Page is. The Guardian Thurs-. July 12 1956 from the white man. Increasing Restrictions On Non-Whites In South Africa TORONTO lCP) - The govern- by the government as a somewhat ment of Johannes Strijdom, de- higher class than the Bantu. . termined to keep the outnumbered Among the many law Passed white. lie may church or white restaurant. white man in control of South by: Parliament is one which al- to him, Africa, has put the squeeze on lows the minister of native af airs He is nut permuted to Eh . me black . skinned Bantu who 19 banish. without any right of ap- labor umonp make up two-thirds of the coun- peal, any native to any area or EXCLUSL -Y WHITE AREAS iry's population. The story of the nations racial problem and the increasing num- oer of restrictions on the activi- ties of the Bantu is told in a series of articles in the Toronto Tele- 4 H gram by Ken lilacTaggart Wh0 municipal authorities which may has been making a tour of Africa. Iforce him to move. ' BasicalI.V- the government's One action requires 100 nativer, from any or all gatherings if the minister regards him as a trouble- maker or disturber of the peace. Another provides that no in- junction may be instituted by a native against any act of state or country. banished plan known as apartheid-sepah business establishments to leave ateness--is in rcvitalize native i-e- Johannesbiirg because new laws. must live under a separate roo serves mainlv rinvcrtv - stricken 583' naliwb 1033' 09978"? bU51' from his master. areas IilllGl'E land has been nvvr-inesses onl)' in Well" 0W" ""935- wnrked by tribes with no tradi- p p p tional interest in agriculture. that police ii ould be given the 1017 mitiing N0 APPE..l.S PERMITTED i0I PVICUUE "Wm; Remmce 9" me The steps taken to implemciitipolice for suchjobs, MacTaggart this plan. MacTaggart says, havei says. I5 FCSUIWIE ill I l0WBTlnE authorities thousands of Bantu living in the areas surrounding the major cities I P901319. p and has affected as well the I,-- .These are some other restric- 103.000 Coloreds - persons of nuns- mixed blood-who are regarded A Bantu must carry I v855b00k European to is about 2.650.000. register for STEAKS, your choice, lb. . . 55c RIB ROASTS, II). . . . . 45c CORNED BEEF BRISKET. Ila. 25: Fresh Ground 59c HAMBURG,2Ibs. . . . worker also doing the same thin gets about 5115. I Strijdom began investigate the racial already started to do. Coloreds 3 Civilization. FACE SOAP, 4for . . . . 3'Ic PEACHES, 15 oz., 2 cans 0. . 35: Large Size VEI. SOAP POWDER . . . .. 33c PEAS, 20 oz.,cons, 2 for . . . 33c theid, MacTaggart says. lltitle can be expected of them. ITREATED LIKE CHILDREN "Blacks in domestic shirrirrs iiiiinil. Tiidiz. i'3?”:?2y.'...i23 INSTANT PUDDINGS, 2 for 20c l;:"::::':.-.-..;i'.:;:::”:.:tr::; niueb-ma ::r.:l:: ";.:li:':':;.. TOILET TISSUE. 3 for - - - 29c ::.:1.”.1':.l”.2”::;i.Lt'f:3.?tt”g SUNKIST ORANGES, 2 doz. 69: l:::”:tg..ffi.l::8 .r:::::; ”.".'.'; Wm F.onn's enocm E;-I I:5:::.”iE::S:Lii.;":::i:ei.2:: 658:: .n'.:f..'3E.LlYtl-l:..f.?'E;... .3... nzaz ;r::':.::..":.::i.i;".::.::: ity but under the overall control I s KBARGAIN OEFERIN 6P -ICEPOODSA ' SET Q-mg Pxeo:ni1nnCannedMea1s a-'''!'.'. '4 5 .PCmm2zsGE loehcoMIlnovboHe Ifvttlou. A.ugad'of::-yoIrkichon::;lIndyfor t mi ZHDIVI of late & turn the m- 9wQ1;!s"hm)m.w of I Canned animal for moat.-in-a-lnirnrto, unexpected gusto. The l label or hot inch of heyatripnac yon bargain food nave anti SUI"? PIEIIII Olllll Ill?! K'l'IPllMluA CAIOOID IAIATS. PO00 IAVH '11. I0! 1370. IOIOMO, OOH. 1-nalmnahdnvnutluduanib Cldjthhd t.hahnh&of &E;-ga&elhR'lPri:Co&dMnh .. permitting ltim to move in any area outside his own. I He must ride a second-class bus ' and board it at a separate stop He is not permitted to attend movies except those labelled non- not go into a white p. It he is a domestic servant. he Aiming the basic laws in the Refusal to move would mean drive toiiard apartheid is one per- to establish areas where no non - European co 'd live. This affected 8.5(I),000 ' of the more than l2.500,CK)0 per. reached into the personal lives of'Dl P850001 for police authority by I sons in South Africa - 3.535.000 Ithe Bantu, an instinctively lawful L Bantu, 357,000 Asiatic; and 1,193, ' 000 Colorcds.' The white population Another bill required every non- and be classified racially. A judge in the Transvaal ruled that the onus was Aon the government to prove I Q A ;person's racial origin. Parliament then pamed a law putting the onus on the person involved. 2, I PAY MAY BE CUT 'v 5 S One ef'ect of this is that if a , person's status is changed from Colored to black, it could mean a sharp reduction in pay. For in. stance. I Colored bricklayer re- ceives about E60 a month. some. what less than a white man doing the same job. However, a black his program without waiting for the final re- port of a commission set up to question. However. as it turned out, the commission's f i n d i n g a largely agreed with what Strijdom had The commission declared that any type of integration of blacks, or Asiatic: in white areas would mean economic in- tBOSb0n ltegraltioni social, cultural and po- . iica in egra ion, the ' . 