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The Oshawa Times, 13 Aug 1959, p. 13

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JACK OF Ar TRADES Population Of Canada 1; Gi New Chairman 518000000 In 190 hye any By DON HANRIGHT ated t ud ,000 i § || Canvainn Prone oy cE Eo 0 im "VOL. 88--No. 188 OSHAWA, THURSDAY, AUGUST 13, 1959 PAGE THIRTEEN \o . | OTTAWA (CP)--Canada's pop-/drop another notch this year, -- 0 ulation is expected to reach 18,- However, it probably still will be| [000,000 sometime late mext year, Close to the long-térm average. | probably in September. | Also included in the six-month | By ALAN DONNELLY 3 y The forecast was made Wed- gain is the natural increase-- Canadian Press Staff Writer |nesday by the bureau of statis-|births minus deaths--of 177,000, OTTAWA (CP)--Louis Audette, § . ities after it reported that the and the estimated emigration of who has become almost a jack 2 * [population at July 1 stood at an|31,000 Canadizns going to othier| of all trades ir 'government ser- . 3 lestimated 17, 482,000, a one-year countries, about the same rate as| vice, once again is stepping into 4 ' |gain of 397,000. in the last two years. He is the new chairman of the . 1 {rect, it will have taken Canada since July 1, 1938, compares with a different job Should the prediction prove cor-' Tne one-year gain of 397 000 $ tariff board, a body with the 1 . [2% years to add 1,000,000 to ifs|increases in the previous delicate task of making decisions 5 4 {population since the 17,000.00 month periods of 435,000 in 1959, that affect the pockethooks of « j 3 mark was reached in mid-April, 539 000 in 1957 and 382.000 in 1956. | Canadian importers and manu- F388 % : ' 1958. It took only 24 months|™ gang continued to report the facturers. 4 2 4 A 4 to add the previous 1000.000(pi000ct arowth with a boost of 8 "I'm not a tariff man," the 52- 3 . £ Eo after the 16 000,000 was reached 000 to 5 300. Queb ec was Sec. year-old bachelor rani admits, EE i Yrs in April, 1956 ond, up 56,000 to 5,011,000. I'm no expert but I hope to be- ; | | ; IMMIGRATION DROPS |] come oe. task i 2 ; The six-months difference re- di ; i . we § mT ' hd i oem in 2boimine ! 4 1 8 fiects dropping imm tion, : 1 Tired y : down last year to 124 from i & a. he dg IN 1 124,001 Wea - +, iff 3 i rm N : : could turn his hand to tariffs as ' 1957 when more wide-open im glicotively as he has handied a i migration poiicies plus the in- . i LJ ' half-dozen other gov ernme nt jobs ¥ F ? ] 2 all ass Vi al ices it ; 2D since 1045 when he ended six SHR FF Te Hive rae {] amraevmas m-- Of Evidence years of navy cervice x : x J since about 400,000 in By : i BES ? OF MONTREAL POATLAND sesame if PA EYED DIPLOMATIC FIELD . . ; ; The population gain of 198,00( COLLAR J 4 | HAMPTON, Ont. (CP) -- Mrs, [tired of hearing evidence against After the wai. he said in an in 4 4 ; ¢ | in the first half of this year i SACE ATEN AN SARNIA PRODUCTS and peguuuueuy ff Bertha (Mom) Whyte, "tired of her," said Mr, Spiers, terview, he decided to "carve out i : s SUN CANADIAN M of | hearing evidence against her,"| Banting Institute's Dr. J. C. a diplomatic career' and for two A pr 1 i 53 i; Sik - Pa 4 \walked out mid - way through] |Sinclair, hepatitis specialist, was Jears was en tie legal staff of i : ; h ] i : C t 1 3 4 7 NE |Wednesday afternoon's en ry [testifying when Mrs. Whyte left. the external affairs department, : : 4 A Onis on 3 4 WRIT , 3. ". i [hear ing on conditions in r{The hearing was closed fo the Then in 1947 he was appointed $ i > ; 4 4 Se / |Wnytehaven Mission for os press. and public. to a new aud uniried field as a e of 3 ; by oH Other Witnesses: included Dr. i ig ] ? 7 f gr 1 dren | member of the newly - created } 2 J 2 M D ii) peta Ff The c is being Jean Moore of the health depart- Canadian Maritime Commission. i : : an Ges ; . held: in A five miles 'ment, G. B, Bent of the Ontario He didn't even know what the ; " "7 3 ? Fairy of Bowmanville ie deter. fire marshal's office, welfare and commission was wher he was r : f ' if Yatdb i 4 / ine whether the 107 children re.