92 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Monday, December 14, 1058 Disarm And Be Happy Bidault Tells Nato PARIS TOM Ms MASTERS N ia minister Georges Bidault told the opening session of the NATO min- isterial meeting today that Presi- dent Eisenhower's plan for an pool for peace would "di- nse material power the destruction toward the peaceful progress of man- kind." Bidault, chairman of the meet- 50 foreign, said to the mestly ence and finance ministers from the 14 North Atlantic member Souliries that a positive Soviet Toply bo the Eisenhower proposal would 0 Be "incalculable political consequences." He added: "Never before would disarma- ment convey so many promises of a happy life. The ministers crowded into the huge conference room of the Palais de Chiailot overlooking the Seine river for their building up the defence of Westerp Europe. Canada's delegation is headed by | External Affairs Minister Pearson and Defence Minister Claxton. | Later today U.S. state secrétary Dules was expected to tell them they must press on with their re- armament program . no mater That they hope will come Big Four's projected od conference. DULLES ADDRESS In his address today, Dulles was to emphasize: ' 1. That the Russian threat is still very great to the democratic way of life in France and the other NATO nations. 2. That the European army treaty must be ratified. 3. That the 12 German divisions to be raised for the army are not the only impo t feature of the pact; that equ important is the impetus it will give to the inte- gration of western Europe. But Dules also was reported planning to tell the French unless the European Defence Community (EDC) treaty is ratified by next spring, he can't promise how much money Congress will be wiling to apiopriate for European defence Bidault was expected to ask that the North Atlantic Treaty be ex- ter | tended to 50 years from its present limit of 20 years. That would make its binding ties on the U.S. last Germany and France together-- and provide an additional obliga- tion on the United States to pre tect France against any fu German invasion. with such a French request. Hopes of concrete results from the Berlin meeting of the British, French, U.S. and Soviet foreign ministers are a powerful deterrent to French ratification of EDC. French and U.S. officials are aware'the French assembly won't approve German rearmament so long as there appears any chance that the Berlin parley may produce 30me other road for Germany to ake. Coronation Carpet Brings $10 A Yard Pod RON EVANS Press Staff Writer LONDON (CP)--Eight Canadian churches and chapels are receiv- ing sections of Westminster Ab- bey's lush blue and gold Corona- tion carpet after biddi in a £9 000 jigsaw sale. The carpet, 8: ether with other Coronation furnishings from the Abbey, was sold by the ministry of works to Belp de defray expentes. Prices ranged £4 a Ire 4) t e great c¢ . iginally cost £6,600, sold in seg- ments to churches, chapels and schools throughout the Common- wealth and the United States for a profit of almost £2,500. The ministry advertised soon after the Coronation 'that the car- pet would be put up for sale and almost 5,000 bids poured in. That caused a problem ih the carpet covered only 2,320 usre yards and officials were us that all uests should be filled. government Sxpett came up with a plan allowitg the irregular- shaped carpet be cut -into smaller es patterns with minimum wastage. which or- Canada's largest single section, a rectangle of the gold theatre carpet 26 feet by 13 feet, goes to the chapel of the Victoria bspiial school of nursing, London, while a church in St. Stephen, N.B., will recéive five pieces of varyin sizes of the blue carpet from the Abbey annex. Most of the sections now have been cleaned and rebound and min- istry officials say they hope to have them all shipped before the end of the year. The carpeting is the last of the Coronation furnishings to be sol The 1,978 chairs, valued at Firm 835, and 5,202 stools, worth £21.