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The Oshawa Times, 7 Aug 1959, p. 9

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roads on Sudbury's large Mine- Mill membership. Mr. Ross said his union would apply to the Canada Labor Re- lations Board Aug. 11 for certifi- cation of the 1,200 company em- plovees. He said a meeting would then be held to decide whether to con- tinue the present consolidated 'Mine Men Vote For Steel Union 'CUNNING MAN Khrushchev Visit ¢ Oshawa Times VOL. 88--No. 182 OSHAWA, FRIDAY, AUGUST 7, 1959 Seen Dangerous | ELLIOT LAKE (CP)--Workers lof Consolidated Denison Mines | Limited have voted 675 to 304 for denison contract or begin negoti- PAGE. ELEVEN ations on a new one. The steelworkers, now negoti- ating with three mining compan- jes and about to begin with a the United Steelworkers of Amer- zuelan government decides fo in- jca (CLC) as their bargaining vite him to Caracas. |agent "Washington could do nothing] The vote gives the steel union about this . . . |complete control of the local ura- "Khrushchev has no intention nium industry and washes away or desire to terminate the cold|the only foothold of the Interna- war. If he did he would be out of tional Union of Mine, Mill and a job the next day." {Smelter Workers (Ind.) im this Ravines, former professor at community aboul 80 miles west {the Leninist Institute of Moscow, [of Sudbury. ; {said he learned that for any real] Steel worker representative |change in the world to be effec- Wally Ross called the vote "an- |tive it must be based on change other paving stone on the road lin the home and change in thelto Sudbury." Steelworkers have |individual. attempted in the past to make in-: fourth, hold contracts at 10 area mines covering 8,000 workers. $26,000 Cash Burned In Bus NORTH BAY (CP)--Post office lofficials said Thursday that $26,- 000 in cash was burned up Tues- day when a bus caught fire near here. The money was destined for the Bank of Montreal's branch in Timiskaming, Que. MACKINAC ISLAND, Mich. chief delegate to the Comintern (CP)--The founder of the Com-|from Latin America, told the 'rounist party ir Peru says Soviet summer summit me etin g of Premier Khrushchev's forthcom- Moral Re-Armament Thursday: ing visit to the United States "The day he | "will open the door to complete leaves Washington he will be Communist penetration of Latin|readv to accept an invitation America." from Fidel Castro to go to Eudocio Ravines, one - time Havana. Then suppose the Vene- . = Minister June 11 provincial election: cost| Denies Jere Boi Myre Speculation 1954, chief electoral officer Ro- | derick Lewis seid Thirsday VICTORIA (CP)--Defence Min-| He said part of the increased igo. pearkes arrived in Victoria] cost results from higher salaries |p RCAF Comet jet Thursday] paid Section officials and in- and descirbed as "pure imagina- ete sts of polling booths. |! reports from Ottawa that] ~~ lhe might become British Colum- (Khrushchev) | New Section Of 401 Open Total Mileage 'Now 240 Miles Another 10 miles of Highway 401, from Gananoque westerly to the Joyceville Sideroad -- mid- Ontario Election Cost $2,500,000 TORONTO (CP) Ontario's ' JOYCEVILLE |) = material, 97,500 tons of asphalt and 12,535 cubic yards of cone crete for the structures. In addi- CNE Trattic Jam Might Be Eased TORONTO (CP) Traffic au- thorities predic te d hopefully Thursday night that Wednesday night's monster tangle at Exhib ition Stadium will not be re- peated Sam Cass, Metropolitan Tor onto traffic engineer, and Deputy Chief Robert Kerr of the police traffic division, said 'the first time is always the worst." Wednesday night's exhibition football game between Toronto Argonauts and Chicago Cardinals inaugurated the new stadium on the Canadian Nationa! Exhibition grounds near the lakefront. There were 27,770 fans and an esti mated 12,000 cars Chief Kerr, who had 26 of- ficers assigned to the stadium, said more men would be posted in future at trouble spots Authorities felt the also would be eased as motor ists became more familiar with the geography of the stadium and its parking areas. congestion Presses Roll In England LONDON (Reuters) -- Printing workers got presses rolling Thursday in more than 1,000 pro- vincial newspaper plants and 4,-| 300 printing firms after settle. ment of a dispute which stopped production