| Children's Aid Society officials. asked to join. It advises the gov iE : ; A i 7s mine whether he 107 children re-| ernment on shipping and ship- ot ousewor ' : | moved by provincial authorities pwo COURSES OPEN building policy. and administers te / . : from the mission were neglected) "Mr. peyman said Magistrate subsidies for various shipping i CONISTON (CP)--" " {children wit in the meaning of|p vould have two choices services. [u 1954 he became com: . Mg " be men more effic und ¢ PIPELINE CONTROVERSY the Child Weliare Act {open to him if neglect were es- mission chairman Pe kitchen stove that n Wasvl 3 ! A 2 ; : y The by was adjourhed at tablished. He could give parents That was his major occupation, . i enki, but it is donbtful anv of 2 of the most controversial ; through the Trans . Mountain | Montreal pipeline Dar: y Magistrate W. R.iconsidered capable custody of until the tariff board appointment them has survived his own cook uestions to tome before the | pipeline, eastward from lel to the pr 1 ter vin- z y aring nine C own | their children under CAS super- came up. But the versatile Mr. i : ing as long as this resident of oral Cemmission on Can- ta through the Interprov ial ial line whic] h termin t at. | witn S, s from provincial |vision or he could make the chil- Audette, a lawyer by profession, Coniston, 2 few' miles east of, 202.5 Shergy vesoutces Was the | pipeline, and imported. crude | Sarnia. Is - advocates. are a h an e departments. idren temporary CAS wands. at the same time carried four 1 hs i i Sud! iy stion of an Alberta to - unloaded at Portland, Me., group of in lependent Canadian rown Attorn Harry Deyman "1 don't intend to make any part-time jobs which required a 3 1 Mr. Wasvlonki has Heed: 4on eal pipeline. The commis- | moves to Montreal throuzh oil companie Seeking Wer |¢aid he would call two medical applications for permanent ward- variety of talents 3 p i for th » Tris 36. ven: ved alone cond report, expect d ir Tossing New Eng 2nd | markets for western crude. The |witnesses today sh ip by CAS if I can help it." he ; : ; 3 for ne Fy : sg gs nurs al th this matter among i southern Quebec The nternationa :ompanies, oper- | ir hig A Sig p IL He was one of five appointed 2 : 4 day he'll be 107 yea: ! , is due to be made pub- | Canadian, ia products iis ating Montrea' refineries on NOTHING. FOR PRESS aid. members on the Northwest Ter- : ¥ 5g | A native cf the Ukraine, he em-| |i¢ in the next few months. This - Northern pipeline carry | foreign crude brought through Mrs. Whyte, shaken up by a| The car mishap in which Mrs, Iitories Council: a foiuder-mem. 3 F drated to Canada in 1913. Affer| map shows ('anada's main oil | r products from Sarnia, | the pipeline from Pr d, op- |car accident early Wednesday,|Whyie was involved occurred ber of the court martial appeal x 1 i ; or 2 4d spending a * me" .as the elines, Crude oil flows from nt,, to main marketing cen- | pose the proposed pi ne as ushed past reporte I hoto-|when she was driving Mrs. board Jone dn Leal. an] 8 dire GOOD BOOKS and music are | mission and was its chairman |Po0V1y-Daid retainer of a noble erta fields westward | tres. The Proposed Alberta-to- ' uneconomic. 'P Newsmap |graphrers when she left the hear-|James Spiers to Malton to catch L i Iman who I 11. a -- i i I de " a --is Export Credits Insurance Cor-| two leisure interests of Louis | for the last five. He has given [Ten Wiig liad id : es and a : ol : i ro CtaAis lof Mrs. Whyte's 1959-model car was driven to W iytehaven| poration and Crown Assefs Dis-| Audette, 52, of Ottawa, newly- | up that post, and four other i i n ras smashed in a collision but al Corporation. appointed chairman of the five- ot kb ore ant jobs as |. OPlaining w rk . with Mon G E ws in Bowmanville by Rev. James|%¢ 8 in a pos Po member Tariff Board. A vet- Patt Baroits 4 Sroment jos 55 N Mines, Was) lenki 'worke . INTERPRETIN TH NE niers of V peg. who returned [D0 One was injured. GIVES UP JOBS eran of wartime navy service, | goiq u round at Garson and $ to the Dar on Township mun-| | cipal hall where the hearing is| USED WIDELY Mr. Audette is sloughing off alll he has served for 12 years on {then transferred to Coniston, these duties--though he sas they| the Canadian maritime com- --CP Photo [where } tired fi Y E being held | Sulphur is used in the manu- Interested him greaily--in order; rere ---------- ing irdustry i arly 20s, Ol ! 