation. The 1s exclusively enlitied to the use for ve of oll npws despatches in the paper credited to The Assosiated Press or Reuters, and also the therein, All rights of special des , Publisher and General Manager. HOOD. , 'Managing Editor Pivest West, Toronts, Ontario, 223 Univer Montreal. P.Q. SUPSCRIPTION RATES 9 edmiers in Oshawa, Whitey, Brooklin, Pert ad Plekering, not over Ye per week. By Mall oF OMarie) outside carrier delivery areas $15.00 por vear AVERAGE NET PAID G@MCULATION FOR APRIL 12,533 from Toronto to Hamilton. The notable thing was not so much the distance as the fact that not one motorist ran him down. A man claims an endurance record for playing a piano for 165 hours. We once heard of a pianist playing The Stars and Stripes for Ever. Prince Charles is to be allowed to min- gle with other boys as he proceeds to his education. It will be a lot more fun, and more useful also, than being restricted to a home tutor, Why Child Sucks Thumb By HEMAN N. BUNDESEN.MD How do we keep our child from sucking his thumb? Parents fre- quently ask this. question, although thumb-sucking in an infant is per- fectly natural. Your youngster isn't going to suck his thumb for the rest of his life. He'll stop, eventually, of his own free will. Don't werry about that. But if the habit continues as he grows older, it should be cur- ed If he still sucks his thumb by the time he enters school, he will be ridiculed hy the other children and ths ill make him drop the habit fast. This isn't the best eure, to be sure, but it's effective. I think, though,, you'll want to break him of this habit long before he is of school age. I don't believe you'll have much luck with mechanien! devices such as mittens, cuffs, thumb-guards or adhesive tape. Putting bitter-tast- ing substances on your youngster's thumbs won't do much good either. Intead of correcting the trouble these things might make your child want to surk even more Scolding or nagging an older child won't cure him and might only make him unhappy and feel guilty. KEEP HIM BUSY You've got to determine the Piusomal Features Fast, Friendly Farm Service REPAIRS -- Home, aute, tractor, SPRING PLANTING -- Spreys, parn, machinery, etc fertilizer, seed. 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