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The Oshawa Times, 27 Aug 1959, p. 13

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INTERPRETING THE NEWS Unity Of West Ike's Tough By HAROLD MORRISON Cangdian Press Staff Writer Pulling the Western alliance together may prove to be Presi- dent Eisenhower's biggest job overseas. : His mission is far more critical than merely one of selling Euro- pean allies on his ability to han- dle Premier Khrushchev in their might get them to pull together on an issue which is beyond the European front: The broader, more generdl issue of building up the under - developed countries to block Communist expansion and increase markets for Euro- pean and North American goods. ECONOMIC ROOTS his | area the Communist the Himalayan Bhutan, nce of disputed re likely to come n | = 3 en-} {d liplomatic sources; | sent About 50|ing t {two-years less a day each. o-jof Hastings, | penitentiary terms. 'Eye Bank Removal Bill 'Approved In Draft Form The Oshavon Times VICTORIA (CP)--A draft bill to/TERMS OF ACT permit legal removal of eyes| If the act is adopted by pro- VOL. 88--No. 200 OSHAWA, THURSDAY, AUGUST 27, 1959 PAGE THIRTEEN {from the bodies of dead persons|vincial governments, i would {for use in restoring sight to the mean eyes could be removed on living "was , approved here Wed-| |these coaditions: * nesday by the Conference of Com-| If ae per: Son, either in WHiing a , missioners on Uniformity of Leg-| lor orally in the presence wo a on ence rg ilation in Canada. witnesses during his last iliness Tirty-six lawyers, including has requested that the eyes be 1 the U.S, showed a reluctance tol t legis] sed after death for restoring the move and the split widened [legislative counsel from every| sight of a living person; Strong words have been ex-|Province, are attending the con- |ference. | If the person died in hospital, Shanget Sie ie English Cian There is no legislation in any |iemosal conid pe authorized by ithe chief administrator unless he Eisenhower gained a great war-(Canadian province permitting aly. pnow ledge of withdrawal of time reputation for ability to get/hospital authority, next of kin OF ithe. request; strong - willed military leaders|an estate ' executor to authorize If the person dies outside a hos- to co-operate. In peace he may| removal of an eye for a Soria) pita), removal could be author- strike a great new blow for free-|ransplant from the body ef ai,.4"hy his widow or nest of kin dom if he can break current; dead person. | The proposed bill was drafted HB ¢ , | The eye can only be removed by L. R. MacTavish, legislative {if the deceased has made such|counsel to the Ontario govern-| jar request in a will. . ment. Limits Raised Ringleader: FE Of Revolts Sentenced GUELPH (CP) -- A prisoner cried in court Wednesday and| three others voiced their terror| of Guelph reformatory guards! when the ringleaders of three of riot at the institution| received additional prison sen- tences. | The riots started last Wednes-| day in the reformatory tailor shop. The next day there was an-| other riot in the tailor shop dur-| ng which prison Superintendent George Sanderson was threat- ened by a prisoner wielding 10-| Sikkim |" id saw the most serious riot which started in the break- If room and spread to the ex- lercise yard when some 40 men| stormed a door injuring the two, | guards. Police and prison iquelled the uprising by tear gas bombs into the where nearly 800 shouting, ¢ i soners were hemmed ul Waters, 21, of N Falls' drew a five-year peni ary sentence for menacing 1 perintendent Sanderson. He broke | | down and wept. James Stewart Pinell, 19, of To- ronto, who triggered the Fr day | revolt by heaving a salt 'shaker at a guard, pleaded in vain to be to penitentiary because "we've already been threatened |by the guards' at' the reforma- {tory Magistrate B. S. Mitchell or- dered him, W m George Bull 21, of Wallaceburg, and John {Henry Brady of Windsor to re urn to the reformatory to serve| 5 % guands t o SCIENTISTS AT THINKERS HOME n Pugwash, N.S, } fessor Mikhail M. Dubinin, Rus- lull in meetings sia: Prof. Donald Kerr, To. | chemical and ronto; Dr. Alexander | Left to Cambridge, Mg 188. ; Mr. Eat a | | Home' dur- Robert i a cuss warfare NEW PHANTOM Oldest Evidence RADIO STATION | | { SYDNEY, N.S. (CP) -- De- Of Life Found | partment of transport investiga- Marvin Sharpe, 18," of 'Belle: tors have been scurrying about ville and Gary Edward Corey, the city for several days in an received four-year, gitempt to locate a "phantom" | radio station that has built up a right SUDBURY (CP)--Three 8, MONTREAL (CP) |what may have been the oldest (Schrel he spotted a rock penitentiary, {form of life on earth have been |form: ation that contained fossils! added fo the reformatory talks here opening Sept. 15. Aside from the French-Ameri- Perhaps. with this in mind, |can differences on sharing of Eisenhower now is on his way|atomic secrets, markets are at through Bonn, London and Paris|the root of the European split. with proposals not only to restate More Western solidarity in negotiations warned of the dangers "abead| with the Russians but also to after Europe began negotiating seek agreement ona common | towards a six - country contin- approach in dealing with what he ental common market. considers the most vital problem Britain tried to get this of all -- raising living standards |larged into a 17:country industrial in the impoverished countries. (free trade area. This fell vag To Prime Minister Macmillan, and the common President de Gaulle and Chan |emerged without Britain. Britain| cellor Adenauer he will suggest charged ce and Germany, that their governments join were discriminating against her. in finding ways of equitably and| the U Inited effectively co - operating in aid-| ing the almost 2,000,000, 000 citi- zens of the under - developed SEATO Council