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Titre :
Sherbrooke daily record
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  • Sherbrooke, Que. :[Eastern Township Publishing],[1897]-1969
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vendredi 25 septembre 1953
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  • Journaux
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  • Sherbrooke gazette ,
  • Sherbrooke examiner
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  • Sherbrooke record
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Sherbrooke daily record, 1953-09-25, Collections de BAnQ.

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[" SEeTÈMBER\t1953\t\t S tS T W\tT\tf\ts - - 1- 2\t3\t4\t5 6 7 8 9\t10\t11\t12 13 14 15 16\t17\t18\t19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26\t\t\t (27 28 29 30 I *\t\t\t Established 1897.PRICE: 5 CENTS THE PAPER OF THE EASTERS TOWNSHIPS SHERBROOKE.QUEBEC FRIDAY.SEPTEMBER 25.1955 WEATHER SHOWERS Cloudy today and Saturday; showers beKinning Saturday night; little change in temperature: winds light, l.ow-high at S her brook* 50 and 65.Fifty-seventh Year Worid News Ottawa \u2014C \u2014 Britain's Maj.-Gen.Horatius Murray is due to arrive in Canada Sept.29 en route to his new assignment as commanding officer of the Commonwealth division in Korea.The army said Gen.Murray will spend a week visiting military installations across the country before flying to Tokyo Oct.6.* * * Astoria, Ore.\u2014(.-Pi\u2014 The Matson freighter, Hawaiian Planter of San Francisco, rammed and sank a steel barge loaded with 700 tons of ammunition in the Columbia river, nine miles east of here today.The U.S.coast guard said the barge overturned, but none of the ammunition exploded.Eisenstadt, Austria \u2014/P)\u2014 Twelve houses in the village of Dobersdorf were destroyed Thursday in a fire started by children playing with matches.1 * * Saigon, Indo-China \u2014l/Pt\u2014 The French Vyet Nam drive to unhinge a series of Communist bases in the Red river delta has grown into a bitter battle 30 miles southeast of Hanoi.The attack was launched Wednesday at Hung Yen, the key to a network of defended villages and towns in the delta which the French command wants to break up in dvance of the expected Com-lunist drive this fall.* * # Copenhagen \u2014(/P)\u2014 Movie ictress Elizabeth Taylor, who arrived here Thursday with her husband Michael Wilding, was taken seriously ill last night, an agent of Metro Gold-wyn Mayer said today.Miss Taylor caught influenza during a visit to Stockholm.Arriving at Copenhagen airport from Stockholm she complained of headache and during a press reception after her arrival the pains worsened.She collapsed later at a hotel.A doctor said she was suffering from a serious heart cramp due to overstrain.* v * London \u2014(Reuters)\u2014A further shakeup in the government of the Soviet republic of Georgia \u2014 already purged of a premier who was an intimate of Lavrenty Beria \u2014 was announced today by Tiflis radio.The radio said three cabinet ministers have been dismissed after the ouster of Premier Valerian Minayevich Bakradze.Their political fortunes had all been linked with Beria.Pleas For High East-West Meeting Level Made Before U.N.Assembly Mine Strike Is Extended To Hollinger Little Nations Beg Big Four Members To Get Together.ï.United Nations.N.Y.\u2014\u2014 Pleas tor a high level meeting of the West and Russia in an effort to ease world tensions mounted toda\\ as the UN General Assembly moved toward the wind-up ol member countries' broad policy statements.Timmins \u2014 iCt1 \u2014 Upwards of Such pleas are not new in the l N.where liul.nations in the 1,600 workers went on strike._ast jjave heitsed the Biu Four to eet together.What s new is Thursday night at Hollinger Con- 1\t.solidated Gold Mines, bringing the, that the pleas number of miners idle in this area cpcnin\u201e sessions, to nearly 4,000.