2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, January 27, 1560 Group Captein E. P. Br land of the RCAF (lef), Wil- lism Corr of the Lockheed Air- craft Corporation (centre) Harold Sloan, Canadian dc peri me nt of defence production, in- dg- | spect a w and | sznce INTERPRETING THE NEWS By ALAN HARVEY Canadian Press Staff Writer By a s'range irony, it may tak« German soldiers to preven! further killings of Frenchmen by Frenchmen in unhappy Algeria With the French National Army apparently equivocal in its reac- tion to the settler revolt, it may be left to the Foreign Legion -- containing a high percentage of German nationals -- to restore order. Everything now seems to de- pend on the military forces. 'Or- dinarily, it would be a simple matter for the 500,000 French troops in Algeria to crush the few thousand die-hard rebels in their, 'wo ma'n strongholds of resist- ance in the shining white city of| Algiers, JA ER INSPECYLED al yok. tarfighter C ather reconnaiss- plane will be built by Canedair, Lid, Montreal, | under Lockheed lice ence e. In- and me m [ 1 104. T | spection ef the long, slim mock- up, to settle configuration and | equipment details, was made at | Lockheed"s Burbank, Calif. fac- | tory, --CP Wirephoto Canada During War Subject Of Book By DAVE McINTOSH Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP)--A new States military history suggest Canada was lucky to escape from the Second World War with|ca its national sovereignty intact, United Churchill off Argentina Nfld., Roosevelt had planned to go to its own voice and .not through a his shipboard meeting with in awa and Que acted this route be- d be difficult to ex why he v asn't tak 1941 bec by way of Oit but reje use it wo plain to K Tens of thousands of Ame:ican|ing him along troops and construction workers flocdéd into Canada to man base: and to build airfields, highways, radar stations and the like an the book says Canadians had rea- son to fear the U.S vested interests. The book, between the US 1939- Us and Army in the Second World after the United war might regard these works as|vised the list to put all countries Hudson Bay by Military Relations submit Canada state is one in a series on the British Embassy. The book says that in drafting a proposed list of signatories to the Atlantic Chart in August 1941, Roosevelt grouped the do minions in a listing under the Kingdom. He later re- in alphabetical order but it wa: d to Canada by the U.S department through the third parly (B.itain) should have, been understandable (to the, U.S.) The importance of con- siderations of national pride prestige and sensitivity would| also have been apparent." C ANADA STUBBORN e author says Canada some times took a dog-in-the-manger! attitude. Roosevelt expressed fears that the Germans would penetrate| submarine te surface raider. But Canada re-| sisted all moves for a U.S, pa-| trol "of Hudson Bay on thel grounds it was a Canadian inland |sea War. The author is Col. Stanley|NOT CONSULTED W. Dziuban of the U.S. Army | He leans far backward to present|never consulted by the U.S the Canadian viewpoint, | CANADA A "NUISANCE" and armed forces elements both the U.S. and Britain treated | Canada as a "nuisance." Often by the U.S. out ever erated Canada in independ | discussions with Japan Canada had been so concerned! The history says sonde civilian|with the situation in the Pacific) which, mit The book ys Canada was in concerning U.S. though | November, 1941, bad sent two battalions to Hong Kong. Japan attacked|ing up the Pear! Harbor Dec, 7, ions involving Canada we. €| Canada vigorously opposed the|/U.S 1941. | and Britain|assignment of parts of Canada |equipment, t consulting Canzda,!and Newfoundland, "The substantial U.S. garrison dian forces located in either, U.S. | or of Cana to] operational strategic or of Canadian control and| command. | jurisdiction to an extent sred unwarranted by many ent long a ans "This maintai and facilities as if they were on U.S. soil.' The book quotes Moffat, U.S. minister to Ottawa, as saying that British Minister Churchill had a "per sonal predilection for speaking in| the name of the entire Empire] and trying to reserve the pro-| cess of recent years and inte-| grate it more closely." Cangdians felt Churchill had been ably abetted in this by the U.S. services "whose attitud throughout had been that Canad: was a nuisance and had mucl garrison constructed, : be treated as a part of A you than as an inde y, Moffat is quoted |} ROOSEVELT PLAN August, 1940, President veit had made clear to i Minister that he wanted naval bzses in the Maritimes. Roose vel' had asked the U.S, railroad how 'hey could move 300.0 