- b 003, were bought by the peers, peeresses and other British and foreign dignigtires who occupied them during the ceremony. The two most important chairs, the Coronation chair and the chair of estate, have been sent to Buck- ingham Palace on permanent loan as souvenirs for the Queen. The huge coats of arms of Com- monwealth countries which decor- ated Parliament square in front of the Abbey have been sent as gifts to the respective govern- ments. Theatre Groups Chosen To Compete At Windsor LONDON, Ont. (CP)--Galt, Lon- don, Welland, Grimsby and Hamil- ton theatre groups were chosen Sunday to compete at the 1954 Western Ontario Regional Drama Festival Jan. 20-23 at Windsor. The festival executive chose the on the basis of the Ee ne. |e] a cal The list of play sand groups is: Jan. 20: "Thunder Rock" by Robert , Galt Little Theatre. REE "i Cocktail London Little Jan. 2 wie Back Little fem Willan Inge, Welland Theass Faye nee 1 "have been are Before" by & > Priestley, Players G Jan. 28, night: Rabecta" by D Su | Maurier, Players Sun CHOSE FINALISTS The Windsor festival is one of 13 regional festivals in Canada in 1954. The winning plays in each region have a chance of bei in. vited to compete in the Do Drama Festival at Hamilton i May. Evan John, from England, a will adjudicate the regional festi- Preliminary awards announced by Mr. Thomas included the Mere- |8 dith Achievement Trophy to the Welland Little Theatre Players for |p "Come Back Little Sheba." Individual awards for perfor- mances in plays not invited to the festival were best actress--Judge Eric Cross Award to Shirley Berch, as Raina in "Arms and the Man," Kitchener-Waterloo Little Theatre; best set, Dr. K. M. Phillips Award to St. Marys Little Theatre with "Quiet Week-End." Textile Mill Forced to Close MONTREAL (CP) -- Canadian Cottons Ltd., will cease operations at one of its three mills in Corn- wall, it was announced Sunday. J. Irving Roy, sident of the company, said a decision to close |A Stormont mill, where 385 work- ers are employed, was taken "with the greatest regret." "For some months past all the company's mills have rated at a very low rate of a Te- sulting in unsatisfactory operating conditions and abnormally high "In an effort to resulting losses it has been deci- ded to close the Stormont mill, one of the oldest mills of the com- pany." A. D. GORRIE DIES TORONTO (CP)--Arthur Duthie Gorrie, 75, founder and past pres- idgnt of the motor sales firm of D. Gorrie Company, died Sun- (a 3d 'He retired as president six years ago. HISTORIC CHURCH The ancient cathedral of at Venice, Italy, ee Wo by its five St. dis- is omes. CROSSWORD PUZZLE 8. American Indians 3. Cap J 4. Mulberry §. Happy 6. Hawaiian bird 1. Finish 8. A seedin~ device 31. Secure 12. Talk wildly 14. Message 16. A dry measure 34. Hidden from others 90. Oil.carry- : ing vessel #2. Route 13. Moisture 18. Consumed 16. Heavy mats 18. Note of #4. Perform. ance #8. Comb, as wool 96. Writing fluid 2M. Attempt 28. Built-in bed 30. Regret 3. Siberian gulf 38. Sea eagle $4. Whole 36. Tantalum (sym.) 7. American ostrich 39. A color 40. God of the sky (Babyl Relig.) 42. From 43. Loiters 44. Persia 46. Y ianTeader 47. Poker stake 48. Not closed +29 " ABIL IE] 26. Tavern RTE . Kind LIES of fish 28. Greek letter 20. Muse of astron- omy (Gr. Myth.) 30. Narrow ridge near surface of water 3. Pacific coast state 32. River bottoms WIAIF IE IK (A[DIAIR] IH] Saturday's Answer 8. Angry costs of production," Mr. Roy seid, 4.15 Treason Trial Ends 29th Day TEHRAN, Iran (AP) -- Ahmad Razavi, who was former premier Mohammed Mossadegh's deputy speaker in parliament, gave a spirited defence of the aged dic- tator's rule Sunday as the Moss- adegh treason trial compléted its 20th day. Razavi told the court: "Moss- adegh was a litical leader. A number of people gathered around him with extreme interest. We do not regret co-operating with him nor are we sorry for the services we tendered him. It is not shame but glory for all of us." Mossadegh nodded his head vig- prously as Razavi paid this tri- ute. PEI Potatoes Blamed for Cut TORONTO (CP) --Potato prices here have Sroppeq five five Io] » cents for 75-pound . The market-setting