1 a O © "She just felt she wasn't doing facture of some 32,000 products, to tackle his new responsibilities. ; : ; 5 when he was in his 70s any good ing there and was ranging from toothpaste to steel. A short, athletic man who sips|€ graduated from the Universit Philharmonic Orchestra and got la plane for Winnipeg. The hood milk to mirse an ulcer. he expects|i€S Of Ottawa and Montreal and|"a great dea: of satisfaction" | Until a few years ago 56 f ; i ; 5 5 practised iaw in Montreal for nine from ping the orchesira de-|his own fireweod, an to J his san full I i years until the outbreak of war. velop into a full-fledged profes- does all his own housew "I have no illusions," he said. | : sional_group. Nl ana a "At the moment there's a good| He was an officer on the de | deal of work te do to familiarize|stroyer Saguenay when it was HOPE TO BUY COMPANY myself with the subject. It's no|torpedoed in the north Atlantic L C H f H | RIO DE JANEIRO (CP)--The By DAVE McINTOSH still requires Canadian cabinet that Canadian 'and U.S. defence PY ° sinecure. There will be partic- lin December, 1940, with a loss of ord hie Justice City of R 0 is studying a plan to! (Canadian Press Staff Writer |approval- to build more heavy planners made a $230,000,000 goof ularly hard work for the first six|21 lives. The ship limped into an form a "mixed com * with] The ssday talks in Ottawa radars beyond the seven new sta-\when they built the mid-Canada 1TOS 11 1 1A months or a year." English port and : Mr. Audette On Canadian Tour op he 2 pr ivate funds fo take \ nce Minister|tions announced earlier this year. warning line, : The tariff board has scheduled moved on to a series of other| Canadian-owned streei- s and U.S. Defence Secre-|Mr, Pearkes has said that the| The trouble with this line along "Only Hiroshima and Naga- getting medical checkups to learn five hearings between now and|warships. He commended the cor-| 1 1VERPOOL, England (Reut- hd jhe e. Mayor Sa Freire Al- tar 'Elrov serve to con-|RCAF will man all new radarithe 55th parallel of latitude is aki can rove the human ef- im they are all right. The vast next January to wind up its|veite Amherst from September, ers)--Lord Chief Justice Lord|vim discarded a plan to expro- firm thai the d vs of the RCAF 'stations in Canada. that it is only a detection system : 8 a bi: The s," a Japan majority still are. : lengthy study of the textile in |1942, until the spring of 1944, and Parker and Lady Parker left here Priate the company from a as a combat force in Canada are; No mention was made of any|and cannot be used, like, the as do tor say ®t even In | In Bagasaki last year, 25,000 dustry, which has continued. for|later commanded the frigate Brazilian Ti sidiary be- mimbered. plan'to acquire a new interceplor Pinetree chain farther south, for| €5¢ doctor says. : Jagasa ast year, 25, more than two years. Aftef that|Coaticook. He retired after the|Wednesday on the Cunard liner|cause the eity has no money to - The main th accomplished for the RCAF place control of interceptors and anti- those cities, blasted 14 years {had screening exams of whom there will be major reviews of|war with the rank of commander.|carinthia for a coast-to- -coast pay for it J ) at the talks 15 An ag reement-- it 100 jet whie lcer: 4 + aircraft missile: ago, researchers today are en- 16,600. were judged heeding more id atti 4 : : , oS : countering tantalizing problems [careful diagnosis. Some 50 are two other fields: the chemical in-| o asn sol e! gh alti he sg | His. nautical interests continue.