TIMES-GRZETTE Z : Classified Advertising. RA TELEPHONE NUMBERS 3.3492 3-3474 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle Weather Forecast Variable cloudiness and light stiow, Moderate winds, Low tonight 80: High tomorrow 35, . os Second-Class Mail, Department, Ottows Authorized Post Office OSHAWA-WHITBY, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1955 Not Over $ Cents Per Copy FORTY - FOUR PAGES PROF. REUBEN MOSES Indian Professor Is Speaker Here SEEK Starr Raps ' Red Drive ' For Markets The sale in Canada of aircraft made behind the Iron Curtain would seriously interfere with the local aircraft industry, Michael Starr, MP for Ontario Riding, said | today. | Mr. Starr was commenting on reports that a Czechoslovakian made twin-engined aircraft had ar- § rived in Oshawa to spearhead a commercial market for the plane in Canada. The Communist-built aeroplane, Aero Motokov 45, will undersell {- the similar Canadian product. | Mr. Starr accused the Commun- ist dominated countries of taking § {advantage of Canada's free enter- A youthful Indian professor who Moses said that he came from| ize system to sell a product pro- § visited 'Oshawa yesterday, is liv- turn such high dividends as the| { Prof. Reuben Moses of Chris-| padian dollars go a long way in India, Prof. Moses said he went de-| e, Indore, India, | tian Colleg ah inspiring and challeng-| g talk to 40 ministers who tended area conference of the| Council was held at George's parish hall here. In an | throu, at- his arts degree for only $400 of Churches. | through church assistance, is St.| medical doctor in a mission hos- pital. Prof. 3 interview later, Prof. studying theology in Canada. june Pi the poop families, "the un-\quced in government factories. | touchables,"" ing proof that few investments re-| .. pod his present position with t! Honey donated to overseas mission) contributed to mission work. but that he had| pny NTAGE SEEN "They have the advantage over | |us. They can deal under free en- terprise, but if we were allowed to sell our aircraft over there, the government would be the only like- ly buyer", said Mr. Sfarr. "It is. up to the federal govern- ment to do something about this. If they think it wise to allow this | Shen there is not much anyone |can do about it. currently] "ooo mount of eriticism 'or ob- J3eetions seem to have any effect he help of Canadians who had To illustrate his point that Ca-| gh four years of college to His wife, who was also educated a Moses is Cabine By HARVEY HUDSON PARIS (AP)--The French cab- thet scheduled today to Whether fo dissolve the Na-| Assembly in a rare manoeu which would give Premier Ed.| Faure the early elections Par- I! denied him. THolding a confidence vole on a 40,¢ ural question--but actually | oust them from office under a titutional clause never appli- whether to order the assembly dis- solved or merely hand in its own commented on e before. cle 51 of the 1948 constitution | resignation. The latter action would muni s that when two cabinets have|set in motion the fami thrown out within 18 months of French politics | consultation with party ¢ choice of a prospective premier, OW, weeks of negotiation to line up|vakia is now nothing more than assembly ance was ousted from the pre-announcement of 'a new "constitutional majorities' -- than half the assembly's 625 members--the cabinet can dissolve assembly. Pierre Mendes- Says Critics Must Accept Some Blame For Rink Fiasco Fwo candidates for the 1965 city|of land to meet council elections last night stated/ments, highly commended ; orth Oshawa arena proj-|for their offer to supply this arena hae he 3 in opera. |and wanted to know why the pro ponents net could be easily put tion iiership by 4 vote of 319 to 273) less than 10 months ago. net's decision to dissolve must be/ment to Bela Machinery Company, taken with the president of the re- Toronto, is receiving a .paint job | publ i as | ident of the assembly. { Tuesday night w g to stave off the early par- coy at Elysee Palace munis entaty balloting--the assembly | oq Schneiter declined to give his everywhere," he protested. "They erthrew the government Tuesday | ,qvice ght, 318 to 218. But by their! ,ith party leaders in the assembly pping majority against Faure, (oqay After these talks he said he elf-discipline id n over-enthusiastic deputies yo.4 make his recommendations than ourselves. We should attempt it possible for the cabinet ¢, Coty in a letter. on them." Bai 8 Se | Federal Justice Minister Garson has refused to comment on the i This- is vernment po- icy. t .