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The Oshawa Times, 19 Aug 1959, p. 14

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Labor Bill In Final | < | s DESSIOILS 4 By JOSEPH MACSWEEN A conference committee of the , Canadian Pgess Staff Writer {US. Senate and the House of ' NEW YORK (CP)--The United| Representatives started late {States Congress has reached the Tuesday to try to reconcile two § put-up-or-shut-up stage in labor|labor bills, one passed by the |reform, an issue with bomb-like House. last Friday and the other . 5 | political meaning. {passed by the Senate earlier. | Jubilant Republicans contend Q Wal that through their efforts and TV APPEARANCE | : ME those of President Eisenhower, | Eisenhower had appeared on [the Democrat-ruled Congress is|television fo criticize the Senate: | or : 2 'heading toward passage of a passed bill as ineffective and he) : Loa-Loa Germs In Que. Town , [strong labor control bill, {spoke out strongly for the more { restrictive bill which the House FARNHAM, Que. (CP) -- Doc: THREE-STAGE DISEASE tors expect to know by tonight] Loa-loa has three stages, Dr. how many of Farnham's 6,000|Fortin said. The first stage Is people have loa - loa, a disease|acute, similar to grippe. During city hall |months. The politicians were wy i never Before known in Canada. [the second stage the disease ap. ool will cover part of the/faced with satisfying public de-| B§ a Five definite cases have been pears dormant--the victims feels | di d. Other possible victims|weak but shows no other symp are being carefully examined. (toms for up to four months. The The disease is caused by alailment becomes chronic in the parasite and no cure is known.|final stage. The parasite causes However some success has been|clogging of lymphatic blood |achieved in treating the effects. vessels which results in swollen | Loa-loa remains with its vie-|/feet and legs. tims for life, causing swollen feet| Untreated patients would be The Oshawa Times PAGE THIRTEEN VOL. 88--No. 1 OSHAWA, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 19, 1959 ' : 1 " w REIN J le ventually passed. George g mT - Meany, president of the AFL- ~» oa . 5 ; ; Pool, Colonnade "a disagreed bitterly, terming y ; {the House vote "a victory 'for UP IN the land of perma- | Green Thumbs because 'of his | Yellowknife. Here he is%hown F Cit H 11 {anti-labor forces -- the Nationa! frost and a short summer's | garden. Every year his garden | with his power cultivator. ! or 1 Y a | Association of Manufacturers and growing seascn, Arthur Oliver | produces thousands of pounds | " i Arne os uy " ~--CP Photo | TORONTO (CP)--A reflecting . : . i has earned the name Mr. | of vegetables for the people of pool, ceremonial ramp, circular] With a presidential election the Chamber of Commerce." moat and colonnade are included |Next year, the labor battle "has PERMAFROST COUNTRY : in the plans for~Zoiomto's new een heating up through the mand for labor reform without [1 J Civid. Square underground park-| : N ' ma |ing garage ard be sprayed uyjakioy ebemies of 18,000,000 Ir Te 2 1 [31 Hountains, a glance at the pre- n eax ® Il 1 i] {liminary drawings disclosed to-| The main fight started nearly |day. two years ago when Eisenhower | architect Viljo Revell who won | | A : | The architectural firm of John demanded action to end union LOWKNIFE, N.W.T. (CP) he uses about 900 pounds of; *The lettuce we grow ran international contest for the Argbfir Oliver is known as "Mr.|fertilizer per acre. here are twice the size of those|city hall design last year. B. Parkin and associates is pre-|abuses discovered by an investi- varing the drawings and a- cost|Bating committee headed by Sen- : " bn for the I The| ator John. L. McClellan (Dem. | and legs, skin inflamations and unable to walk after three or fopr [firm is associated with Finnish Ark.). Teamsters Union chief] sometimes joint pains. It is not|years, Dr. Fortin said. ; 'James Hoffa became the fatal, but its complications may|-- Gfleen Thumbs" to citizens of this) «Ri Y START lin California and average about ning centre in the north shore ®ARLY S17 |{two pounds each. Greit Slave Lake, The season's work begins in aioe. oara ' INFLUENZA TOLL Und ' " b ji f March when, 45.000 bedding aon ps ven Ee ae pos JARARTA ndaunted by the permafrost pie