for seven weeks. The back-to - work move ran % iteh a CO 1 y! > ber 1 av - 2G into a hitch in Leicester, where Maple is being contributed by the|ously on Highway 401 from west managements of two newspapers charged unions with "victimiza- tion" against employees who helped turn out emergency edi- tions during the stoppage. Union officials promised an on-the-spot investigation Members of the volved are to vote settlement agreed between em- ployers and union leaders for a 41% -per-cent wage increase and a reduction of the working week to 10 unions ,in- on terms of a bia's next lieutenant-governor. | The 71-year-old minister said) the report he might succeed Lieu-! tenant Governor Frank Ross who retires next year was "pure imagination on the part of some Ottawa writer and perhaps he should get a medal for his imag- inative mind.' Mr. Pearkes also denied an Ottawa paper's report that a fed- eral construction project - under | way at Carp, 20 miles northwest of the capital, is "possibly the underground emergency head- quarters for the Canadian gov-| ernment in the event of nuclear war." Asked by reporters; to ment on the Ottawa Citizen story, he said: "The army is constructing aj signal experiment station for the| purpose of conducting certain ex- periments in the transmission of The construc- and no wireless messages tion is for that purpose other." Mr. Pe: today will turn over to Belgium's Defence Min- ister Gilson the Canadian coastal defence escort vessel HMCS Win- nipeg as part of Canada's aid-to NATO allies Research Ship For University TORONTO (CP)--The Univer- sity of Toronto Thursday took over operation of the Porte Dau- phine, a 400-ton vessel engaged in oceanographic - type research on the Great Lakes. | The ship, to be operated by the university's department of geolo- gical sciences, will study the formation of the Lakes; meteor-| ological effects on the mass of | water; erosion, pollution, cur- {rents and other problems. Money to operate the vessel and a laboratory at nearby mines department, the National |Research Council, the Ontario de- |partment of lands and forests land Canadian oil companies. Carleton, Western and McMas- ter Universities are co-operating {in the program NOTED EDUCATIONIST Sir Robert Falconer, who died at Toronto in ]943, was president of the University of Toronto from com-| Xcess SH ROAD b! i HIGHWAY 401 | FROM JOYCEVILLE SIDEROAD oc) TO GANANOQUE SCALE 2 3 Im-- -- = DRAWN BY DEPARTMENT OF HIGHWAYS, ONTARY Gananoque, the new highway | will greatly relieve traffic con- | ditions on Highway 2, especial | | ly through Gananoque, | of this 10-mile section it is now | Brockville -- a distance of 48'2 possible to travel continuously | miles the second longest on Highway 401 from west of section of Highway 401 in the Kingston to the junction with | province. While providing two Highway 2 at Crystal Beach, | 'convenient interchanges for | five and a half miles west of | traffic into. and owt of partment of Highways. The distance is a little better than 10 miles. Official opening cere- | monies were held Aug. 6 and the new section opened to traf- fic at 6 p.m. With the opening MAP SHOWS the newes tion of Highway 401, the exten- sion of the Kingston By-Pass from the Joyceville Sideroad to just east anoque, to be completed the Ontario De Second Largest Section Open Of Highway 401 In Ontario ville a distance of 48% miles|ville), 48% miles; from Prescott property in September, 1954. Thisjusual. T his particular er the second longest section of|to Highway 16, three miles; Iro- half million is in addition to the change design is known as a dia-| Highway 401 in the Province, |quois to seven miles east of Mor-|construction costs mond type and features four one- | |risburg, 17 miles WIDTH way ramps, Very few similar : ia hed . {ones have been huilt by the De- Fr wvay W) 1 heing vonsi uet-) Each two-lane paved portion is partment of Highways to date. use Windsor to Tilbury, 31} We og or I eo 24-feet wide throughout on either] When the interchange for the miles; London - Ingersoll - W. £508 LS Sar pif iid side of the depressed median Joyceville sifleroad is construct- stock - Eastwood, 38 miles; High-| the Bg nt of Highways strip, which is 28 feet wide over way 27 to Highway 10, six and {Fach section. isa complete en. | the entire 10 miles. Outside shoul-|ace X half miles; Toronto By-Pass, in-|. as it joins 'two P existing ders.are 10-feet wide; the median | miles of new highway. cluding the link via Highway 27|..