{inspeets. an ; licy . on matters of alifical secur: he Os airport, plang. {Fivonve progam f ior Mover Em ade] or gm pe jo ) commissioner to Canada today lasted. persons responsible for im- ie I { 1 I i porting planes built behind the Iron FAIRBANKS, Alaska (AP) -- A | {Curtain. { The constitution says the cab-| One such aircraft om eonsign.| Pierre Schneiter, assembly pres-iex Czech commisioner, claimed|Jet fighter plane, roaring out c= spent more than an hour Rusian's retain rigid control of control on a takeoff, mowed a ith President Rene! trade policies in satellite countries. deadly fire-strewn path through six Reports) 'Communists try to underséll us big Eielson air force base housing inits Tuesday and wiped out at least 13 lives. Two more persons were believed among the dead, who included year-old triplets whose parents and two brothers were spared. Six of eight persons treated after the crash and fire received crit- ical injuries. Possibly a score of firemen and volunteers suffered from frostbite in the 16-below-zero weather. Roaring along a few feet above the ground at an estimated 150 miles an hour, the F-84 piloted by Lieut. Alfred 1". Pounders, 28 veered at almost a 90-degree angle as it left the runway, witnesses AN AIRPORT ATTENDANT Aero. Molotov. 45 al ic presiding and after advice in an Osbawa hangar before use been received from the pres- in a cros-country sales campaign | Karl Bush, formerly Buzek, the they have succeed because patience, more more stamina will more and consulations claim thes until after tn disprove this claim, not nour- then could decide ish it." The cabinet tk To stand, Mr. Bush the recent Com- st decision to sell Czech-made routine arms and munitions {0 Egypt. "This matter was certainly not Prague, but at Mos remarked. "Czechoslo back his liar - presidential leaders, | decided at he eventual a province of Russia cabinet. | WAS COMMISSIONER - - Mr. Bush was Czech trade com missioner to Canada between 1937 fand 1938, and remained in this country during the war years, working for the Red Cros. He {now heads the Czech refugee or- ganization in Canad', In 1946, Mr. Bush said, he re- turned to Prague, where he was asked to resume duties with the trade commission. "I refused," he explained. could see which way the wind| "The plane bounced on one build- was blowing, even then." ing, throwing it all into flames," Before Mf. Bush returned to Can-| Hammer recounted later. "Then it support, and said. SAW IT HIT It soared over installations of the base for about a quarter of a mile then plowed into the housing area. Rudy Hammer, an electrical en- gineer employed at the air base, saw the plane thundering toward the six eight - unit apartment "1| houses. require- them their of the children's arena One candidate, Ald. G. B. Atter-jcouldn't do the same, |ada, he said. he met Maurice Hind-| bounced on another building and a sley, said that the critics of the|P rink project should accept some responsibility for its failure. "It hds been insinuated that cer-!lerested groups. tain people were trying to hide|inv certain facts in relation to the ac- nec ite | LANS APPROVED {public and representatives of in STARR RAPS (Continued on Page 2) "All meetings were open to the | wing flew off. Then it ripped down The press were ited and they tried to get the essary permission to have a dent act as pub- tivities of the Osh y| press corr Arena Association," said Ald. licity chairman. Attersley. | : "City ~ council encouraged the rink organization in their endeav- ors, loaned them $5,000, arranged te provide an additional two acres edge as let the c¢ "If there was any lack of knowl- 1 what was happening, ities accept the respon- ICE RINK (Continued on Page 2) LATE NEWS FLASHES Turkish Premier's Resignation Rejected ANKARA, Turkey (AP) -- Premier Adnan Men- | Reds RPE Re Imported from Moravia, plane will be used ta spark MA CZECH PLANE HE CANADA Vie ! For Trade By MIKE GRAHAM An aircraft built behind the Iron Curtain is now stored | in secrecy at Oshawa airport, officials of Field Aviation Limited. it was confirmed today by. Czechoslovakia the simple a cross-country sales came 4 paign by Dela Machinery Corp. (Canada) Limited Toronto: % The Daily Times-Gazette learned today from Bela representative that the aircraft has been moved quietly from Kitchener, to Malton, and then to Oshawa in attempt to avoid publicity. "If we receive further adverse publicity, we will move the plane again," declared W. Stonehouse, the Bela manager here. AWAITS PAINTING % The aircraft awaits spray-paint- Z ing in the Field Aviation hangar, 4 and is so far the only machine of i its type in Canada. i Substantial orders are expected i 4 by the Bela representative, since 4 the