\t1\t; The United Steelworkers of Am* France, Iasi ol the western d erica (CfO-CCU) spread its strike db, was on today's speaking Ü-: alone to Hollinger as part ol its fight\t-\t1\t.against what the union calls \u201cthe \u2018 countries which have been loudest in Ihc attae conspiracy of mine operators to m\tAfnca this year have come so early and so often in the Thrc s pea k with s on 1 in the policy Middle Fast ¦reneh pc\" liv ' destroy unionism in the gold camp.\u201d j Hollinger is the biggest mine in ! the rich Porcupine gold field and I is reputed to have the most ex-I tensive underground workings of ! any mine in the world.Last Tuesday the same union called a strike which led to the I closing of the McIntyre mine, an-; other giant of the Timmins area.Four other district mines also i are strike-bound by the union to back up demands for higher wages, shorter working hours and j company deduction of union dues, ; In extending the strike to Hoi- ! linger, known locally as \u201cthe big mine,\u201d the union delivered what municipal leaders described as a crushing blow to the entire north country.Said town Councillor Leo 1 Del Vallano: \u201cPrime Minister St.Laurent and i With less than 20 countries loti to speak.UN officials hoped to gal Ihc formal statements out of the way by Monday, (hen start the political committees to work on such issues as Korea.Palestine,, disarmament and Morocco-Tunis- ; ia.Big Four meetings -to seek agreejnents on Germany.Austria.Korea and other issues disturbing nil,\tn,\t, ij the world, have\tbeen urged bv Ottawa (P\tTwo\tsecond\tworld ; de]egates lrom\tcountries ' witn war prisoners\twho\tescaped\twhile j wide political and geographical being held in\tCanada have\tbeen1 distribution.Germans Get Permission To Stay Here ' ëÉÉp * x * ¦ ¦ IfH i M&JS HEARTBREAK I his Uni ¦ deg -keeps a tireles; move than mne ONI THE HIGHWAY Ilis friend was liil and killed by a speeding automobile, , ¦.; - u id.-; -imul what happened Knowing only that something is ten thly wrong, vigil over the body.-determined that nothing more shall happen to Ins comrade, hours the grieving pup kept his hopeless watch by the side ol tl.S.Highway outside Allentown.Pa., until Humane Soeiety agents relieved him of his heartbreaking vigil.granted permission to remain \u201cprovided they meet health requirements,\u201d the immigration department announced today.Both former members of Hie German merchant navy, they are Premier Frost (of Ontario) arc go-, .Franz J.Jeniseh,\u2018arrested in nam- ing to have to make arrangements ilton about six weeks ago, and for transporting 40,000 people out J Heinz Frommc.who surrendered of this area right away or find'î0 RCMP here more recently so some way of settling this thing.,\t,, .\t, '\t, The same union put 1.600 men ni\u201cl ms MaULs could t)c eledled-on strike at the big Noranda cop-, Fi'omme is living in Marathon, Ont.per-and-gold mine in northwestern.A department spokesman said Quebec Aug.21.\t;the health provision was a \u201croutine As north country residents i process.\u201d It will mean a check by watched the strike paralysis creep the health department similar to across the goldfields, they were ! that given all immigrants, who may chilled by memories of the three- be ruled out because of tubercu-month strike in the winter of 1941-,iosis.mental illness or serious phv-42 which cost Kirkland Lake thou-,sjcai defect, sands of residents and gave its economy a setback from which it took years to recover.Once cleared by the health department.Jenisch and Frommc will be given landing certificates, Iceland\u2019s Thor Thors, summed up the argument for the assembly j late Thursday.He quoted recent statements by , President Eisenhower.Britain s - Prime Minister Churchill, and Russia's Premier George! Malenkov to support his contention that disputed issues could be settled.\"When they all seem to be seeking to get together, why don't they?\u201d Thors asked.'That ihc world must know, it demands; to know.