Sinn Ed- ward Island potatoes, which re- ceive federal subsidy, are jos five cents at $1.25 a 75- bap wholesale bringing New Brunswic| returns to the same level and On- tario to $1.15-1.20. Officials of the Ontario Federa- tion of Agriculture are Jollowing up pritests that the Prince Edward sland prices are lowering pri- ces of Ontario-grown potatoes. Ontario growers are protesting because they say the importing of P.E.L. potatoes has eliminated any chance regulating prices for toes a deficient producing area." as long as the EDC treaty binding | hour U.S. sentiment here seemed to: indicate a willingness to go along' ta- wn here "since ou it is » TIMMINS (CP) he next ste) toward ending ine strike of 1 pin g Wu Hollinger Consolida- Jed Sou Mines is up to the com- Briween 700 and 800 miners who have been on strike for 11 weeks to enforce demands for a pay in- crease and the checkoff union dues voted Sunday t to accept a settlement plan calling for a gen- eral wage increase of five cents an onto last week at a series of meet- ings held under auspices of the Ontario QVeIHIIent, Officials of the _strik union, United Steel- workers America (CIO-CCL), Fecsimended 3 ime to the Biglivs mee comp ohne has not yet an- nounced its stand on the settle- ment proposal. It may do so 3 is believed the plan, if ac- cepted, Sond set the, pattern for en e strikes by 3,500 other miners te seven of the 10 other |a Timmins area gold mines. The settlement proposals, re- to- [ter the Beeting % leased last week in Toronto, made Millard Booed "Only Jocularly" no mention of the checkoff of union dues, one of the main issues in the Ee It has been sug- Rested pay & cheques could be sent which could deduct the monthly ue, and send them to the union office. CLOSED MEETING Millard, Canadian director of Ce steel union, and other union officials attended Sunday night's meeting theatre. The iN Jy was closed to the SS. Hooing could be heard outside after Mr. Millard entered 45 min- utes late. He had been delayed by attendance at a union strategy conference. However, Mr. Millard fald, later ithe booing was "jocu- ar . Some miners were reported to have approached Me Millard af- apologize for Ek: to-work proposal, in addition to calling for the wage increase, provides for setting u governilient appofuted fact-find- he committee investigate the economics of the gold-mining in- dustry. The plan was worked out in Tor- | pre: the IX booin, NO TRIP TO KOREA TOKYO AP) -- An American mother arrived here today hoping to win back her soldier son who has renounced his country for com- munism, but Gen. John E. Hull said he had been '"'ob! "y to re- fuse permission" for Mrs. Portia Howe to go to Korea. The soldier, Pte. Richard F. Ten- neson, is among 22 Americans who refused repatriation while prison- ers of the Reds. og now are in neutral cust e demilitar- ized zone of Yn. Mrs. Howe arrived by plane to- day from her Alden, Minn., home. She paid for the trip out of 'savings from her son's military allotment. U. 8. POLICY She went immediately to Hull's Par East command headquarters. "I have the deepest sympathy for Mrs. Howe and the utmost re- spect for her desire to effect the Won't Let Mother Talk To PoW Son return of her son to his own goutiry," Hull said in a statement ater. "But in view of previously an- nounced U. S. department of de- fence policy in relation to the prisoner-of-war question, I am not authorized to permit her entry into Korea A $y er son." ull said she came on her mission v) love "with a faith in God |, and a knowledge that millions are pra for me." She hoped to win | her son from communism by [5 starting "the old train of thought-- religious training and love of country." In September, when Mrs. Howe 3.30 learned her son was refusing to come home, she said: "If I could talk to him for at least 10 minutes, I could at least make a dent in that kind of think- ing." OTTAWA (CP)--A Liberal mem- ber 'of Parliament from Saskatch- ewan Friday said in the Commons that a government measure to tighten anti-dumping laws could be used to strangle trade. Walter Tucker, member for