Czech-produced planes under- 3 competition by several : thousand collars. Closest rival to the Czech ma- The British Ministry of Supply has placed orders for the same type engine contained in the Moto kov, Mr. Stonehouse said. In addition to the exeguti aircraft stored at Oshawa, Bela corporation plans to. accept orders for two further models pro- duced by the same Czechoslovak f small trainer and a metal 8 are under to import an additional eigen to e most modern crop-dusting aircraft in the world. sell their nearest Canadian-built!anoth by a Toronto was built behind the Iron Cur-' oduced craft tain in Czechoslovakia. It will . used to spark - Minister Howe Bs Jet F a high-tension power line. From' ig o House Units there it smashed right through an hurtling through the air, feeding apartment house and scattered! the fires which had broken out in everywhere, .crashing into a park-|all the buildings. ing lot and wrecking cars." | Miss-Pamela Harris, '21-year-old Debris from the smashed build-|Eielson resident who had just ings covered the whole two-block|alighted from a bus a short dis- area in which they stood. Confusion| tance away, said the oil tanks burst was compounded as residents and{like bombs, and she saw the olunteers ran about attempting to| flames engulf one group of school salvage articles from the buildings. | children coming home for lunch. The tremendous force of the im-|/She never learned what happened pact sent apartment fuel tanks to them. Mayor May Call Out Guard To Aid Storm-Hit Buffalo BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP)--Mayor; The clatter of plows and sanders jteven Pankow said he might call|echoed through snow =- covered on the help of the national guard|streets during the night as clean-| 4 an Scarboro Town Spending TORONTO (CP)--A femporary ban on further long-range financ- ing by suburban Scarborough town- ship was ordered Tuesday 'by the metropolitan Toronto executive committee pending an examination of the township's present financial standing. The committee was told by its financial authorities that the town- [ship has applied for approval of} |capital financing $1,087,648 above the $7,000,000 recommended for this year. The committee asked for a re- port on whether the apparent needs of Scarborough for the next five to 10 years can be financed while maintaining a reasonable tax rate. | 3 Trad tempting to import these planes,' able "We rei electri Mpr,/ Stonehouse stated. ceived every encouragement." The Czech machines will be im- Josted ™ sections, and assembled a workshop leased from the Kitchener, Waterloo, and. Welland! airport, he explained. Two Canadian aircraft concerns|plained. were recently purchased by Bela, Its fol rate of climb, and oeurability make the plane ide for flight in mountainous country, 2a Mr. Stotiehouse, ise sa Ver: 3 {police on Border wel ! : i of 20,000 Mr. Stonehouse reported, so ade-| The plane cam put down on' a quate service facilities will available for the imported planes. TRAIN CANADIANS Czech mechanics are now train- ing Canadian personnel on the Motokov engines in the Kitchener workshops, Mr. Stonehouse sdded. "We have British instructors, also," he noted. 'These men have several ycars experience on the engines in England." Mr. Stonehouse claimed 14 years experience in the aero industry, having served as works manager for Vicker-Armstrong in Britain during World War II. | Stonehouse claimed. be large airport or in a Mr. Stonehouse claimed, and take off again, 'It can take off within 500 | in an emergency," he said. into the engine is a su which increfses power 15 per cent for takeoff." . Cruising speed of the plane is 39 m.p.h., with a top ef 190, and stall- ing speed is less than 50 m.p.h. he plane took part in the recest {Detroit airshow, and is perform ance produced 15 inquirieg from in- terested buyers in the Civic Race Lacks odav as this industrial border city up crews, aided by men and ma-| fought back from the wallop of a|chines from Rochester, tackled the record-setting November blizzard. | monumental job of clearing the The mayor declared a state of thoroughfares. emergency Tuesday night after ai The storm howled in from Lake personal tour of southern sections;Erie about noon Monday, and by of the city, where thousands of|the time it was over late Tuesday | abandoned automobiles have made Buffalo had a depth of 18 inches street cleaning an almost impos-|and many sections south of the sible task. Governor Averell Harriman has higher. | offere leity, and Pankow said he might/the previous November record of {take up the. offer if street crews| just over 17 inches for a storm in find they cannot