\u2018\u2018The time has come to lace facts.When we hear, day after I day, over the radio and read in newspapers, that over 80 leading ! cities and centres of population here in America are being singled out as targets tor atomic attacks, and as we can imagine that such visits would be returned in ihc visitors\u2019 own territory, has not the time arrived for facing facts and ¦Oi \u201e Day n Q j- ^ O tv Paiimunjom f/i\u2019) The Kor can repatriation commission today proposed a live-day delay before the Communists and Allies try to coax home prisoners re losing repatriation- -apparently because of disagreement over rules.The UN command promptly agreed to postpone the start of prisoner interviews- a phase til the truce which, an Allied spokesman called \u201cthe psychological bat tic ol our time.\u201d But it insisted that the five days be deducted lrom the DO-day interview period the Korean armi Iic.no immediate Red Delay Is Sought More Help Of Questioning Needed In Indo-China Today's Chuckle Indian chief introducing himself to pale-face visitor: \"\\ am Brave Eagle; this is my son, Fighting Bird, and this is my grandson.Super-jet Bomber.'' awakening to this deadly outlook.Afavor*Ï Vsoooner of Timmins ! \"''h .0e '-lven landmS certificates, TVe cannot continue to live in .left for Toron?o Thursdiv fol I offlcially granting their entry into fools' paradise, meetings with Labor Minister1 U,nada- ^y ma>\u2019 ^on become \u201cBut it seems clear that th-, Dalev of Ontario\tCanadian citizens in live years, decision lies with the big le aders ! The steel union staged a nine- Two oilier German merchant sea- and so does the responsibiity?! week strike at Hollinger in\t1951.i men previously were granted per-\tThors\temphasized\tthat\tworld Thursday night\u2019s walkout\tis said mission to stay in Canada, in\ttensions\tappeared to\thave\teased \u2022 March, 1949, Willy Gottschalk was! with a new regime in Russia.He discovered working in a Montreal ! til-Çd what he termed \u201cconeilia-proceedings provided for\tunder ! chemical plant.He was later given j\ttor \u2018 speeches by both U.S.\tstate Ontario labor laws were\tunder-1 official status as an immigrant, in !\tsecretary\tDulles and\tSoviet\tdele- gate Andrei Vishinsky.\u201cThe doors seem to be open,\u201d Thors asserted, \u201cat, least not closed.Any entrance will do.it the negotiators enter in the right mood and in good faith.\u201d tixecl by There reply.During pi nod.22,;: Hie UN am i .1 by the i ed by their was the 100 :.us to be illegal in that the union took strike action before conciliation taken.\t| May, 1950, Hans Otto Albrecha sur- Throughout the dispute with the , rendered to police in Calgary and union, the mine operators have i was also given immigrant status, taken the attitude that theirs is a depressed industry operating only with government support and that they cannot afford to increase wages or shorten working hours.The McIntyre management had instructions from its shareholders to close down the mine in the event of a strike and there have been suggestions that, since gold W.Europe Plans Ammo Project Continued on Page 5.Mayors Decide That Cities Cannot Pay Their Own Way Holstein Sets World Record By BOB JOYCE Canadian Press Staff Writer Montreal\u2014i'(P)\u2014Money problems dominated the five-day Interna-.ional Municipal Congress held aere this week.The 800 mayors and representa-ives of Canadian and American dties also debated traffic prob Paris \u2014 AP \u2014 The North Atlantic Council, governing body of NATO, today announced plans to produce a billion dollars worth of ammunition in Western Europe.The United States will pay paft of the bill, but U.S.officials | asked the amount of the American share be kept secret.Britain's Lord Ismay ; secretary-general, called .j \u201cbiggest single program ever pre-!Mona came up with enough milk .\t.\t,\t.sented to the Atlantic alliance.\u201d to tip tha 18,538 pound mark.The held out .little prospect of object of the plan is to get milk contained 787 pounds ol biu-quickiy achieving a new metro-, West- European faPctorie>s to terlat with an average test -'1 ' nufactul'e ammunition so the 5.24 percent.urban communities 2nd cfuesSo^\u2019: AI,ics can stop depending on U.The former world champion m uroan communities ana cities ,io.n g oulpUl\t: umior two-year 305-dsv uivi.