° , rho i Vimig OF inside shoulders are two feet| : Ivrea fe with the Queen Elizabeth Way, z7| King's Highways and is put into) cide: Both are surfaced with NUMBER OF CONTRACTS ji hi full service as soon as it is com-| ; divas " ol. TI Ten contracts were awarded) miles; from the eastern end| 4 0" poi i given to these | compacted crushed gravel. he| " etd f thi Mg | of the Toronto By-Pass to New- Eo tons on the basis of the|lEnt-ob-way is 300 feet. wide alif 77 pedi ig Cy " his we castle, 32 miles; Brighton - Tren, "0" "lief which will be the way. tion of Highway . of Kingston to the junction with ton - Belleville Marysville, 33 | afforded for traffic congestion on STRUCTURES LANDSCAPING Highway 2 at Crystal Beach, five miles; Kingston - Gananoque -| oo highways. aa | To date more than 5340 trees and a half miles west of Brock-' Crystal Beach (west of Brock. 0 or largest rics High ¥ fos iand shrubs have been - ---- --- ee-- NAY, CONT | bridge that carries way M than $4,415,000 has bee |over both the Gananoque -River| OF@~ than yi Sus a8 D'and Thousand Islands Railway|q pe ' : wii] expended to date in the construc-| (vp) This - structive. with a| Some 125.340 square yards of sod | tion of the 10 miles of new high- | tal Tengtt "of 300 et won. | have been laid. In addition the way, the interchanges and other| ow: ~€NEN1 » 18 @ CONCinenartment of Highways is also h tinuous steel plate girder type.|. : a ) . ion. structures. The roadway width is 96 feet. | Seeding some 150 acres, particu | . Total estimated ti {larly around the interchanges, by |COST OF LAND ey $982 Aha ed cost Is mMOre eans of their own hydraseeder- Expenditures in excess of $550,-| "a8 ius {mulch blower method. The De-| sec of Gi by of Highways Picture t --Dept 1 The official opening of the 10 miles of Highway 401 between the junction with Highway 2, just east of Gananoque, and the Joyceville sideroad by James A. C. Auld, MPP for Leeds, and Jack R. Simonett MPP for Frontenac - Addington, on August 6. brings the total mileage of Highway 401 now in use to 240 miles, The new section is four-lane, divided highway, With the open- ing of this 10-mile section it is now possible to travel continu MILEAGE SUMMARY These are the sections now in | access throughout the entire 10 'Slush Fund Charge Raised These include evergreens, decidu-| ous trees and flowering shrubs. | | I ed there will be full control of, way between Gananoque and | Kingston -- was opened for traf- fic Thursday, at 6 p.m. This new sc 'on will bring the mileage of | BH' hway 401 in use up to a total of 240 miles. That total is close to| half of the full distance of High-| way: 401 when completed. The ribbon-cutting was per- formed by James A. C. Auld, MPP for Leeds, and Jack R. Simonett, MPP for Frontenac-| Addington, on the new $882,000 bridge over the Gananoque River and the Thousand Islands Rail- way With the opening of this 10- mile section it is now possible to travel continuously on High- way 401 from west of Kingston to the junction with Highway 2 at Crystal Beach, five and a half miles west of Brockville -- a dis- tance of 48%; miles -- making it fhe second longest section of Highway 401 in the province. | | | $4,965,000 PROJECT Total eost of the project was more than $4,965,000 which in- cludes $550,000 expended to ac- quire. the land for the right-of- way, Four structures were re- quired, .two of which are inter- changes, another is an overpass and the. fourth a $370,000 bridge over both the Gananoque River and the Thousand Islands Rail way (CNR). At a later date an interchange will he built at the junction of Highway 401 and the Joyceville Sideroad, Materials used in the construc- jon of 'the 10-mile stretch included 777,000 tons of granular tion, 819,000 cubic yards of earth were excavated and 299,000 cubie yards of rock removed. Fried Eggs Lead To Court Suit KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -- It started out as a simple order of eggs for breakfast. It ended with a $50,000.damage suit. Wade Patterson Dunn, who or- dered the eggs, has sued the Na- tional Toddle House Corporation for damages as a result of his breakfast order Tuesday. Here's what the suit says