complete the task. 1949. and provincial powers. The candidates were taking part/cluding completion of the Went- in the "Town Hall of the Air' or-|worth street bridge, opening of the new sewer treatment plant, authorization for building a new Chamber |home for the aged in Oshawa. CKL Any Fiery Issues Speeches made last night by the[speaker, claimed the largest pro- 1 5 i for|gram of public works in the city's city had four feet, with drifts much igo Oghawa City Council did not|history was accomplished during . over his term of office. d state help to the snowbound| The 18 inches for the city erased | nich the election is going to be| 'It has always been a foregone conclusion that the mayor of Osh- awa may enjoy a second term of office by acclamation," Murdoch promised to endeavor to/Down stated. "'I am not receiving three mayoralty candidates produce an; firey issue fought. | Mayor Norman Down is stand.| ing on his record, A. Hayward/ improve the procedure under|t which council operated John Naylor is calling for a re: distribution of municipal, federal|V Junior| ganized by fhe Oshawa with! of Commerce B DOWN SPEAKS Mayor Norman Down, the firstibe in office when work began on and W. RECORD SHOWN were given by Mayor his privilege." Details of the more ambitious vorks projects during the year Mayor Down, in- and The mayor said he was glad to Minister's Wite Horrified the new multi « million at shopping centre, reputedly largest and most modern in Can- ada, and referred to the project as a welcome addition to the city. He admitted a parking problem existed downtown, but sald every effort was being made fo ar- range more space, so that out-of. town visitors might ve cars to shop with Oshawa mer- chants. . , Council members and heads of civic departments were thanked for their co-operation by Mayor Down, who said that he en his ' year's work with their help. "If the people of Oshawa see fit to elect me for a second term, I CIVIC RACE LACKS (Continued on Page 2) Make Every Day deres submitted his resignation today, but Pres- ident Celal Bayar rejected it and directed him to find a new cabinet. 4 Orders Dissolution Of Peronista Party 4+ BUENOS AIRES Reuters -- The Argentine gov- "ernment today ordered the dissolution of the Peron- « ista party. . At the same time the government, issued a decree restoring the newspaper La Prensa to the Paz family. - - " By Baptist Women Drinking | TORONTO (CP)--The Canadian the FCC resolution is in order | Temperance Federation resolved|since the federation had been ad- | Tuesday to ask the United States|vised to do. it by temperance; |Federal Communications Commis-|groups in the U.S. The resolution | sion tosput an end to the !'sabo-|asked that the FCC restrain brew-! |taging of Canadian anti-liquor ad-|eries, wineries and distilleries from | vertising laws by beercasts on Buf-/using U.S. radio and television sta-| |falo television and radio stations." |tions "to get their message across! | Tt also heard a claim by Mrs. |to Canadian audiences." | {Ross Eaton of Sackville, N.B., that| Rev. Ben Spence, a veteran tem- | members of some Baptist women's | Perance Se suggested ihe 15d 1 oh £toups are among the 64: per cent) lackiist" all "firms which use! jo Canadian. wormen who Fink. Buffalo stations to advertise their} Mrs. Eaton, wife of a Baptist) hr odyets. | 128 Dead, Scores Missing After Storm MANILA (AP) -- Toll of an unseasonal tropical storm was raised today to 128 dead, scores missing and widespread destruction in the southern and took part in the of election candidates broadcast program | ALLAN CANNING (CENTRE) directs the Oshawa Junior Cham- | | ber of Commerce "Town Hall | speeches and many answered of the Air" at city hall last night. | questions sent in by listeners | the 1955 elections i minister, said: member of the civic affairs committee, and the other mem- ber of the broadcasting pamel is Don Browne, Ontario vice- president of the organisation. the Jaycees civic affairs com- mittee which in endeavouring to create greater public Interest in On Mr. Can- bers: of our missionary societies are drinking. I was told by one friend that they are even giving cocktall parties." SAYS IN ORDER "I have eveh heard that mem- I c 4 vi Mrs. Eaton said the: number of | women alcoholics is increasing as apidly as the number of men' al- oholics. The figure had Jumped 7 per cent during the last 10 ears. Women were needed who could | I + central Philippines. w All 27 mayoralty and aldermanic ' The program was organized by ning's right is Lloyd Akin, a ~Times-Gazette Phote | Dr. H. M. Rae of Ottawa said "glamorize abstinence." I "The plane has : foe? Syceling