Ros- thern, said he does not see how Revenue Minister McCann will be able to administer the measure if d by Parli t The bill would deal with sharp ] price cuts in imported YWCA MONDAY DEC: 14 BRIDGE CLASSES -- Beginners 8 p.m.; advanced, 9 p.m HAVA CAMERA CLUB -- 8 P Stupio CLUB, 8 Ea ART EXHIBIT -- Exhibition of Canadian Drawings, all day. TUESDAY DEC. 15 NURSERY SCHOOL -- for chil dren 4 and 5 years old, 9.30 a.m. HANDICR S -- leathercraft, feltcraft, glove-making, weaving, etc. 2-5 p.m. SENIOR LEADERS' CORPS -- leadership course for teenage girls, : .m. KEEP-FIT CLASS, 7.30 HANDICRAFTS -- lea feltcraft, glove-making, etc, 7-10 p.m. PUBLIC SPEAKING COURSE -- Opes to men and women, 7.45 p.m. ART EXHIBIT -- Exhibition of Canadian drawings, all day. WEDNESDAY DEC. 16 NURSERY SCHOOL -- for chil- dren 4 and 5 years of age, 9.30 am.. HANDICRAFTS -- leathercraft, feltcraft, glove-making, weaving, 4 be] SLIM AND TRIM CLASS -- weight reducing and weight norm- al class for married ladies. Medicals required, 2.30 p.m. BALLROOM DANCING CLASS ~ Last class this course, 9 p HANDICRAFTS -- eatieatt, feltcraft, glove making, weaving, etc., 7-10 IBIT -- Exhibition of reraft, weaving, ART E Canadian Drawings, all day. C.R.A. MONDAY Adult -- 'Woodshop, Strength and Health Club, Boxing Club, Table Tennis, 7-9 Oshawa F y and Game Protec- tye Assoc. Executive meeting, 8 P Randle Park Children's Xmas Party, 7 p.m. TUESDAY Recreation Office open all day, Lions Cie Room for the Blind, 9- pd Health "Club, Boxing Club, Shuffle board, p.m Children -- Leathercraft, Wood- shop, 4.15-5.30 p.m. Adult -- W hop, Strength and Health Club, ap Club, Leather- craft; 7-9 p.m. > Barbershoppers, 8 p.m. Table Tennis, 7-9 'p.m Fernhill N.A. Meeting, 8 pm. WEDNESDAY Recreation office open. all day, ons Club Room for the Blind, .m. Fp Woodshop, Strength and Health Club, Boxing Club, Shuffle- board, 2-4 'pm Children -- Woodshop, Leather- craft, yd Ballet, 4 to 6 yrs, 33.45 p.hn.; 3 45 pm.; 8 yrs. and shot OS Hal = P oodshop, Strength and -9 p.m, Health Club, Boxing 'Club, Bowling at M Motor City Al- an Class, 8-10 NA. Happy Dnibles Xmas Party, 7.30 leys, 9 p INDIAN CHIEF ELECTED BRANTFORD (CP) « James §. Powless was elected chief coun- the six Nations Indians Sanday. Woodshop, Strength and | manufactured goods by providing purposes. This appraisal would be of a "weighted average' price based on prices for the imported goods in the country of origin up to six months prior to the date of import. Provisions of the bill went into sure writes into law the action al- ready taken. The step was taken after representations by the tex- tile jmjusry against sharp sea- sonal s in the price of im- ported EY textiles. venue Min- ister McCann has described this as a 'special kind of dumping." After lengthy debate, the Com- mons approved the bill in prin- ciple and started clause-by-clause consideration of it. Mr. Tucker said trade could be strangled by a minister delaying a ruling on the duty until after the imported goods had been sold for an appraisal for customs duty t Canada Protests Tariffs Then Passes Anti-Dump Law |; and then Imposing a duty thats would mean a loss for the importer. BAD POLICY Mr. Tucker said it is a bad policy to pass such a law at a time when Canada is protesting to the United States about trade restrictions on Canadian exports to the U.S. Hon. Earl Rowe (PC--Dufferin- Simcoe) said he supports the meas- NEW PRESIDENT e Sppointment of Frank W. Manso as president and man: aging director of the Pepsi-Cola Company of Canada, Limited has been announced by William B. Forsythe, chairman of the Board. He succeeds David M. Chenoweth who' will remain a ember of the Company's Board of Direc- SIMCOE HALL MONDAY, DECEMBER 14 GIRL"S BASKETBALL: 5.30 p.m. NURSING CADETS -- INSPEC- TION: 7 to 9 p.m. Girls 11 to 21 years. OSHAWA POLICE BOYS' CLUB: Floor hockey, movies, gym games, and drum band. » PEICHT LIFTING CLUB: 17.30 SDAY, DECEMBER 15 NURSERY SCHOOL: 9 to 11.30 a.m. Children 4 years of age. CHILDREN'S PUBLIC LIB- RARY: 3.30 to 5.30 p BASKETBALL: "330 to BOYS Bobs WOODWORKING: 8.30 to