happened Dunn "ordered two fried eggs a cup of coffee, Charles Henry, a Toddle House cook, broke the yolks when he started to prepare the eggs. Dunn said do £0 ahead and scramble them, env threw the 5 a and started again. iin] The yolks of the second pair of eggs also broke. Dunn again asked that they be scrambled. Henry again threw them out. Dunn said he's just drink his coffee and forget the eggs, since he was in a hurry. Well, one thing led to nother, the suit said, and Henry knocked Din down, kicked him and beat m. Henry was fined $26 Wi on assault' and battery J OTTAWA (CP) -- The continu- ing squeeze in the availabilitv of money for loan was pointed up dramatically Thursday as the planted. Bank of Canada's interest rate|-- jumped to a record 5.98 per cent. The rise of .26 per cent from | 572 last week was the biggest in-| crease in a steady five-week rise] an upswing which has reflected the relative tightness of money available for short-term lending. The bank rate is geared at one- quarter of one per cent above the 1907 to 1932. ------ SALES REPRESENTATIVE We are looking for an aggressive representative, 42 hours from. 44 preferably with experience with automotive, igni- tion, brake parts and other lines ~--ering the transport and construction field. I This territory in Oshawa and District yields a high | income, so we want a worker. Reply in confidence giving outlines on experience to BOX 237 OSHAWA TIMES which will get $4,200.000 and the public treasury algng to the extent of $4,000,000. at United Steelworkers of America CYATSEANS ..g > [000 have been made to purchase] The design of the large inter-|partment of Highways was the{average yield of 91-day treasury he re- STCOND IN 30 MONTHS the right-of-way since the De- change for Highways 401 and 2 |first in Canada to employ this|bills which the government issues price in-| It was the second increase in| partment started to acquire theljust east of Gananoque is un-/money-saving process. {each week by means of sealed- Premier | beer prices within 30 months, Mr.| -- {bid tenders. Thic week the aver. This level of interest is the pro- Capt. G. L. Schulstad, U.S. Air|barrier is in the region. of 760 foot sheets of glass which take up| The Bank of Canada, which is a 2 age yield--the effective interest [ rate--was 5.73 per cent. How- ever, there were other bids which a . ar 19 er 6 showed that at least some money VOl S onar arrier {duct of two main factors: a con- {tinuing strong demand for loans OTTAWA (CP) A United | RCAF aparently slipped]a claim against the defence de-|in the present period of rapid eco- States Air Force Starfighter jet | through the sound barrier with-/partment when the repair cost|nomic expansion, and the central Force pilot, was under orders not|m.p.h. Ito six S i re i SX {to six months to obtain were responsible for monetary policy, to repeat the sonic boom which DELAY OPENING lamong those shattered. Weather could--if it wanted to -- make caused $50,000 or more damage| The scheduled September open.|STIPPINg and exterior tile was loans easier to get by expanding Wednesday to the new Ottawa| e scheduled September open-|wicted and will require complete|the money supply. But the money PEMBROKE (CP) cently announced beer creases are a move by Frost's government, less than|MacDonald said. In 1957, after in-| two months after an election, to|creasing the tax on breweries fulfil "slush fund' obligations of|by $5.500,000 the government,| the Progressive Conservative through the Liquor Control party, Ontario CCF Leader Don- Board, granted the breweries an| ald C. MacDonald said Thursday increase of about one cent al night bottle Bearing in mind that (Wo regu- This provided the breweries lar sources of "old party slush ith a net revenue (after federal funds are the breweries and theliavec) of approximately $10,000, hotel association," said Mr. Mac-000 , . , enough new revenue to Donald, "it is interesting t0 eX-ipay their tax plus an extra $4,- amine who is going to benefit 500 000 to add to their already from this extra $14,200,000 which! cw oilen profits § wii ve fBken from He poe Kets! «within 30 months, instead of the people of Ontario cutting into their (the breweries) The three beneficiaries were profits the Frost government has the hotels "which will get an es-/jayied from the people of Ontario timated $6,000,000; the breweries a; added $8,700,000 in new reve- nue, after taxes, for the brewing| industry. } | | | | was available for loan for 91 days for as little as 5.47 per cent. MANY SEEK MONEY (didn't break the sound barrier out Capt. Schulstad being aware{has been established three or|bank's apparent desire to avoid Thursday ir a demonstration for jof it. The plane is capable of 1,-|four weeks from now. {an inflationary expansion in the the cabinet and the press. (300 miles an hour and the sound| Specially tinted, 18 - by - eight supply of money in the country. will tag which 3 ling of 'the air terminal, con-| i. Ut / 3 Scores of plate glass windows structed with an exterior largely | Tepe we (supply 3 on lly wndianged in the new $6,000,000 terminal|of glass, will have to be post-| Transport Minister Hees, whose from las ober. were shattered when the Lock-|poned said the department. |department is responsible for! In Toronto, A. T. Lambert, heed F-104A broke through the| The air force originally placed construction of the new $6,000,000 vice-president and general man- sonic barrier during a low-level damage at a maximum of $5,000. terminal, said to Capt. Schulstad ager. of the Toronto - Dominion pass. [But architect James Strutt said Defore he took off Thursday: (Bank, suggested that the present MacDonald meeting of was speak Local Mr. a Geneva Failure WILSON & LEE LIMITED ACCORDION VIOLIN SPANISH GUITAR POPULAR PIANO SAXOPHONE TRUMPET accordion during that home for practice. MUSIC STUDIO Register Now For Lessons On These Popular Instruments Our 6-week beginner's course on the accordion at $1.50 weekly includes the FREE use of an Blamed On Reds [ietore Be too ik & rans de ent spokes-|that in estimating the damage Now don't break any more of jracord interest rate reflects an } WASHINGTON (AP) -- State man said the plane, an early [$50,000 "woulc be {my windows." exaggerated fear of inflation. Bank Of Canada Rate Jumps To Record High "This rate surprises me--the threat of inflation looms greater to many people than it does to me," he said. Demerit Marks Are Postponed TORONTO (CP) Ontario Transport Minister Yaremko said Thursday that application of de- merit marks against speeders travelling less than 10 miles an hour over the limit has been postponed for a further two months. Major reason given for the de lay until Oct. 1 was that not all roads have signs posted and final decisions on the location of speed- limit sign posts have mot yet been taken. Mr. Yaremko said that by the end of the summer most speed studies will be complete and signs erected. 'The upgrading of speeds will still be a continuing thing," he said. "As we straighten curves in roads and carry out a pro gram of improved roads, some of them will be changed with re- spect to speed limits.' ' WAS THEATRICAL LEADER NEW YORK (AP) -- Clarence Derwent, 74, a veteran actor, died Thursday At his death he was president of the American National Theatre Academy. Pre- viously he had been president of Actors Equity Association. turned from Geneva Thursday | fighter which is being purchased| A source in the department of blaming the Russians for theifor overseas squadrons of the |transport said the damage bill failure of the foreign ministers {could go as high as $100,000. The conference on Germany. | | transport department will make cont ried, amnesty, 1) DOCILE SKUNKS To TURN TRAITOR Soviet Union, however, pursued | an objective that made success-! ful negotiations impossible." LINDSAY (CP)--A group of Herter then hurried to an ap-| irreverant skunks which made pointment with President Eisen-| their abode under a summer hower. cottage have succeeded in driv- ing the cottagers off in the usual manner--but under com- ! Rebel Forces | "iu ciemstances unis ¢ In Nicaragua were "docile" and used to put out food for them: The trouble began when one skunk mean- . dered down to a nearby dump MANAGUA, Nicaragua (AP)--| and got into mischief. President Luis Somoza's govern-| Me stuck his foot in a tin can ment reversed itself Wednesday night and admitted there had been an invasion by rebel forces from Honduras and Costa Rica. Secretary Christian A. Herter re-|;nodel of the Lockheed Star- io start." 