American troops to times, 19'0 known ar he put was mercly submitted Canadian government fi nce after it had been Newspaper Man": oly Finally Found TORONTO (CP) clay mis ing for two wecks, was lo cated Monday in Ottawa as a re- sul of a news report on his dis- Foster Ottawa acquaintance, whol he: ord the report, saw him enter- a down n movie theatre called Fraser rean chief of The Ca- whom Barelay had four months ago as of Ontario service at Tor- ess relay had only vagie recol- ens of his movements since he vanished Jan. 12. He knew he took a bus from fo Carleton Place A prior police check had shown he spent a week at a Peterbor ough hotel Barclay, who was born in Ot. tawa and worked there many years before and after going overseas for CP as editor and war correspondent, spent Tues- day nig at the home of a brother ik Qttawa, ned and operated bases sion in Was Pierrepont|and {near Timmins Mackenzie Kinr|!D and air!" Britain and tte US. drew up Rx --lercn Porei Bar-/ible by 46, Toronto mewspaper m~n burn that obliterated rozsds, MacDougall, cated The book says that, in appar on, the US, for a ould not permit Can blish a military mis ngton "The desire of a sovereign stale, both for practical reasons for political Fessons at to speak to oresenta rela time ada to est heme Pr re of another Zorn with Young Prospector Sells Mining Site For $23.000 STREETSVILLE, Ont. (CP)-- ful prospector who likes to study old mining reports be- fore heading into the bush has turned a tidy profit from the sale {of an old, fo ten gold propert : in Northern On tario, Gordon Leliever, 27, who lives wn 15 mies. southwes vived the n staked 1 times. H the Mari-|% Nor'h Inca' Mines, ork led him 'to profit in 10 years of cling. STUDIED RECORDS "By exzmining, early work done in Bar helt up, 1 had discovered ine Gold Mines had g his property 24, re.urning commer- 1 silver. e aban reas ns n-t Subsequently hel YT TOSpe records Tavp- deve! dored the gro und fo known to me mmed'ate are re. left' no the ges and landmarks. It visible indications that ond had been worked "The mining recorder wlicated that gro ey ad cpen for about 10 years, and 5 ded by the early reports, the Camercn property and staked." Reon I 1o- Porcupine The building of the northwest staging route through Edmonton 0 the Alaska Highway, brought on many difficulties. The U.S. poured $21§,000,000 into construction in Canada the author says, Assisted this country materially in open: north. OF this amount,' repaid $93,000,000. The also spent millions for giving Canadian in- | dust ry a leg up. The author says disagreements were overshadowed by areas of harmonious co operation on many great wartime achieve ments Incidentally, the author men- tions a few disagreements among Canadians themselves, one being that the RCAF commander was barely on speaking terms with the Canadian army commander] and British air ministry repre sentatives at Gander, Nid. |Canada He sald Canadian North Inca sent consultant goologist D.C.| Gillham along with him to ex- {amine the ground early last Dee- ember, For 30 claims covering] - more than a square mile Leliever received $23,000 plus 200,000 shares of the compan 's stock. Born not far from the Kerr-Ad-| dison gold mine, Leliever grew] up in Haileybury, Ont., and Tor- onto, "I've been prospecting since il was a child," he said was in the business 49 j told me you must h . He airly good. to sell and not just y location ground.' Court Reduces Eg 'Damage Claim | OTTAWA (CP)--The Supreme | Court of Canada Tuesday re- duced by $51.776. the amount of] damages a Unitd States steam. | 5 sh'p company must pay to the | 'ederal government for destroy: | "|ing a two-span bridge over the Burlington Ship Canal in 1952, The Exchequer Court of Can ada ruled in January, 19538, tha' the. Gartland S:eamship Company of Chicago must pay damages of 184,383. However, the Supreme Court today reduced this to $112, { 607. 150 LBS; FIT. AT LEAST GRADE Applications will 35 P.M. FRIDAY JA { REQUIRED FOR FIRE DEPARTMENT ONE FIREMAN QUALIFICATIONS: AGE 21 TO 28; HEIGHT 5°10"; WEIGHT 8 EDUCATION; PHYSICALLY be received until NUARY 29th, 1960 Apply Personnel Dept. CITY HALL, CITY OF OSHAWA ARMY HESITATES But the army is exercising re- streint, possibly because of sym- {pathy for the rebels, possibly be- {cause of sheer reluctance to ex- tend viclence, possibly because {he insurgents are mainly French descent. (Figures have bcen published 'o show that of the 1,030,000 o'tlers "in Algeria, only a -third are of French aving come © from Snain, Italy, Malta ether Med:terrcnean countrie The Iven that the ultras, Hv the long battle against Moslem population," would make] the {common cause with