Bole GAMES ROOMS: 3.30 to AnRiBRIx BUILDING CLUB: BOYS' CRAFT CLUB: 3.30 p.m. PUBLIC SCHOOLS LEADER- SHIP COURSE: 4.30 to 6 p.m. PIANO LESSONS: 4 to 6 p.m. GIRLS' BASKETBALL: 5.30 p.m. INDUSTRIAL BASKETBALL LEAGUE: 7 p WEIGHT LIFTING CLUB: 7 p.m. WEDNEWDAY, DECEMBER 16 NURSERY SCHOOL: 9 to 11.30 a.m. Children 5 years of age. JUNIOR GIRLS' GYM CLUB: 3.30 to 5.30 p.m. GIRLS' CRAFT CLUB: 3.30 to 2 [l BOYS' GAMES ROOMS: 3.30 to 5.30 p PIANO LESSONS: 4 to 6 ALGER CLUB BASKETBALL: "a 9p ormEs" "TEENAGE CLUB: 7 to BASKETBALL Ne. Balahood's vs Simcoe Hall Grads. " WEIGHT LIFTING CLUB: 7.30 10 p DUPLICATE BRIDGE CLUB: to ure although "it looks like a gun- (7.30 shot prescription knowing that the patient is in trouble but not know- he hat the prescription is going 0. ASKS BROADEN ACT He wondered whether the fact that about 300 textile workers are jobless in Dr. McCann's riding of Renfrew had anything to do with the '"'hasty" drafting of the legisla- tion effect last Tuesday and the meas® The measure should not be con- fined to manufactured goods but should include raw products which may need similar attention soon. The trend of discrimination against such Canadian products as dairy foods was becoming more conspic- uous. Henry Hosking (L -- Welington South) said the government move was made only because the jobs of Canadian workers were threat- ened by dumped imports. The measure would also help small shopkeepers, since only a few large retailers in Canada were able to buy U.S. goods at cut rates. Mammoth Tusk Found in Pit HAMILTON CP) -- A 75-pound fossil thought to be a mammoth's tusk was found Friday at the bot- tom of a gravel pit at nearby Aldershot Dr. Herbert Armstr: dean of arts and science at McMaster Uni- versity, said the huge animal may have wandered tp this district in search of food or to escape the oold | 15,000 years ago. im Syvret, 24-year-old steam LL operator, discovered the tusk between layers of gravel and clay 30 feet down in the pit. .. Passamaquoddy bay between New Brunswick and Maine is never blocked by ice. Board Agrees To End Union TORONTO (CP) -- The Ontario labor relations board Saturday granted an application to end bar- gaining rights of the United Pack- inghouse Workers of America (CIO-CCL) at the No. 1 plant of the Savage Shoe Company = at Preston. In a ballot conducted at the plant by the board Nov. 25, work- ers voted against the union as its Deanne agent. The vote was ainst the union and 68 for. os ers at the plant were on strike most pf the summer. SALLY'S SALLIES Cope. 1953, a "Did you say you weve looking er just looking avoundd" .30 p.m. GRADS BASKETBALL: 8 p.m. CLERIC OUT OF HOSPITAL EDMONTON (CP) -- Most Rev. W. F. Barfoot, Anglican Primate of all Canada and Metropolitan of Rupert's' Land, was released Sat- urday from hospital here, where he had been confined since a Dec. 4 abdominal operation. 9 Gargantuan Papers Deluge New York City By WATSON SIMS of eS ORE ab). AP)--A flood Hide printed news, probably, in all newspaper pa ing history, rolled down on New York Satur day night and Sunday morning. In the first regular publication of Sunday ney spajers after an 11- day strike which ended Thursday after it almost completely halted the city's presses, five Man- hattan papers got out editions totalling 1,698 pages. This 'gargantuan effort in a city normally noted for b Sunday editions set records for the Times, News and Tr. The ' Journal American said its 160-page edition was one of the | ¢ largest, if not the largest, it had ever published. The 380-page Herald Tribune also was iy of the biggest ever. This was in striking contrast fo last Sunday, when only the Her- ald Tribune published and that newspaper contained only eight pages with no advertising. News, a tabloid, alone totalled 532 pages, including a num- ber of regional sections. A spokes- man for the News said this was some 130 pages more than the largest number published by the News previously. In advertising, the News said, the edition contained 23,000 more lines of department store adver- |s tising than on the womparative Sunday last year. GHT RECORD Newsboys