|tour of Canada asni gol 1 altitude c folie planners want hl 3 A ae, " ¥ py : dustry and the. radio. television|ya ounc a cruiser on Ontario's : sility to , to the flying| Defence planners want to push| jn evaluating those effects. This |reeeivi ing hospital or home care and electronics industry. Besides. |piqoay lakes--its name Kabloona Parker said he wa as, going first height of mew Soviet bombers. |the battle line--the invisible iin article explains why large | In Hiroshima, 44,000 took the there is the continuing work of| on. tino his interest in Eskimol|l® Vancouver where he would e ina osses | on FUND DUTIES FOR. KGAF where interceptors and missiles| areas of ignorance remain. |exams last year, 6,700 received hearing appeais against customs| erie developed while serving|speak at a meeting of the Gana- { dh B a oy d engage Ru an bombers By ALTON BLAKESLEE [further check, and 628 were found tariff rulings by the revenue de-|) "to Northwest Territoriesdian Bar Association. Then he| a ur de Bis oop! Will sip 0 niles north to the 55th par zgeociated Press Science Writer needing treatment. £ i AS . a C ce I. merge: a al § 4 | ; le NAGASAKI, Japan (AP)--| Tyis does not mean all had ail t. ) nf + + 1 partmen { Council. {will travel bv train to Montreal ly: The RCAF will" handle tata -------- "Seventeenth A-homb vi tim dies) ts od by diati LAWYER IN MONTREAL | In his spare time he indulges|c the opening of the law courts 0 eC Ire ep round duries and the United ! ver 0 ic {ments caused by radiation expos- : on. baltia ire » music and books. ; de States air for > ing so far this year," says the news-\yre Thousands who are listed as a a Fri bg p Ay Fy ol I i a he has He will take vart in the opening By RONALD FARQUHAR WIDESPREAD EFFECT ; Ho Poarh i" fhe Se. this Descendant paper headline : {survivors did not get radiation, " Audette of the Exchequer Court.'been president of the Ottawa of Quebec law courts Sept. 14. PPG Ret ne 3 Cok Ln for vs. the. cok ,.change Feb 23 when he told the ~ | - Fact or guess? a [through distance, or shielding oe ----A. leaders of Come nist Ch oe bs me with ia ir ig og Commons: "We can rely on the 1 Degth: hi stole 2 pal on! 3 2 Digkection. of buildings. Some now eaders of, Co China are 1 + 9 TU.S. for interceptors and provide Of Secord hospital set up especially to care sick could have illnesses due to 9 ir 3 'tant [reaching effects sntire . | : hing tars believed hold important [reac ef on the entire in additional facilities for them to survivors of A-bombings. causes other than radiation. Sacral conferent e at present ¥ th ternational situation, are certain ope , if necessary, over aqur s this death basically caused | | the Khrushehev-Eisenhower sito have been under careful study | © 40", OTTAWA (CP) -- Richaid Y. tened by exposure to bomb |AUTOPSIES HELP fing a rouble v bv » Chinese le lL | 3 in the offing and treuble brewing by the Chine leaders. Mr. McElroy said American|Secord. a descendant of Laura n? And what is the toll? | There's no means of telling off- nd in t dochina stat Ss 'hinese spokes 8 p 1 i to 3 : 1 h Earl Bird Gets the x oe Ini m : le of Laos, d| 5 { ale ® bli tel mal as Yel interceptor squadrons will be|Secord, heroine of the War of LY This is the critical but elusive | hand. Autopsies after death tan e y "en lst ns that the rt © Shlected our ent d pr ¥ ne lic: r moved north foward the Cana-|was appointed Wednesday as Al-| answer sought by doctors, scien- |help pin down the question. So §igns thal tae pari) 1 4 CHIT dian border and that some of the berta representative on the His- tists and zens here in Naga-|can the rate of various illnesses been away from the capital sinc rusheh lans t s 3 : + qd 5 : 5 : + on ord of Si aE » has b Gy os us ac ley > kus fo tons ood W [American Bomarc anti-aircraft toric Sites and Monuments Board !saki and in Hiroshima |among irradiated survivors com- iD wn ere nas heeyjLin bib ¥ ,/ | missile batteries will be so place of Canada pared with those not irradiated spe t t 2 P Y g a n Spevula fon fat the Polithure 8 ; is 5 4 W . > Laos - in sl as to afford protection for Cana-| The department of national re- USE SPECIAL CLINICS or persons never bombed. y ymmittee has bee souther vighbor, between ge 2 a swe : ivi session, possibly in Shang) a HH oe and wibini jg dian populated areas sources announced that the 58-| Part of the answer will come Individual doctors ean and do |Wuhan or the mountain resort of likely to have been a major topic, Cauada is scheduled to havevear - old Edmonton cattleman|from