'British Arms To Be Kept At Peace-Time Mark had to be handled wise KIDDIES THRILLED AT PRESENCE OF SANTA CLAUS and almost immediately had his arms full of youngsters. The par- ty was for the children of the Santa Claus came to the Osh- awa and District Labor Council Christmas party in the UAW hall delegates of the 13 affiliates of the Labor Council. Seen here left to right are: Christine Shaw, Sandra Shaw, Brian Rutherford, Santa Claus, Bobby Rutherford and Bobby Fenwick, New "Monarch" An Honorable Name ' The Monarch, a cable ship, in 1955 will lay the first telephonic cable across the north Atlantic. Nine years. ago another cable ship of the same name was beached on the shores of the Eng- lish channel seven days after - the Normandy invasion in the Second World War. She had been severely damaged by a United States destroyer. Jack Macbeth, who was on the scene, tells the friendly since no German ship of that type had ventured into the landing zone since D-Day. To play safe, Trentonian's cap- tain, Lt.-Cmdr. William Harrison of Lunenburg, N.S., switched on recognition lights. (These are groups of three col- ored lights, in pre-arranged com- binations for stipulated periods, to ensure recognition between friendly warships.) Bears The cable ship, although not technically a naval vessel, was op-| erated by the British Admiralty. | Her crew consisted in large part of retired Royal Navy men, some of senior rank, who had insisted | on doing their bit in the war. Aboard Monarch, now listing crazily, the bridge had been ripped | to shreds. Other parts of her super- structure, her skinny funnel and | died in Cmdr. Harrison's cabin. | U.S. Netters Lead Aussies In Davis Cup By WILL GRIMSLEY MELBOURNE (AP)--Tony Tra- ert and Vic Seixas, top American seige guns, crushed Lewis Hoad and Rex Hartwig 6-2, 6-4, 6-4 to- day to put the United States into a 2-1 lead over Australia in the Davis Cup challenge round. This doubles event was of para- mount importance to both coun- _ THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Tuesday, Becontber » wey weather eye on the huge fleet of some 400 Russian submarines com- centrated on production of fast frigates and anti-submarine ves- sels. At the same time there was am easihg in the egnsk uetiog of air- cr: carriers. Existing tops up their complement . Prime ment of air power. In August the By RON EVANS Canadian Press Staff Writer LONDON (CP) -- Backed by a defence budget of £1,636,000,000, Britain in 1953 went shopping for the best weapons available to equip her fighting forces, swollen to a peacetime peak. By Oct. 1 there were 863,900 men and women under arms, some 531,000 regulars, 309,000 serving un- der the national service scheme and 23,800 filling out the women's services. More than 500,000 more stood ready in reserve and auxil- iary ranks. About 20 per cent of the total fighting units were stationed Britain. The rest were scattered through Europe, the Middle East and Asia. "We've about reached the. limit on manpower," said one defence ministry official. "We're now spending money on "re'equipping our forces." CAUTIOUS SPENDING Although there was plenty of money in the purse--almost £25. 000,000 more than in 1952--it still Minister Churchill told the House of Commons in March that the government was pursuing the "twin but divergent objectives of financial solvency and military se- curity." He said that by adjust- ments and spreading-out of funds the government was attempting to bring military expenditures within the limits of what the country could afford. One of the bigger items on the bill was £100,000,000 earmarked for defence research, up 40 per cent from 1952. To the army, with a strength of in (445,900, went £581,000,000. Particu- lar success in the re-equipping campaign was registered in ar- mored divisions. Biggest news in this connection was the announce- ment in September that a new tank, the Caernarvon, faster, heay- ier and better armored than the famed Centurion, had been devel- oped. New complex shells and rocket weapons began piling up. Almost as much money--£548,- '000,000--was tabbed for develop- delta-winged jet bomber, the Avro | Vulcan. Foreign experts envied super- sonic jets sueh as the Supermarine Swift, the Gloster Javelin and the (Hawker Hunter at the Farnbor- {ough air show in September. In the same month, Sqdn. Ldr. Nev- ille Duke chose the Hunter to crack the world's speed record be- fore the United States stole it back a short time later. Officials reporttd the RAF well stocked with Canberra jet bomb- ers and before the end of the year operation "Becher's Brook' --the ferrying of 400 Canadian - built Sabre Jet fighters to Britain--was completed. Britain's own fighter production received a setback, when a prototype of the Super- marine Swift crashed during trials in November and not a single squadron of jet fighters had been formed by the end of December. The Royal Nawy's share in the defence budget amounted to £364.