- on iafn£cen?ra\\%erGcesd Pay CC1''I\t^ be financed by produc-, of the P.vicla-day milking class No one came uo with an over 1 ing countries and by offshore pio-|was Tranquille Canary Yale Klein.all solution o?thePtraffie ouestUn : curement under the U.S.mutual: a Holstein owned by the University an solution oi tne trame question,] tonnrifi;\t¦¦ Tcm.\u201e.\tnr q-.ciran.hmw.n sa,n turned out Erin, Ont.\u2014 -® \u2014 Grahaven Milestone Mona, a two-year-old holstein set.a world record tor production of both milk and butler fat Thursday night, as cattle breeders held a special dinner in NATO j her honor.it the: As Mrs.R.G.Graham milked, se main point: ;n the Allied ind ems and issues of municipal gov- although many ways of tackling I\tP'ogram, Ismay told re- d!,n^a,skal,c'^|V'dn,.' d\u2019-'L \\ irnment, but always with the individual traffic problems were ! porters'\t18\u2019084 P°unds oi m,lk al -\u202282 r)< 1 luestion of money in the emmedi- suggested.ate background.i Both organizations passed reso- U.S.officials have asked NATO \\ cent butter fat.I not to disclose the amount of tjJ j S.money involved, according to ! Whittier, Calif., cm The 1952.The chief conclusion of this con-1 lutions calling on their respective-T\tr\t,\t, ,,\t,\t, , mention was that the cities of the governments for action.The U.S.\t4 \u2022 Weicker of New York j world s champion jiijJk pioduciii^ vorld can't pay their way.' 'mayors wanted Washington to Y-YTO assistant .secretary-general cow is dead of old age.Ian co Experts from Canada, Britain and make\tits mind\tup about civil de-\tin chai'ge of production.A eicker ; I^azel Excellent, who produced he United States all told the same fence\tand foot\tthe bill, and they\tand -taff drew up the plan., 27o,000 pounds\tof milk before she more money than they did before 'asked\tCongress\tnot to scrap the\t, Weicker said the program had was re ired last\twinter succumbed ,tory.Cities, though collecting present system of federal grants-\u2022 been approved by the counci, and ibursday at Lie age of 18.Dairy-he war are not getting as big a in-aid\trecommended to each NATO ' men say that s\ta bovine equal to share of tax revenue as°they used: The\tCanadians decided they still!\tcountry.Each country will have more than 100\thuman years.The to do,\tI don\u2019t like the exemption of crown :to ,dec\u2018de whether to go along] cow won the world title Aug.5 And.the experts said, there is 'property from federal tax and de- wl,h the plan, no let-up in the demand for city cided the demand its removal and ! .services.Citizens want new roads, exemption of municipal purchases nore street lighting, better water from the 10 per cent federal sales1 supplies, and extended police pro- tax.lection.\tThey also called for a federal- The money isn't there, they provincial conference to consider agreed, and only large grants from the financial plight of Canadian federal and provincial govern- cities.ments keep cities from going Thursday members of the Cana-bankrupt.\tdian federation asked the federal It was the first time the Cana- gove?nment to let them pay hall dian and American mayors met at the bill for civil defence if their a joint convention.Apart from province won\u2019t put up the money.I one afternoon when the two At present if a province doesn't1 groups met separately to elect of- match the federal civil defence ticers and debate resolutions, all grant by an equal amount oF their sessions were held join'.iy.money, the city gets no grant, at The Canadians stayed on for a all.business session Thursday, al- Delegates also heard Quebec\u2019s though the congress formally end- minister of municipal affairs, Yves' ed Wednesday night.\tPrévost, explain that Quebec; Few of the speakers at the con- doesn't think federal subsidies are1 gross were optimistic about the any substitute for a province's: future.\tright to certain taxes.Dr.Cyril James, principal of If Ottaw'a had enough money to .Montreal's McGill University, told Otter to purchase tax rights, then] the mayors \u201ccivilization as we it was clear the federal govern-; know it will collapse\" if cities ment was taking in too much rev-; don't lead the way.