2 cans ' ' ' C jation. interbreeding oll iiiiisecsegaieiiid Wo0dbury,s ;eventually extinction of the white I This fear on the part. of many I whites of eventually losing control of South Africa is one of the moti- vations of the drive toward apar- He adds that another factor in the attitude toward the Bantu is a belief among many whites that service. . No Breakublo Parcels For - HMCS Labrador Realtives and friends were warned not to mail fragile items to personnel of HMCS Labrador. the Royal Canadian Navy's Arc- Skmed 09'-'"P3”””5 PM Wm” tic patrol ship which sailed from skilled trades are mostly closed Hmfu, July 3 (0,. he, um-d an. nual voyage in northern waters. In announcing the Labrador's mailing address for the next three months, Naval Headquarters ad- H9 03" OW” land will in "I "95 vised that the ship would receive T9P1'959'"I"8 10 99' "Em 0' "W most of her mail by air-drop and that, under the circumstances. no If he, bleaks 3” 0' 3” mmw assurance could be given that fra- regulations. he can be summarily in a defined locality though it be a long way from where he has been born and grew gile items would survive without damage. Parcels will not be in- sui-ed. The Labrador will be operating mainly in the Foxe Basin area ; of the Eastern Arctic. where she will take part in the seabornc sup- ply of DEW Line sites and con- tinue with her programiof north- ern survey and studies. i The ship's company, drawn from all across Canada, consists of ap- proximately 210 officers and men and 10 civilian scientists. Their rn il should be addresses as fol- lows: Rank. Name Number, Mess Number. H.M.C.S. Labrador, 1 Base Post Officer, Montreal. P.Q. Domestic postage rates to Mon- treat apply. of whites. The Bantu would have no vote. The report admits the Bantu are not agriculturists but says the state must teach them to be farm- ers. It suggests their activities as workmen be confined henceforth to secondary industry-which as yet does not exist-in their own areas. x 0 -- - 5hQQ .. '2-teehnf URGENT MESSAGE Signals exercise at Camp Borden. Despatch rider S. Sgt Lemuel MacAulay, 54 King St., Charlotte- Ontario. Lt. Col 'ohnston com- town. hands an urgent message mands the 5th Signal Regiment to Lt. Col. K.M. Johnston. 65 Am- (Militia). now undergoing a week's hrose St., Charlottetown. during a training at the huge Ontario Army only leadership value because its quality-built by A RIGIDAIRE t world's largest maker of refrigeiators it. i. iiotm. GIAIIILOTTETDWII camp. The unit boasts the larg- est contingent of any of the eight units from Ontario and the Mari- times now In camp Total streng- th for the week was 140 all ranks. (Canadian Army Photo) 10 maps. half of them in color. The hlsto says ' fective strength was mately 0.000. Abqp discharged. crulted," the history says. CIIIDES AIR. FORCE tunately. that the Korean War was the last, or that the next war. if there is one. will not be another tperipheral' and local conflict of "lg same sort. rather than I worldwide struggle fought with devastating ' , "indeed, the former type of war is very much more probable. just because a nuclear war would probably mean a world conflict and virtually world suicide." '5 cents. It ll illustrated with 0 black-and-white photographs and that on the eve of its d ore to 1951 for Korea. the 25th Canadian infantry Brigade. or special force. uilt . was kiiown. then, had taken on ' more than 10,000 men. But its" ef approxi- t 500 men were absent without leave or had de- . aerted and another 1,500 bad-been - "Such wastage was largely I . by - product of the speed with which the force had had to be re- The official account, prepared by the army's historical section. takes a 1!!) at the air force's nir- atoinic concept of future war. It says: "There is no assurance. unfor- I . 4 -Canacia's.Koirean.iB'rioadeif5 38.829 "wet; fatal, casualties. 312 of them talx Canadian Army had all ut If the .caauaitiu, which incl three fatalities. The official account does a into the recon and enforced tirement of Brig. A. B. who headed the Canadian mission in Tokyo in 1951. He prisoners on Koje Island off the south coast of Korea. canon Quaxas naconoan MONTREAL (CF)-Rev. Maur- e, disclosed Tuesday-the instit- .u on's selsmograph r e c o r d e d weekend earthquakes in the Aeg- ean islands. two 'eax-thquake shock" waves "of powerful intensi y l were received is minutes apart Just before initi- night July 8 and were traced to somewhere near "Greece. NEWSPAPER IIEADEII South Africa's 14,000,000 people read a total of 19,000,000 news- paper: a month during 1955. WORLD LEADERSHIP Could give you this sensafcionolly low PRICE TAG! Greatest example yet; of the Frigidaire valuo that has won 20 million buyers! Big 10.1 cubic foot capacity Frigidaire 1956 Super Model " --yet it needs only 28 inches of walhpaoe! FRIGIDAIRE PRODUCTS OF CANADA, LIMITED Scarborough, Ontario Leadership value because it's backed by GENERAL MOTORS world's largest manufacturer of mechanical products inmsn ') I . or ice Bruist, director of Brebeuf Col- aurly 1.000.000 were, North - - can and . Chinese . South Korea had 825.(ll0i casualties. UMI00 of thanr . the United States 10:001. of. 4 - or-G111 II-W apparently retired because he did) not inform Ottawa quickly ! grade to help guard Commuiikt that a rifle company was -. detached from the Canadian v Father Brulat saith 0 -- - - - . .- . V ., ..:p.;.::ii-;"id Suffered? Heavy Wasfagcs-we-s. ...”"':ti'.'.?uy(c'i3?a3'.ll'.'.'. 3'; :3. ,' ea. .. lfth of its strngth through dis- than 2,000,000 casualties. of i Canada' suffered 1.557 'bm: