Daily Times-Gazette, 14 Jun 1955, p. 13

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0 R hr pr ry mm DAwY TIMSGATETYS, Tus, Spo 1 45 1p Events, Places CHEER MARILYN'S DEPARTURE FOR CHANNEL SWIM. a a wa th 4 ain " i coy a PRESIDENT GETS SMALL RIRCRAF T : i . . CC " ch we mal TO 0 Vl BE avoid heavy traffic and also cut | pane of ont 3) ote down time of the trip from iwo accompany them. 3 hours by auto to 30 minutes by .Ceniral Press Canadian PROMOTED Draper, the ETERS FERIRI BENIN RIERL TR Boe BOOM TOWN To most Canadians, Chibou- gamau, Que, is a new copper mining sit 0 those who Visit and live in the town, however, it is the liveliest spot in Canada with more night clubs per capita than any other town in the coun- try. J gle Lyn is one of the night club entertainers who per- form in five establishments in the town of A A sentry guards the four-seat | plane in which President Eisen bower will fly from Washington to his farm in Gettysburg, Pa. 80 miles distant, The chief exe- -~ TWAT while she drove the truck. Re sult: Gordon burne d himself while baking, Georgia was a howling success as a truck dri- ver, Gordon is now hack behind the wheel and Georgia 1s back | in the kitchen | Central Press ' & k A SADDER AND WISER man today than he was a few weeks ago Is Gordon Marriatte, truck driver of Waterdown, Ont, Claim- ing he had a much tougher Job than his wife, Georgia, right, he took' over the housekeeping Canadian bon voyage and good luck, Choirs channel, Marilyn Bell and bands and cheers of .the SEATED IN the airliner that | English the crowd that asscmbl- took her to Britain to swim the | WAVES to a -- or NAB ROBBERY SUSPECT Seventeen - year « old Claude Gingras, a robbery suspect, is held by police after he was found, exhausted and hungry stumbling along a road near St, Raymon Quebec City, The youth, one of " Que., 50 miles west of | h three wanted in connection with the armed robbery of $3,000 from a bank at St, Marc, Que, is es ted by Lieut, Conrad Giroux of Quebec Provincial Police who directed a four-day search for (CP Photo) 5 6 SHIPS TUNGSTE metal deposits, is being shipped after New { toring i shipment of n ince has been tungsten mine at Bur miles northeast of lericton The shipment, though small compared to the ultimate output expected from the huge base he scomplished by Hill, 65 > he DROPS Ladies' Air race ton to Cuba was Start of the from Washin held up by this § ane when ils pilot, Mrs. Zaddie RK Bunkep | She found she couldnt navigate | to New York. In operation at present is a 150ton concentra- tor but this will be expanded to handle 300 tons a day before the end of the year, Here two of the mine's 40 employees examine the ore as it is pro ed in a flota- tion machine Central Press Canadian 67 - yo from ¥ od | pu nto the con great-grandmother | hut | fel 8, Calif, dropp "HANGES IN the top - level command of Canada's armed ser- vices and in the department of national defense, set off a wave of speculation in Ottawa after official government announce. ments by Prime Minister Louis St. Laurent and Defence Minister Ralph Campney, The former an- nounced the appointment of Alr Vice-Marshal Frank Miller, air doput to the chief of staff at SHAPE In Paris, to deputy min- ister of national defence, Mr. Campney reported the re- tirement of Lt-Gen, G, G, Sim. monds, 52, as chief of the Cana- dian army, general staff and his replacement by Maj.-Gen. H. D, Graham, seen above. Now GOC central command, Oakville, Ont.,", 57-year-old Graham will be pro- moted to the rank of lieutenant. general, Otho G. Bell, one of. 21 Amer. can soldiers who refused repa- triation at Panmunjom, has had a change of heart and wants to return to his home in Olympia, Wash., according to his wife, Jewell, She received a letter re- cently saying that as soon as he can get a passport he will come back to her and their daughter, Paula, 4 Central Press Canadian - managed to return to d and rt all over age I entrants in mie ACC in, 1 the 1,1¢ fhe ~Central Press Canadian ROYALTY AT TOURNAMENT Graclous Queen Elisabeth smiles an acknowledgment of cheers from her subjects as she and the Duke of Edinburgh (rear) arrive to attend the royal BOTY HTS wie ¥ We >. We tournament in London. The event is an annual one open to officers and other ranks of the navy, marines and air force and in- cludes a display of the latest in Britain's military equipment. A JUVENILE DELINQUENT POSE A picture of juvenile defiance Is this pose of 17-year-old Jose Vargas, accused of stabbing James O'Farrell, 28 an instruc- tor at the: Joan' of Arc high school gymnasium in New York city, Vargas was 8 4 Ws, - 1 \ : ROMULSO'S SON GRADUATES Carlos Ro islands ticardo adu General and 'Mrs mulo of the Philippine congratulate their son, ordered out of go | the gym boxing class and when he refused to leave, O'Farrell took him by the arm. Vargas then pulled a knife from his pock- et inflicting a serious wound on the instructor, Central Press Canadian y in Washington, Philippine personal with the | town Univer | DC. The gor President cnvoy to rang of amha «Central Press Canadian OVER-RULED Maestro Leopold Stokowski is shown thanking his audience for the enthusiastic applause that fol lowed his conducting of a con. cert with the aymphot orchese tra _of the Hessian radio station in Frankfurt Germany, The photo was made Withegt Stokowski's as press photographers to take pic. tures; ~Central Press Canadian RELEASED One of the 250 Austrian pris- oners of war who had been se! tenced in Russia to long. terms of imprisonment as war crime fnals and who were released after the signing of the Austrian state treaty recently, Colonel Masera is shown in touching re- union with his wife, He is the brother-in-law of Dr. Kurt Schus- chnigg, former chancellor of Austria, who now lives in the United States. Col, Masera was the last commanding officer of the Austrian Guar battalion before its dissolution when Hit. lor, unnexed Austria in March, DIPLOMAT Douglas LePan, 41-year-old Tos ronto career diplomat, Is ex pected to be named secretary and research director of the royal commission delving into, Canada's economic future, A writer of poetry and former Canadian ministerscounsellor at Washington, he will head a group of economists in Ottawa. for his favorite pupil Coach Gus Ryder has a kiss k | + MOUTHPIECE Nikita 8. Khrushchev, Soviet Communist party boss, adopts the role of a peace-seeker in So- fia, Bulgaria, as he tells his audience that the recent Russian agreement with Marshal Tito of Yugoslavia will reduce interna- tional tension, Standing behind Khrushchev is Soviet Premier Nikolai Bulganin, --Central Press Canadian ¥ | ed at Malton, Ont, to wish her IT IS HARD to leave friends behind even for six weeks, crowd gave her a hearty send-off, 4 | BUT TEARS are f she sees an old SECRET NETWORK? This odd-looking network atop the dome of the Parliamentary library in Ottawa has passersby wondering if it might be a radar . installation, The effect is made by the ladders attached to. the peak of the dome so steeplejacks can paint the 15-foot weathers vane spire, (CP Photo PLACES WREATH ON MEMORIAL IN FRANCE Veterans Affairs Minister La. pointe places a wreath at the | new Bayeux Commonwealth memorial near Caen, France, The memorial honors 1,837 "offi cers and men of Commonwealth armies, including 270 Canadians killed in the Normandy lavas sion. g _ (CP from National Defenesd

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