\tenue, he said.Transport experts painted a The Canadians chose Windsor.1, black picture of the creeping para- Ont., as site of their 1954 conven-lysis traffic is causing in central tion.and although the Americans city areas as people move into the haven\u2019t reached any decision.Can-suburbs and down areas become adian spokesmen say they hope it blighted.\tAvili be Detroit.That way they Government administrative spe-1 could hold a second international Cl»,lists\u2014particularly from the U.S.' congress next year,\tt 90-day interview forme)' prisoners of 30 prisoners capturai':' to be question ginal side, j The Lve-nanon neutral commission composed ol India.Sweden, Switzerland.Czechoslovakia and Poland, said (lie delay was necessary because \"arrangements and facilities'' for the interviews had not been completed.I The commission is reported to ] have been trying to reconcile wide \u2022 I y different, recommendations submitted by the Allies and Reds on rides to govern the operation, Brig.Gen.A.L Hamblen, bead (¦; the Allied team of explainers and observers, agreed to the de-May but said i! must be deducted j from the 90-day explanation period.which the armistice terms say ! must start Sept.1 There are the .conflict bet Communist views : 1.\tCommunists insist on interviews with individual prisoners; the Allies demand groups of 25.2.\tThe UN command wants the prisoner to have the right to refuse to listen to the explanations; the ! Communists demand that all prisoners listen.The Allies object to individual interviews on the belief that a ; prisoner appearing before Red explainers might be intimidated by threat, of reprisal and other mean:.The UN command says a prisoner should be allowed to refuse to s go to the explanation on the ground that he already has made his choice and that any reversal I.must he done by \u201can overt\u201d act ; on his part\u2014that is, by applying to the repatriation commission for repatriation.The Communists also demand that the explainers be allowed to j talk to the prisoners repeatedly.The Allied command is prepared ! to let the prisoner make his de-cx-ion after one explanation.Those still undecided could be interviewed as often as they wish but 'only voluntarily.I The UN command has called on m;o repatriation commission to j guarantee that no foreo, threat or ! affront to personal dignity he permitted against, prisoners.Terms of the agreement on prisoners at ( I ached to the armistice document clearly state that, no intimidation should be permitted and only j riuirsday Iho repatrialion commis.! sion gave prisoners such assm j ances.The temper of (lie nearly 8,1100 North Korean and 14,600 Chinese anil-lied prisoners is sueh that some will resent cn'orls by tlm Communists to win them back and may even resist appearing for Hie explan,it ions.On their arrival at the compounds in Iho demilitarized .'one, , anli-Rcd prisoners hurled rocks and shouted abuse at Communis! observers outside.The 23 Americans, one Briton and 335 South Koreans listed by the Reds as refusing repatriation i arrived at the demilitarized zone | Friday, singing the 'Tnternation-j ale,\u201d anthem of world-wide com-I iimnism.' Annoiinerment of their names by Fed Chin,'a ¦ !Viping radio brought.K actions of almost unanimous dis ! belief from their .families.There was no indication of what.: they will he told, lint Gen.Mark Ottawa i® remier Antoine day Unit Fn Former French I\u2019inay said hole noli troops light in Indo-China om the United ir East, commander, men and Clark.UN I said last.week.\u201cWe plan to interview tin and explain fully their rig! privileges .CommunvJ correspondent Wilfred Burclirll once more Friday admitted there may be some.Allied prisoners hclrl in Red Manchuria.More then a week ago.Burchett indicated some American airmen were in Manchuria, lie said the Alii es would have In negotiate for \u201cIhrougb diplomatic mg llii' communists need more help Stales.The wai is costing her $1,501).000,000 a year and hardly a family in Fiance has not been touched through death nr injury in the lighting, he said.Mr.I\u2019inay, 6)-yenr-ol
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