- 000,000. Naval officials, with a Lo came off the world's first explosion of a Bri on the Woomera r Australia, A third bom nated over the range Oct. 26. announc possessed guided missiles capable of travelling 2,000 miles an hour at heights of 50,000 feet. b; the specifications of the , One of the revolutionary new en- gines had been 'and tested Goose and fhe 3 for sea trials next spring. Na cials estimate the bin 18 ca- Jable of driving a itigate ot 8 already in the boat Grey second is slated for ht the second atomic bomb e in south was deto- October also b Supply Minister Duncan Sandys in August that Britaih The year-end saw the m ajor pro- portion of Britain's fighting forces serving . divisions, three of them arm were in Brigades were Berlin, Trieste and Austria. in far-flung Four d, in with NA' so stationed German Start the ¥ serve your fam for less money. after week all yeor it will be the ea ever made, if you keep it ear with @ resolution to ily the best in food You can do it, week long. atyour IGA. siest resolution you tet IGA help you | . 1+ FOR YOUR F IRST PARTY IN ' S : $41... 'r ] / J WARSHIP OPENED FIRE story for the first time. By JACK MacBETH Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP)--A trim cable ship named Monarch in 1955 will start to lay the first telephone cable across the North Atlangic ocean. Until nine years ago there was another Monarch. She was beached in England seven days after D- Day in the Second World War un- der - circumstances that can only happen in war. She was severely damaged by gunfire from a United States destroyer. This is the story, never before told publicly of the old Monarch and her British crew, and of her }ast friend, a Canadian corvette. HIGH-PRIORITY JOB Rt was about 2:10 am. June 18, 10. Monarch was laying 120 miles of cable between England +and British headquarters on the * Normandy beachhead, a '"high- priority" operation. at her cable, strung astern e a heavy leash, Mon- +arch was making about three knots, escorted by the Canadian corvette Trentonian, a little more than half her size. As Trentonians' navigator, I was on the bridge. About 10 miles of the cable had been alid within 24 hours. Suddenly two star shells burst above the darkened ships. Ahead was a destroyer, presumably Then in a noisy flash, rapid sal- vos screamed toward Monarch and | her escort. | There was no return fire from her hull looked as though a huge tries, and now the U.S. has a de- bomb had burst above the upper |cided advantage in that it must deck. {win only one of the two remain- Meanwhile, the destroyer sent a|ing singles scheduled for Wednes- stunned boarding party to Tren-|day. They will pit Trabert against Trentonian. The destroyer had tonian. They quoted their captain been identified as a United States | as saying he had challenged the ship. {two British ships with a signal | Trentonian's recognition lights | lamp before opening fire, and that | were turned on againand left on. |he had received no reply. | A Canadian signalman flashed the | On Trentonian's bridge, two offi- | morse code recognition signal for cers, a signalman and two look-| the day, but the firing continued. |outs had seen no challenge al-| | Hoad and Seixas against Ken Rose- | wall. Captain Harry Hopman and the Australin selection committee gambled and lost by sending Hart- wig into the fray instead of Rose- wall, the youngster who dropped the second singles match to Tra- bert Monday. The range between the destroyer | and her targets now was about | 1,000 yards. Trentonian's radio op-| erators tried to radio-telephone to| jell the American ship to cease Finally, the shooting stopped. | The official report, prepared | from 2:15 am. to 2:30 a.m. the destroyer had fired 80 rounds of five-inch ammunition. Trentonian, lower in the water than Monarch, escaped with al minor graze as most of the shells screamed overhead. Monarch was | not so lucky. THREE MEN KILLED When the shooting stopped, I was ordered to take one of Trentonian's | sea-boats to pick up survivors an investigate amage aboard the cable ship. We found three men had been killed and more than a score badly injured. Trentonian took aboard about 35 survivors, including the wounded. One of them, Monarch's captain, though, with 10 miles of the French coast, they had been watching closely for invasion traffic or any- thing of unexpected nature. | Trentonian was ordered to sub- mit a report to naval authorities but the incident never was made public. All concerned appeared to | accidents of war. An RCN official commented re- cently: "This is the type of thing that crops up in every war, many cases without blame to any- | one." | Trentonian was ordered back to | Portsmouth with the survivors. A British tug took Monarch in tow | in They must have known and re- gretted their decision almost at the start of the first