re started i re 4 and: 4 v p plants are started in the grec sound. as a dollar.' spectacular figure in the commit- be. and the short summer in thisihouse, After they are well cla hich : | . |tee's investigation. . | | M NEN | Senator John F. Kennedy : 4 Gi a COMMON IN INDIA | Brock V ille area 600 miles north of Edmon-| ; p Luc "Fortin noticed about! (Dem. Mass.), a presidential con- 3 tender, pushed a reform bill ¢ four months ago that one of his| (AP) -- Influenza through the Senate last year but patients had unusual symptoms. illed 75 Indonesians in eight vil-/it was stopved in the House. His e dug into text-books and medi- lages around Bandung in June revised bill again passed the Sen- cal journals and diagnosed loa- ; di ted, they are transferred to SUMMER FROST land July, health authorities have ate this year, after which it was i Joa, a common illness in India| . ton, he grows thousands of hotbeds until the first week in| "In a wood year potatoes can|reported. |attacked by Eisenhower. § he, 7 and Africa. | pounds of vegetables--potatoes.| june, when they go to outdoor|run 300 bags fo the acre, but a| | Conceivably, Congress could k -- | Dr. Francois Somlo, professor n 1Ze | turnips, celery, carrots, beets, gardens, I d summer frost "can cut the |again sidestep the issue at its: isi lof tropical medicine at the Uni-| [ lettuce onions, cucumbers and | early June, Great Slaves half. {current session but this is con- {versity of Montreal, confirmed BROCKVILLE (OP) -- Brock- | |from Windsor, Ont., with his wife {Lake is still frozen over and a| + ges are picked when a 0 anywhere |sidered unlikely because of " i {his diagnosis. {ville almost doubled in size He also grows bushels of flow-|chill reminder of the long winter they are about five pounds, but/there." he sas "T heard the forthcoming elections. Senate ; / | Dr. Somlo is in Farnham exam- day by order. of the Ont Nag, ers to add color to the houses in comes with cach off-ice wind. [I've had some that weighed 15 north. was. a place where any| Democratic leader Lyndon Jahn- ? |ining residents and army cadets Municipal Board. > Yellowknife. i Radishes and onions are ready pounds. {man could succeed if he had son has promised to "stay here lat an army summer camp on the| The town was granted annexa- "The land is.so poor it is prac- b" mid - July; turnips, carrots, me vears, the tomatoes are|gumption and the will to work." until we do pass a bill." {town's outskirts. All victims 50| tion of 2,380 acres of Elizabeth tically held up by fertilizer," Mr. cabbages, tomatoes, beets and = 1. thou look like clusters] He worked in nearby gold The House bill, sponsored by 'far have been civilians, {town Township, less thac half the Oliver says of his 10 acres of cul-| cauliflower by Aug. 1: celery by of tank.sl 4 a on 2" Imines for six years, then turned Phil Landrum (Dem. Ga.) fa "There is no indication yet of|requested 5,350 acres town coun- tivated land. "Ten acres may not| mid-August, and potatoes by the Of glant- grapes. to his first love--gardening. | Robert Griffin (Rep. Mich.) loagloa in the army camp," Dr.|cil had sought. ESKIMO ART combines union reforms with : : : | i 100 jel " ». sound like much, but in this coun-|€nd of August. | The size of the vegetables is| "I don't know what we have, fry where arable land is at a| The 15-hour day Mr. Oliver puts/partly attributable to the long|hut we're still here after ninelstiff restrictions on picketing, premium you take it where youlin during growing seasons is re- summer days in the north. Mr. Oliver came north in 1950|it. find it." In the growing season warded by beautiful vegetables. ' ears and enjoying every bit of boycotts and violat'ons of the " rights of union members. { AN ESKIMO artist at Cape Dorset, N.W.T., prepares a stoze-cut print, one of many which will be distributed by the department of northerm af- fairs for sale in public and rivate galleries and museums popular with the publi¢. To ere- ate the stone-cut print the Eskimo etches the design. from a block of soapstone and sten- cils for the sealskin prints are cut from sealskin. Commercial pigments and seal oil are Fortin said. | By township figures the addi- He said one of the victims is tion of 2,380 'acres of land to in serious condition. It is still un- Brockville will mean about $500,- certain whether the disease is/000 in new assessment and pos- contagious. Insects are suspected sibly 1,000 more in pepulation. It carriers, but "there is nothing woul t the town's population definite on how it reached Farn-jover 17, cross Canada this fall. Both | stone-cut and sealskin prints, are expected to become WASHINGTON (AP) -- The! Annual Festival F or Vanc ouver Bouse of Representatives. ays Flagpole Sitter H - By PETER BUCKLEY (tions, such "as the Vancouver Pigeonholed President cod. inter. Claims Record Canadian Press Staff Writer Symphony Orchestra. {er's request for increased inter- VANCOUVER (CP) -- The fu | "My own feeling," said Mr. est rates on long-term govern- HAMILTON (CP)--Paul - Cote, ture is clear for the Vancouver Goldschmidt, 'is that anything/ment 'securities and savings 31, of Kapuskasing, came dow | International Festival, in the which arouses interest in the arts|bonds. from his flagpole at Hamilton I mind of Nicholas Goldschmidt, |and widens the horizons, also in-| The action constituted a sur-|/Beach Tuesday night and | "Im general, I feel the festival | creases the audience for other prising reversal of the it- aC record. '| will have to strike a balance be-!events. tee"s approval last week of a| Ie had been on the 40-foot pole |tween a program featuring the| "For instance, I believe a-|compromise plan granting the 3! days. good old tried - out pieces, pre- vance ticket sales for next win-|president three-year temporary] The ex-paratrooper said his re- |sented with top international art-|ter's symphony concerts are way! authority to raise rates if he cord was three days longer than |ists or in a very progressive man-| up. These other events can only found the national interest re-|that set by a Montreal woman. ner, and on the other hand mod- benefit from the festival." 'quired it. | Sponsors paid him $1,000. |ern works and new artists,' said - -- I noted musical director. ' | 3 J LJ ® It was near the season's close| {for the second annual festival, for T1 en u missions {which Niki Goldschmidt is man- aging director and artistic dir- | ector. His desk was cluttered with | ® 4 |papers and there was a constant| nvi ; i traffic in and out of his small of- fice. | | CANADIANS SHARE OTTAWA (CP)--The Board of] For the first year of operation, |programs on Saturday, school { The theme of balance came up Broadcast Governors has an-|TV broadcasting would be pro-|broadcasts, special events ap. | again when he was asked whether nounced a deadline of Oct. 16 for|} ited bet ¢ for|Proved beforehand by the board f | Canadians will continue to play interested groups and individuals °° ore: noon, excen of and programs of straight adver- an important part in future fes- who want to make submissions religious programs, Children's!tjsement approved by the board. tivals. {on proposed regulations for tele-|-- -- pn = | "Our aim is a cross-section of | vision 'broadcasting. | , the great from the international] Dr, Andrew Stewart, board| | field with first-class Canadians." | chairman, announced the dead- ER wil | Is there any difficulty finding|line Tuesday with a reminder : Hf | Canadian talent for both starring that the board has set public : i. {and supporting roles? hearings Nov. 2-3 to hear oral SEE of | "Never, There are always representations in support of | ¥ Rive many Canadians for the festival written briefs. | 5 --authors, musicians, composers,|. Dr. Stewart, in an interview, soloists. Without them, the fes- invited written submissions on tival would be pointless." |the principles of the proposed TV| igs RETAIN PRINCIPLES {regulations, which include a ni. J What are the plans for next|imum of 55 per cent Canadian] year? 5 {content in any weekly TV prod "We may deviate one way oro Sed le, | the other from the pattern of the| He said the board will accept last two years, but generally the VYitten representations from in- idea will remain the same." terested groups and individuals, | Between now and the third fes. | although, due to the limitations tival next year Mr. Goldschmidt | imposed by time at the Novem- will likely take another look at|ber hearings, only spokesmen for cultural events on the other side|the former likely would be heard. of the Atlantic, and there may| The. board announced July 28 also be a trip to the