the army. |HIGH-SOUNDING ROLE After wariare, of guerrilla] leaders have) five years m.litary 138 8a! ) great danper has always Sas infuriated Algeria Has Own Ideology come to view the pacification of Algeria as an almost sacred ask, with all the mystique of an anti - Communist crusade. Hans {empski, the German reporter whose interview with Gen. Jacques Massu played a part in touching off the uprising, sald in a television interview from Mun- ich: "This army has given itself an 'deology of its own. . . .It is being hammered into the soldiers that 'n North Africa they are standing as the last force of fighting men whose mission it is to guard ajg satiated and weak Europe .from bolshevism." In The Evening Standard, a | London newspaper, Paris corres- pondent Sam White makes the same point when he says the French Army has "colonized" Algeria to the point where it sees its own future linked with Al- geria's future. CRUCIAL ELEMENT White says the junior officers, and pon - commissioned officers are the "crucial element, "Thoy are n preps envisage Alreria's soee France and to use the bla cma! of the S=hara oil aga'nst Paris Gen, Massu, on the Le that the army w'll obey i~archically" -- meaning that| ach grade will obey his super- Wl | { But it looks as though the gov- ernmen' and the ton military au- § |thority are wary about putting thot loyalty to the test in the present difficult situation ~which| is why the Foreign Lcgion may| have an important part to play. | WELLDRILLING Campanella Stepson | Still In Jail | NEW YORK (AP) -- Former| baseball star Roy Camnar stepson was back in the ands] of the law Tuesday, for the th rd time in less than a year, Thic| time he was accused of petty thievery and parole violation. | David Campanella, 16, and three other Negro boys, were sent to jail under bond of $5, 000] each to await a hearing Feb. 3. {Magistrate Benjamin Schor de-| clared: { "I'm going to insist that the| boys stay in jail. I want them to| See the inside of a jail. They've e beyond children's acts and| oe don't know where to stop.| Maybe a stay in jail will be a deterrent." Young Campanella told police] he took no part in any theft, but| had just happened across the other boys moments before po- lice seized fhem. The other boys packed his story. David's father was star | catcher of the then - Brooklyn | Dodgers until an auto accident in| 958 left him partially rer. | land ended his baseball career. GOCD FCOD BUSINESS MEN'S LUNCH 12 to 2 P.M. HOTEL LENCASTER | WATER Prompt, Efficient Service OTANABEE WATER WELLS LTD. Phone Peterborough Rl 5-6392 Collect Sproule's Beef is Red Brand Beef -- Convdd's finest to assure quality flavor and tenderness. CUT AND TRIMMED TO GIVE COMPLETE SATISFACTION RED BRAND--BLADE BONE REMOVED LEAN AND MEATY 1-LB, SEALED PKG. CONCERT TRIUMPH shall of Toronto scored a big | triumph at a concert in the big hall ¢f the Philharmony in Len. Canadian singer Lois bi | ingrad, Russia. Miss Marshall, shown during the concert, gave performances in Leningrad, Moscow and Riga -during tour of Russia. | GET THE BEST For Less At MODERN UPHOLSTERING 9262 SIMCOE ST. N. OSHAWA RA 8-6451 or RA 3-413) ENJOY THE | BALMY TRADE | WINDS i In the lond where the sun B| spends the winter. Hotel | Rooms -- Efficiency Units --Family Size Apts. Directly on the Gulf of Mexico. From 7.00 Free TV Radio - Daily Maid Service - Largest Pool on the Island - Putting Green Shuffleboard - Planned En- tertainment Room Tele- phones. COFFEE SHOP SPECIAL RATES FOR HONEYMOONERS THE ELDORADO 11360 GULF BLVD. ST. PETERSBURG Phone 21-1911 for reservations per day double occupancy ' Bond Issue "My father, "lectric 'By Ont. Hydro TORONTO (CP)--The Hydro- | Power Commission of Tuesday announced a aew $50,000,000 bond issue to as- tario ave something «ist in the financing of its cur rent capital expansion program. | The issue consists of open-end, | 10- and 20-year 6 per cent bonds. |The 10-year bonds are offered a to yield 6.07 per cent di hy 20-year bonds at 97% to yleld| 8. 20 per cent. F. RICHARD 136 SIMCOE N. The Examination of And Glasses BLACK, O.D. AT COLBORNE eyes Fitting of Contact Lenses Children's Visual Training For Appointment Please Call RA 3-4191 EVENINGS BY APPCINTMENT PLAN NOW RA 5.6163 RISTOW & OLSEN, REALTORS DREAM HOMES BY KASSINGER FROM $16,900 Sold Only 'Through RA 5.7732 RA 3.226% THIS IS THE TIME TO SELECT YOUR SITE, PLAN YOUR HOME AND ARRANGE YOUR MORTGAGE, HOWE & MILLEN, REALTORS SCHOFIELD INSURANCE ASSOCIATES 1-LB. BAG 20-02. TINS WITH PORK BLETS BRAND N 14-07. CORN 3 KLEENEX REGULAR OR CHUBBY TISSUES 3' FOR VEX LIfUID BLEACH ys . 32.071. JAVEX BTLS. 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