2 good Place. INTERPRETING THE NEWS 'Toronto Girl Dies Of Drugs CLARINET HAWAIIAN GUITAR TROMBONE VIOLA CELLO other Of 2 | TORONTO (CP) Coroner | Fred W. Tickett says a 20-year-| old girl died in a Toronto hos- |pital Thursday morning from | narcotic cirrhosis brought on by By ED SIMON | VIOLATION CLAIMED Canadian Press Staff Writer | Fach side has freely accused | Since the adjournment of the the 'other of violating the 1955 three-power United Nations cem-|Geneva agreement that ended mission for Laos a year ago, | French rule in Indochina and |China and- North Viet Nam have brought Laos into being, together the use of drugs ah ioc vlan The oh bare Hill. alias|!ed an insistent chorus demand-| with its sister states of Cambodia land Viet Nam. | Baker, the third within a] "%, its recall. 3a week which drugs were in-| The West has always replied | The West says neighboring volved, Last: week - Beatrice that conditions in the primitive| communist states have consis- (Rim) Gordon. 21. of Toronto. little country did not warrant altently armed and supplied the died in" Kingston Penitentiary|€" meeting of the commission, | pathet Lao and have worked con- period which is taken th brought him home. Thereupon wh Sia. Wes Ang at {on which Canada, ere she was serving a termjja,g share membership. for possession of narcotics India and Po-| giant] and the Md sprang, trapping But it said most of the invaders| | The him. The cottagers managed to were capt ured or routed v towards the establishment he escaped. A i : of a Communist dictatorship. Each time the errant skunk get him into a cardboard box The number still at large was MUSIC STORE 87 SIMCOE ST. NORTH without offending him and not RA 5-4706 Nicar: sources in had announced Zu an revolutionary) an Jose, Costa Rica, said that about 150 rebels sed into Nicaragua early this| week from Honduras on the north and Costa Rica on the south. A Nicaraguan govern ment| spokesman said Tuesday there | threw everything thev had." approached one of his buddies under the cottage, he was lib- erally showered, "Suddenly," reports the de- partment of lands and forests, "all inviolable moral laws of the skunks under the cottage seemed to be broken and all dozen or more skunks . . . wi Rose Doohan, Hamilton rooming house said her husband told them they|petween had moved there to 'kick the the guerri drug habit." July 10 in a semi - coma {~ : {Canadian government has sup- In return, the anti-Communist yvernment has been attacked abandoning its pledged neu- trality in favor of the West, for interning Pathe! Lao units that were absorbed into the Laotian army and for postponing elec- tions scheduled for next Decem- ber. The third Toronto girl to die|ported this view, although India| ithin the week was Bernice as given increasing support too 27, who died Ji her the Communist demands. fo Police] The recent outbreak of fighting| government troops and | rilla forces of the Com- 2 hab munist Pathet Lao, which under- Miss Hill was taken to hospitalimines the Western case, can Dr. scarcely be regarded as coinci-| Naturally, 'the cottagers de- j Tickett said he learned the girl dental, particularly since the hos- started drinking when sl 14!tilities broke out in two provinces! a had been no invasion and that parted forthwith. Shortly after- she wards, the skunks left too. and in later years had become close to the North Viet Nam bor-|sib addicted to heroin. Ider 'everything ination." is quiet through the Trouble In Laos ommunist Plan in view of the forchcoming Khrushchev-Eisenhower talks. NEW TROUBLE SPOT But the events of the last few days have established that Laos must be included with Berlin, Quemoy and the Arabian penin- sula among the world's trouble spots and that Canada's high hopes of sharing in the success- ful concluion of a "supervised peace" have not yet been ful filled. The Laotian government con- tinue to oppose the recall of the three-power commission as a vio- lation of its sovereignty. But it is clear that Laos would be powerless to resist an all-out. Communist bid for power. A British proposal for, the dis- patch of United Nations observ- ers to the country may prove ac- While reports of the fighting |ceptable to the Laotians. But it contradictory, there is a pos-|is unlikely that a permanent so- ty that the Communists have (lution will be found far short of Idecided to postpone a showdown|the Eisenhower-Khrushchev level,

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