Orient. {the broad principles on which it} Along the way, ne said, he has Plans to rely in Setting the new tentative plans for some guest|1V regulations. It said then the conducting such as he did last regulations would be announced year in Manchester, England. (by Nov. 15 and that they "would Mr. Goldschmidt, born 50 vears| Come into effect about mid-1960 ago in Czechoslovakia of Belgian| When second TV sation are = parents, has been 22 years in pected to start operating in the North America. After getting his| oF Canadian cities. | musical training in Europe he! The hoard expects written rep- moved to San Francisco. in 1937 resentations from the Canadian to spend four years establishing | Association of B ros 4 casters: the opera school at the San Fran. Prospective applicants for TV sta- i i tions, and such groups as the Ca- cisco Conservatory of Music. nadian Federation of Agriculture, WIDE EXPERIENCE |the Canadian Labor Congress, the Similar assignments followed at|Canadian Broadcasting League {Columbia University and other and various educational groups. ham." Brockville is quite capable of serving the entire area asked for, the OMB said, but the board was reluctant to grant full annexation because of the heavy financial outlays which would be involved in servicing rocky areas. mixed for coloring. --CP Photo Interest Rate Pigeonholed New Power at These Pumps Your Supertest dealer now offers you two great new gasolines! These all-new high octane gasolines, are refinery-blended to give you top performance, more mileage |U.S. centres before he moved| The board proposes that up to A : al. up OIL FROM ATOMS into an 11-year stand 'as musical/two hours of broadcasting time| director of the Royal Conserva- each day during the peak view-| wa Ameren, pane Pisgram 8 He ows hou tory of Music's opera school at|ing period, from 8 p.m. to 11] Which ho par xplor- e ' made, Ty fusics = Ay Vr gm! 2 purposes ation rights on the fabulous oil | Canadian and United Siates three years ago. His career in-|prescribed by the board. sands of the Athabasca region | authorities give permission. A cludes guest appearances with| Programming during these two of noithers Alberts es a Sout ot Shai Wil he Sink lle orchestras in Zurich, Oslo, Brus- Hours must be at least 55 per oll from the sand. So far, 10 | and the underlying as sels and elsewhere. lent Canadian. For purposes of physical or chemical method | The bomb will be planted at the He also squeezed in a conduct. the minimum of Canadian con-| pc" eo "eon that will eco- | bottom of the shaft and deton- ing assignment at this year'sitent, programs from Common nomically separate the oil and | ated. The explosion is expected | sands. Soon the Canadian cab- | to create a great underground and economy for your gasoline dollar. Fill up at your Supertest dealer's next time you need gasoline! # SUPERTEST SERVICE GUARANTEED WHEREVER YOU SEE THIS SIGN! You-get more than just service--you now get GUARANTEED Service when you drive in to fill up with new Supertest gasolines. This pledges thatayour gasoline purchase will be absolutely FREE if your Supertest dealer displaying the SERVICE GUARANTEED sign fails to wipe your windshield and check your oil. ; QUPERTEST AdL CANADIAN Vancouver festival -- a perfor-| wealth countries or ffom French- mance of Bruckner"s Mass No. 3.|language countries wil be| inet will study the plan of | cavity walled in by rock melt: The interview turned to an ar-| counted as 50 per. cent Canadian| Richfield Oil Corporation of | ed by the heat of the blast. Oil. [ticle in the New York Times in content. | Los Angeles tc use nuclear | separated from the sand: by {which critic Howard Taubman| No private or CBC TV station| energy in the ofl sands. Inset | the heat is expected to trickle {said an "inteligel minority" in would have any direct program| map at left locates the sands | into the cavity where it cap be pumped out. : --CP Newsmap IT'S NEVER FAR FROM WHERE YOU ARE TO THE SIGN OF THE MAPLE LEAF [Vancouver felt ti: almost $500,- connection with U.S. networks) which cover 17,000 acres of 000 budget for the festival could |without ,permission from the| land and are estimated to hold be better spent on existing institu-| board. 300,000,000,000 + barrels ' of oil

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