o # This weird looking steel tow- er capable of handling "any guided missile now under con- sideration" has just been un- veiled at Oakland. Calif. Built Clarification On Story Is Asked HAMILTON (CP) Mayor George Kemp of nearby Dundas said Wednesday he wants to "cor rect the public impression" gained during January cffered to sell his children because when Otto Cizek hn, for, the U.S. Army, the tower | normally stands upright, but | can be tilted into any position down to horizontal. The 120- foot high tower. weighing 340,- "NEW GUIDED MISSILE TOWER 000 pounds will be disassembl- ed and loaded onto a train of i4 freight cars for transfer to Patrick Air Force base near Orlando, Fla.. for testing and servicing guided missiles. was ever seriously considering selling his children he said, "and the law enforcement authorities must have felt the same way or {this story might have had a very | different ending." Mr. Cizek was given work with 3 painting and decorating firm rere Jan. 30. He had offered to vell his children for $1,000 each and give the money to charity 'efter being out of work for two months The mayor said Mr. Cizek came lo Canada from Czechoslovakia in i949. He lived at Chatham, and for five vears. until August, 1956, at a house he had built at had seven very successful years in Canada." Mayor Kemp said Mr Cizek was offered help by a Toronto immi- grants organization but "never auring his visits to the town and wher authorities did he mention that this organization was willing to assist him." He said the family was given money by the Children's Aid So- ciety although Ontario government ¢ssistance could not be given to him because he was employable. MUSICAL INSTRUMENT The clarinet is said to have THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle VOL. 86--NO. 44 OSHAWA-WHITBY, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1957 PAGE TWENTY-ONR Washington Likely To Miss Wilson's Snappy Repartee | By BEM PRICE |consciously dignified senators and But before he could become sec- | WASHINGTON (AP) -- Charles address them as 'you men" as if retary, Wilson had to obtain ap- | Erwin Wilson, occasional racon-|they were mere corporation vice: |proval of the Senate armed forces teur, once told of a mamma whale | presidents? committee, This was the begin- warning her baby whale that| Who will call the politically po- ning of his long immersion in hot {"only when you're spouting are tent National Guard a haven for water, {you likely to be harpooned." |draft dodgers during the Korean| ut of his appearance before the The statement is memorable War? ; comittee in January 1953 came chiefly because few high officials And who will be left, after Mrs. the now famous expression, "for in government have ignored this Wilson departs, to agitate the years I thought what was good | choice bit of advice more persist-|olives in the teatime martini by for the country was good for Gen- ently than Charles Ervin Wilson, pablely griticizing the president [eral Motors and vice versa." U.S. secretary of defence. of the Unite es"? | 'As one result, yelling for the| For four years the former pres-| There vara mighty hassle over Iscalp of the 67-year-old Wilson [ident of General Motors has been ites with GM seems to be a local pastime [in and out of hot water with as- .s < There are some reports he will/sorted congressmen and labor In the end Wilson obained com- |continue in his job only until leaders, usually over something mittee approval only after he had |around mid-summer. he has said. |agreed to seel his GM stock. The | "If Wilson goes and takes his out-| On Nov. 20, 1952, president: price was $2,250,000. Sometime spoken wife of 44 years with him, (elect Dwight Eisenhower tagged later he figured that by selling at [this is going to be a far duller) Wilson to become secretary of de- [that time he lost about $2,000,000. town. |fence. At a press conference an| If his initial appearance before 1iCY BLUE EYES hour after the appointment was the committee demonstrated any- Who will be left to call the White announced, Wilson promised to thing, it was that Wilson wasn't a House a "dunghill?"" Who will fix |give the job "the darndest whirl it! politician in the usual sense. He an icy blue eye on a battery of 'lever had." |proved this again rather success- - - i -- - {fully on Oct. 11, 1954. | On this day Wilson, at a Detroit | press conierence on unemploy-| ment in Michigan, said: "I've al-| ways liked bird dogs better than| kennel fed dogs. You know, one Rocking Queen's Park At-A-Glance ENEFetInE Chair Ma ) 4 By THE LANADIAN PRESS |vell." , 1957 Wilson apparently meant that if Wednesday, Feb, 20 CCF Leader MacDonald charged there were no jobs in Detroit some ey se that special retirement 'bonuses of the unemployed should look for Isere paid to the government's work elsewhere. (CP)--The political favorites in the civil serv-| Wilson's latest excursion into ice {the headlines came after he ob-| The charge was denied by Pro- served that "a sort of scandal . . . -incial Secretarv Dunbar. a draft dodging business' devel- A bill given first reading would oped in the National Guard dur- sive nrovincial assistance to moth.|ing the Korean War. and the'r dependents on al The fur flew right up to the tral Nova Scotia village turns out scale tied tu zctual expenses of [White House, Wilson later ex-| about 5.000 wooden rockers each the families. __|plained he didn't mean to cast year for sale in the four Atlantic Gordon Innes (L--Oxford) said slurs on individual guardsmen but provinces the government appointed advis- that the system which permitted The old wooden rocker, once cry board to the Ontario Agricul men to escape the Korean draft found in every kitchen and parlor|tural College is a political ma- was wrong. President Eisenhower and on every veranda in summer chine, 5 |called Wilson's remarks 'unwise.' is still in considerable demand, Harold F. Fishleigh (PC--Tor-| For Mrs, Wilson that tore it. She but the wicker rocker is pretty/onto Woodbine suggested that said she was "indignant" and the well a thing of the past Hydro Minister Connell "put On|pregident's statement was "un- However, says Mr. Creelman, the gloves and declare war onj.ajjed for: the modern platform rocker is in-/the United States for increasing = jyst before this Wilson had been creasing in popularity. It doesn't|!le diversion of Lake Michigan cajjed to the White House. When tip, doesn't damage the base- water through the Chicago drain-|,. emerged he was asked if he| boards in a room, stays in one|®R€ canal, __|had a statement. Retorted Wilson: | |pldce and yet provides the same |""This is not my dunghill. Any: | |soothing motion He points out that in the old days|thing to be announced, somebody A lot of tired businessmen would/many a good and sound business'else ought to announce.", think better and get more done in|venture got its start to the peace-, Wilson apparently referred to | BASS RIVER, N.S. old rocking chair may be stand- ard equipment in business offices some day, says James Creelman, who has made a lot of them. | He's proprietor of the Dominion | Chair Co., whose plant in this cen- ¢1s SPARKLER AT NATIONAL GUARD WAREHOUSE Sparks from a National Guard | warehouse fire at Bowman Field | blew over a parked airplane | sputtered like a huge sparkler. Firemen estimated the loss in setting the fabric, afire and it | the hangar used as a warehouse at $200,000. The fire was con- trolled before it spread fo a hangar housing 51 planes. Members work together for the good of the whole and that is the |secret of its success. We learn {to compromise when necessary." | Mrs. Kissick said she believes {the Council of Women compels Knowledge Seen Vital Br = VANCOUVER (CP)--The presi- capsule form, discouraging the dent of the British Columbia Coun- average woman from digging up cil of Women says knowledge is facts. the key to a place for women at| np. Kigsick h i i 3 it x as been interested the policy-making abies of eiviz i club work since 1937, when she nd higher government. became active in the West Van- Mrs. G. W. Kissick, who was to|couver Townswomen's Guild. preside at the B.C. council's an-iSince then she has held office on nual meeting in Victoria Feb. 20-/tne YWCA board here, the North 21, told a reporter the councilshore Council of Women, West "has Degh called the parliament vancouver Community Centre and "Members study public affairs He North Shore * Lady Laurier on all levels and look for thel go. y.q peep president of the Josue nd Ue ong study B.C. Women's Liberal Association and then make recommen-|,,4 chairman of several chari- dations : "Over the years, the council has table drives. had a great influence on Canadian laws, particularly those affecting women and children." TO HOLD COURSE ! TORONTO (CP)--The Ontario LEARN CO-OPERATION arena managers certification One of the council's greatest course will be held at the Ontario values, Mrs. Kissick said, lies in|Agricultural Col'ege Guelph, May 'Sanctions' Explained By THE ASSOCIATE PRESS "Sanctions" is an odd word. In ordinary use, sanction of something means that it's ap- proved. . But in legal terms, carried over into diplomatic talk, "sanctions" denotes restriction an intervention that tends to bring pressure upon a person or government. And that's what United Nations diplomats are talking about in dis- cussing whether to vote sanctions against Israel. FIRST ATTEMPT | The term came into active dip- |lomatic use in the 1930s in the .eague of Nations, a predecessor f the United Nations. Article 16 of the League of Na- tions covenant was the first at- iL ol been invented in 1690 by Johann the long run if they'd take time|ful rock of a rocking chair. an ancient Roman proverb that a bringing together women who rep- 1-31. OAC physical education di- temp t to organize a system of in- be couldn't find work fandwich East, Ont. and 'this "I do not believe that Otto Cizek would seem to indicate that he itive reed instriment. HE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE CARRIER CONTEST STARTS TUES., FEB. 26 12 New Starts | Weekend Trip Wins Trip fo... MARCH BUFFALO and | 29-30-31 a] iagara Falls ALL EXPENSES PAID! 3 Months Start Will Help Your Favorite Carrier To Win! Denner of Nurnberg from a prim- out for a rock in the middle of aj Of course, like everything else, cock crows loudest on the dung- resent differi i William M ; ay 3 Ld ve S iffering shades Lec . t | sanctions to enforce busy day, Mr. Creelman believes.'the old rocker costs more now. 'hill in his own barnyard. » "This is Hing Shades ot (Pinion laay. Ala Hebel said Tues Sorma ions security. It imposed on nhs Rau -- Ruthin i o : A ------ All Carriers Invited To Attend BIG THEATRE PARTY MONDAY, FEB. 25 7 P.M. --at-- SIMCOE HALL -- 387 SIMCOE SOUTH Winners will stay at Hotel Buffalo and will be guests at MacDoel's Restaurant, also visit the Museum of Science, the Buffalo Zoo, see a Cinerama production, "The Seven Won- ders of the World," at the Teck Theatre and "The Ice Follies", at the Buffalo Memorial Auditorium. Remember! All Carriers Will Receive Details of Contest at The Big Theatre Party at Simcoe Hall, 387 Simcoe South, on Monday, February 25th-7p.m.