set. From |the beginning, it was apparent | that Hoad and Hartwig were not teaming well. Hartwig, new to Davis Cup com- | petition, had a bad case of nerves. aboard the Trentonian, said that|write it off as one of the tragic |p addition, he never had teamed {with Hoad in a major tournament | before, and could not anticipate his partner's moves. Hopman, however, was fearful of Rosewall's admittedly weak ser- vice, so he took the gamble--and will have to take the blame if the Aussies lose the cup for the first time in four years. and dragged her to England. {MOVE CRITICIZED Now, a new Monarch is setting out on a new career. Trentonian? She was torpedoed and sunk in the English channel in February, 1945 seven months after I left her to join a Canadian motor torpedo boat flotilla. One officer and five men went down with her. QUEBEC CHAMBER CLAIMS: - Motorists Must Fear Laws If Road Travel To Be Safe QUEBEC (CP)--Court proceed- ings and heavy penalties should be the first step in any highway safety drive, the Quebec province Cham- ber of Commerce said today. The 25,000-member chamber said in a brief prepared for submis- 3 sion to the Quebec government too many motorists break the law "because they feel safe or do not fear nalties."" "A law is effective only as much as it is observed and it is best observed if sanctions are feared," said the 35 page brief which dealt mostly with highway safety. LIQUOR CAUSES MISHAPS main causes of traffic accidents, | the chamber said three kinds of i motorists are mostly involved in | accidents: '"The unfit, the ignorant and the careless." "To eliminate the unfit, instruct the ignorant and keep. the careless {at a distance, the chamber be- {lieves it would be advisable that | all motorists undergo a competence | test," the brief said. | The tests would include all driv- ers under 25 years of age, all | whose permits have been sus- {pended temporarily and all who | have been held responsible for ac- cidents. « Noting that liquor is one of the spend the extra year necessary to teach in secondary schools. Indus- try, commerce and the learned professions offer more in salaries and prestige than does teaching, she added. Mr. Robinson sald the present number Faduating from the On- tario College of Education as high school teachers barely meets the 300 required each year as normal replacements, he OSSTF general secretary listed four other possible steps be- sides recruiting British teachers to meet the shortage: Lower require- ments for secondary school teach- ers, the transfer of grade nine from high school to public school, the setting up of senior public schools staffed by public school teachers covering grades seven to 10 inclusive, and the introduction of a three-year university course for teachers. The decision by the Australian selectors to break up the Hoad- Rosewall team which won the Wimbledon, French and Australian championships, drew criticism from observers here. However, Sir Norman Brookes, head of the Aus- tralian Lawn Tennis Association, defended the position in an un- precedented press conference. Several Australian newspaper writers called the switch a 'crazy gamble." One said: "That's hand- ing the cup to America on a silver platter." Trabert, as usual, was his mas- terful self. It was Seixas, though, who gladdened American captain Billy Talbert's heart and raised his hopes. Vic seemed like his old self after his disappointing show- ing in Australia before today. He and Trabert seized the ini- tiative at the outset and held a tiger-like grip throughout the match. The Aussies never could get going, and in exactly 58 min- utes it was all over. : All told, Trabert and Seixas broke Hartwig's serv ice three times and Hoad's once. Rex was having trouble with his first de- livery and when he came through with the soft second attempt he found himself in trouble. The Public School Teachers' Fed- eration, which has a membership | of 4,600 throughout the province, | endorsed recommendations made | at its meeting calling for higher | standards in teacher training. The | federation decided to support the | Al. Murray Back, Bob Dawes Is Out TORONTO (CP)--Bob Dawes, a CALIFORNIA BRUSSELS SPROUTS IGA--PLAIN FEATURE! DILL 21 FLORIDA--CRISP & SWEET = J PICKLES 2.23 PASCAL CELERY GLOBE--CHOICE--HALVES IDAHO FEATURN DOLE -- FANCY | DESSERT PINEAPPLE JUICE =a SPANISH ONIONS 21 PEARS £ AYLMER--CHOICE 4/5 TINS IMPORTED RADISH 2 CALIFORNIA FANCY--SIZE 300's LEMONS 5 - 19° FLORIDA MARSH SEEDLESS--SIZE 96's w Grapefruit JUICY FLORIDA--SIZE 176's "CHIQUITA"--BANDED BANANAS DOZ 8-0Z. PKGS. 8 «39° w 19° 2 39 TREESWEET . . . LEMON JUICE MITCHELL'S -- FANCY , . . APPLESAUCE 6-ox. Tins 20-0x. Tins GULF'S PRIZE -- SMALL , . . S-ox. Tin LAING'S -- PICKLED . . . 24-0z. Jar 2]¢ 39¢ 49¢ 35¢ WELCH'S | GRAPELADE | 12-0Z. | we 28% | GA RED Maraschino cherries | COOKIE «ope | MIX JAR GOVERNMENT GRADED--5v4 LBS. UP ROASTING CHICKENS Meaty. Heavy SWIFT'S PREMIUM BONELESS HAMS... v.. GREEN PEAS MONARCH 20-02. TINS 37: FEATURE! +53: u 85° . 