tottered under The Times, each edition .of which weighed five pounds and five ounces. The Times said this was a: weight record and said the 1,300,000 cop- ies required 3,927 tons of newsprint, representing 3,960 cords of wood. The ink alone, the Times Jaounted to 45 tons, lor compound and vent used to print the book review Also listed as Times' records were the 748 columns of news and 615,000 lines of advertising. news sections alone of the Times ran to 152 pages, record. said, The Herald Silhune's news see- tion totalled 112 pages. The of 436 pages had been exceeded om . three other occasions, but said previous editions were fattened a larger proportion of tabloid-size cial sections. frais ISTMAS ADS The Sunday editions d found the : ong end foun merc] 8 to make up for precious og were jam-packed with advertising: The strik The Dgleup or oat ui or lost time | ott was sprinkl newspapers. carried two sets of Somes, one which was dated Dec. The «B® two- age editions, sacs do mike a up for the days t du trike. i 8 as the newspaper of reco the sheets were prepared "for the The Times book review section alone contained 64 8. . included day and last, the two totalling pA pages. The Herald Tribune, News, Mir- ror and Journal American ea Times, which % aries comics, had a supplement of The Times, which prides itself rd, said record," during each day of the stoppage. page The Herald Tribune book review sections for this Hillary-Led Expedition Going To Himalayas J. C. GRAHAM Canadian Press CorFespondent WELLINGTON, N. CP) -- Everest conqueror Sir Edmund Hillary will back in the Him- alayas between April and June of 1954 leading a New Zealand ex- pedition. Originally it was planned to climb Mount Makalu (27,790 feet) the world's fourth highest peak, but a United States party has ob- tained prior permission to attempt the climb. The New Zealanders then decided to explore Barun valley, one of the wildest and most spectacular regions in the world, which has been visited by onl i four Euro- peans. They are Hillary himself, George Lowe and Charles Evans members of the recent Juseesstul Everest party, and Erie leader of the 1952 British layan team. These four forced a passage back to India through the Barun valley in 1952. It is believed that Hillary plans to attack several unclimbed and almost unknown peaks more than 20,000 feet which were sighted by the party 7 Sufing the previous visit. Much of the valley is still unexplored. Lowe, a fellow New Zealander, and Evans, an English doctor, have joined the x atom which will include six other New Zeal ers and an Englishman not an selected. Gov't Guards Pensioners OTTAWA CP) -- Health Min- ister Martin said Friday that old age Pepsioners will not receive their Dosember cheques before Cutisunas. Mr. Sriving to a ques- Mog oy i Alistair Stewart CCF Winnipeg North), said it would not be in the interest of the pensioners for them to receive their cheques before the end of the rgonth A 3 The minister said delivery of cheques before Christmas would mean that pensioners must wait five or six weeks before receiving another cheque. This would place an "unnecessary hardship on pen- sioners with limited means." An administrative difficulty would also arise if the date of is- suing the old age pension cheques were changed. + TROOPS TO GET BEER MONTREAL (CP) -- A bill of lading for 24,000 pints of ale, Christmas gift to Canadian troops in Europe from Carling roy Ltd., was handed over today to Maj. -Gen. J. P. E. Beragicken eneral officer commanding Qu ¢ command. Coro olin... 5-1101 onetw : MATCH THIS DEAL ® | YEAR FREE SERVICE (ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY TO PAY) ® | YEAR PARTS GUARANTEE © | YEAR PICTURE TUBE GUARANTEE FREE INSTALLATION AND DELIVERY Quality, Service, in Conadea . . . faction . . . You 21 389 95 Coronet Sets the Pace! Satisfaction Guaranteed or Your Money Refunded NOTHING ELSE TO BUY { dart first for Coronet in TV merchandis- ing. Coronet alone offers this inclusive PD 'plan and guarantees you satisfaction or your moriey back. 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