patients now being treated express their medical opinions S yh a 1 Oh two Bomarc bases at North Bay, succeeds Joe! K. Smith. also of umler a government pr [b io on their observations Pop- shi at any ering » par } : . [La officials In Peiping Br ering of fe party oN and i Javier, Qe Edmonton free medical care for survivors ularly, it's an easy assumption were non-committal when d, China has said it considers the A Shang 2s A at a Mr. Secord's father, a great-|[of the bombings, It started on y|that suyone dying in an A-bomb {if such a meeting was or is being situation sericus and has called American Bom: are units in Maine|2reat-nephew of Laura Secord|!WO years ago, wi De {hospital must have been ir- [held. They sugzested the leaders|for the reconvening of the inter- and the Western. U.S came to Edmonton from Brant-iPitals built, s ecial examin, radiated. {might be touring the country to|national commission set up to [ford in 1881 Mr. Secord, born in|clinics established, doctors' €o-| But a true and meaningful see for themselves how industry supervise the Indochina armist- COLOSSAL GOOF | Edmonton studied at the Ontario|operation enlisted. [tally is difficult with all the mar- and agriculture are faring. ice. It now is becoming apparent' Agriculture College in Guelph. By the thousands, survivors are gins for error. -- 5 - - = - - - - Fe -- Statistical and medical studies {by Japanese doctors and by the | : y ; 3 | [atom bomb casualty commission Yes, Fall will soon be with us again 3 i are seeking these facts too. The ! commission was started in 1947 and Johnston's are rapidly round |as a joint American - Japanese project. It has some 900 Japan- ing their fine selection of Men's g ) |ese staff members and 50 for- ' : B 7 eigners, and Boys' Wear into shape for the : y It is purely a research organ- : a : | ization, explains Dr. George Dar- discriminating male. S {ling, the director. 4 A J : | But A-bomb survivors hunger- ing for personal treatment for years regarded the commission LONG SLEEVE BAN-LON / Gs A {unhappily at first. Many also felt {the studies were simply hsing T-SHIRTS . . h SP : Japanese people as guinea pigs . : : : J A {of medical research. LONG SLEEVE ORLON AND WOOL A+ J J \ NCP [NOW APPRECIATED i . The commission's role and goal SPORT SHIRTS : . 1.95 > ; X 'A |in research now are being more : \ & VW oa |appreciated, says professor Tat suo Morito, president of Hiro BULKY KNIT i ¥ shima University. "For we musi : i" have a scientific way to de 'de PULLOVERS and CARDIGANS J 3 : ithe effects. It is important not . L only for people here, but for hu- up « imanity. Only Hiroshima: and In the continental style ..eseseenss 13.95 : : | Nagasaki can prove the human ] i effects of A-bombings." i {149 ' At the A- boa hospital in ORLON PERRY COMO CARIGANS | : ln a orix 8 Bom | Dagasail, "we are concerned \ ; eaturing Firestone Rubber-X for extra long miles mainly with radiation effects on 10 95 ) 4 3! £4 2 8 h 5 ) 8 age, {internal organs, such as the liver In new shades and styles ron . exclusive seven-rib tread design for extra skid protection jand bone marrow, glands, and ~ nn 1 and cancers," explains and S/F (Safety-Fortified) Cord Body for extra blowout Dr DF oh . & . = via ys ios 5 vipat | rector. CNE and Argo tickets can be reserved at our store. - \ FE, ; protection. Buy now at today's low price! | Was a patient really irradiated 2 " % NEN {and by how much? Each one (ills jout a detailed questionnaire, tell- ing where he was when the bomb went off, how far from the centre, Hey her in an open fiekl, in a building or shelter, and what |kind, whether he was injured, or had any radiation symptoms soon and recappable tire |after the bombing. Size 6.70-15 Blackwall Dr. Yokota reports more Leu i . Tubed-Type |kemia among bomb survivors. He OSHAWA LTD rs ; ] 190 KING ST. E RA 5.6566 |§ treating patients with anaem- : S . (las, liver complications, a few commen | With cancers All repor re submitted to the 8 SIMCOE ST. N. i 8 All rey GET THESE SUMMER SPECIALS NOW! iri NERA A a WEES were involved, Dr. Yokota says RR AN HN A Tas da

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