59° SLICED SIDE BACON "43° SWIFT'S PREMIUM MILK-FED BONELESS VEAL LEGS EVERSWEET--RINDLESS e PARTY-TIME SNACKS eo Dutch Lunch | Braunschweiger sata 5, 09: | caus = . 43: Chubs ©. A FRESH SUPPLY OF TURKEYS, GEESE, DUCKS, TENDER- Sepsetment of euttvation's effort fo [former professional hockey plaver Hf: SILVER SWAN... . GROWN CHICKENS, SMOKED HAMS AVAILABLE Urges U.K. Teachers Be Hired To Help Ease Ont. Shortage TORONTO (CP) -- Ontario high school teachers will id suggestion that British teachers be recruited to help ease the teacher s shortage in thé province. S$. G. B. Robinson, general sec- retary of the Ontario Secondary School Teachers' Federation, told the group's annual three-day as- sembly Monday that British teach- ers who have come here so far have been "almost without excep- tion, good capable teachers." "Let us fill our ranks with these rather than have them filled for us by the half-trained or the uh- trained," Mr. Robinson said. {Qualified on any secondary school | staff. | | STRIKE THREAT . i This decision was considered a step which could pave the way | for some of them to teach in Tor- {onto high schools if the staffs of these schools carried out a threat {to resign next May. They have i threatened this action if the Tor- onto board of education does not eliminate the single salary sched- ule for public and high school | | teachers. | However, an official of the pub- {lic teachers' federation said its members have no intention of | strike-breaking if the Toronto sec- | ondary school teachers leave their | S {higher staff schools by admitting grade 12 |with Montreal Canadiens and Tor- students to special teacher train-|onto Maple Leafs, Monday night me courses. Iwas replaced by Al Murray as owever, it objected to these coach of Galt Black Hawks of the students receiving a first-class Ontario Hockey Association Junior teaching certificate identical to|A series. previ certificates issued for| Jack Moffat, president of the alifications. | Galt club, said Dawes "resigned." A decision was also taken to Dawes, a freshman coach, had the hold another summer course next Hawks in second place early in year in administration and. super- the schedule. In recent weeks the vision for public school teachers team faded badly 'until now they and principals. The course, held fare tied with Barrie Flyers for for the first time last summer at last place. Queen's University, Kingston, was | found to be a success and $3,000 | i | ESKIES SEEK TALENT wil be 'ncluded inthe budge "to wrNIONTON' (GF). Coach Dar. {rell Royal of Edmonton Eskimos of |the Western Interprovincial Foot- | ball Union left Monday for Florida, {where he will watch the Orange Bowl New Year's Day. . Joe Schertzl Signs With K-W Dutchmen ML who brought the split-T for- KITCHENER (CP) -- Kitchener- mation to Canada, is then sched- Waterloo Dutchmen said Monday |uled to fly to Starkville, Miss., to Royal, .a former Oklahoma SERVIETTES COFFEE Pkgs. of 70 2 FRESHLY GROUND ROYAL GUEST "IGA" SCOTCH MINTS 10-0z. Celle. Package 25° 1-Ib. Bag 98° 35¢ ATTRACTIVELY PRICED. TA MII NAAT AM RE He said that 12 years from now Jobs. ii Coughlin of 'Windsor; pr , pres. 10,000 secondary school teachers of the Ontario Secondary would be needed, without consider- | y Toh further ral hich would | School Teachers' Federation, told be de beca ine im. | the OSSTF assembly it must re- * oT Co use of increased im |g attempts to lower teacher A | qualifications. j The Ontario Public School Men | Miss Cloughlin said the prov- Teachers' Federation, also in ses- [ince's high school population was sion here this week, unanimously | increasing as never before "but agreed that jt does not co cider it each year we find an increasingly unethi ©1 for any member to fill fewer number of our first rank a legal vacancy for which he is university graduates willing to! 4 {ing defencemen Joe Schertzl has been reinstated | as an amateur and will play for] the Dutchmen in the Ontario Hockey Association Senior A lea- gue. Schertz], 30, played with Hershey | Bears the last three years and ranked. as one of the hig in the AHL. He was credited with 45 5 inl; a 1970-51 season and 31 points last year. bargain with "split-T quarterback Jackie Parker, 'an all-American ranked eighth this year in the -se- lection of the finest United States college football players. Royal was non-committal con- cerning Eskimos efforts to recruit Parker, but club manager Al An- derson said Royal would try to get in touch with the player and other prospects. at Mississippi State Uni~ versity. DYL'S . IGA MARKET 166 ALICE STREET DIAL 5-0622 IGA MARKET 120 WILSON RD. S. EASTVIEW DIAL 3-2032 DIAL GLECOFF'S IGA MARKET 174 RITSON RD. S. 5-4721 DIAL 5-1604 College Hill IGA MARKET 534 CUBERT ST. SOUTH-END IGA MARKET 204 BROCK ST. §. WHITBY PHONE 583