countries. SEES TOUGH GOING In Washington Unless the civilized world -- noi/| KARACHI (AP) The next just ourselves but the civilized ministerial council of the South- world -- is willing and ready to Asia Treaty Organization share in the burdens of making will probably be held in Washing- it possible for these people to|ton towards the end of Sepiem- achieve progress in this ber, Karachi + this world is going to have tough said Wednesday going, Eisenhower said before his : said departure. to Laos, Bisenhower will have to visit|states of Nepal three capitals to see the three and Ladakh pn government leaders. A greater Kashmir state display of Western unity might|UP p for discussio have been achieved by all the) 3 leaders gathering at the one com- a Of ference table, but this is not to 3 Closing Ecomomics of Britain on the one hand and France and West Germany on the other now} occer ar are so widely split that bickeri instead of unity -might be pio if all gathered at the one e table. Under Study: TORONTO (CP)--Board of Con-| trol Wednesday put off for a week 50 Familios a decision on whether to close and prop] ate Fred Hamilton - Park, the scene of a riot by soc- cer Ke Sunday Evicted In The move to shut the west-cen- t park has been spearheaded | ly Ald. Philip Givens, who was | North York supported by a deputation of {more than 100 citizens at Wed- | Inesday's board of control meet-| TORONTO (CP) families in suburban North York| "We were lucky that no one got Township have been evicted from [killed last Sunday." he said. legal multiple dwellings and jice Inspector James ad. Toy close to 1,000 more face the same|iold the board fans attacked fate, Reeve Norman Goodhead lice officers with "two-by- fours" announced Wednesday and "large stones." He said he was staking his| The riot broke out following a political reputation on the present game between Hungaria and Ita- action and that his aim is to/lia of the National Soccer| squabble over a .22-calibre rifle| nock future basement League. Italia won 2-1 on a pen-|ended in death for nine-year id) dwellings in North York Town-|alty shot in the last 30 seconds. Arthur Raymond Murrell Jr. Board of control asked for ajwas shot in the stomach oe con- | nesday ible expropria-|Walter, 13, tried to take the rifle| broadcast. away f om him, state police said | cycles 7 "eliminate ship." Mr. Goodhead said that for too|report from city long builders, tenants and land- |cerni ing the pos lords have been thwarting town-|tion of the park, sold to the| ship bylaws which stipulate only league by the city for $50.000 in| one family can occupy a single-|1957. The board was fold t hej family dwelling. Basement apart-|league now wants $150,000 for the ments have been constructed to) par supplement incomes and township bylaws ignored. y Earlier this week township le council decided to take a test officials -old boy t Sunday's melee. League director a construction firm ordered to|vond league officials. He had re- change or tear down a six-suite|ceived threatening letters and apartment building construction phone calls. He pointed out last| under a permit which called for Sunday's "foolish incident" a four-suite building. place outside the soccer park. ' . {sia leads in knowledge about th Five policemen and an eight-|Arctic Ocean even though U.S were injured during |atomic- -powered submarines have! been the first to cross under its| Frank® Thir-lice pack, a navy scientist sz case into court to attempt to have kettle said the problem was be-|Dr. J.W. Horton, technical di took at an anti jdiscovered In Ontario, {rocky sho ores of La ke Superd T v | sizable teen-age audience here. The station burst on the local | (AP) -- Al gcene about a week ago with 'n' roll music, we forecasts and brief news I ports It tive form of life. *| Professor Tyler told Dr. Barg-|tawa; Jack Clunas, 21, Hoorn who almost immediately | Thomas, and Jean Lesage, for the site. {Niagara Falls, Ont., were was years before enough|work. party being escorted ific data was bled and headed for full reports. Dr. oorn +|said the whole story will hd in an extended on ork BOY SHOT TO DEATH WOLCOTT, N. Y. © |S my ie pl am re- timated to be 1, 700,000, 000 year operates on the regular | band at 1530 kilo- young announcer | : dvertisements, y without charge port officials believe the output of the transmitter | | is about six watts, sufficient to {| blanket the city. night when his brother, | the scientific | the others found reDIe: even t : . evidence of life ever lering for 1% miles. . Professor Patrick Hurley of the| Anthony he Massachusetts Institute of Tech Magistrate 30ny /inology did much of the work of told the men that } samples in|recent "rash of escapes" se Bu time. [pe > ARCTIC KNOWLEDGE SAN DIEGO Calif. (AP) P a tending hoorn, 1 he ry to {covery of the fossils: In 1954 Pi ler of the U terms of geological Ty-| He carried out a series of iso-| sity of Wiscon- topic surements involving t vip on north elements of argon and px be 1 ig to deter- and was able to pl npoin mine the eastern limits of depos-|of the its of taconite, a low toun officials came Apparently source Tuesday | close to the jum,| Dr. the age c al Survey of liest samples with "'as-itold re porters accuracy--1,700,000,000sils "are unc 13 evidence of life yet found. there's a knock on ' the announcer said after interupting a musical pro- gram. "I'll be back later." c- {tor of the navy underwater sound | laboratory at New London, Conn., made the comment Wednesday - submarine wariare , oh, -grade iron conference. Watson-Watt, ~C P W irephoto | Three Escapees Get Sentence {who escaped from Burwash In- 'dustrial Farm Aug. 17 were sen- At a site five miles west of tenced Wednesday to Kingston with six months near the lof what he guessed was a primi- they were serving at Burwash. | Alistair Davidson, 33, of Of of St. a wide swamp. |Guards stopped Davidson before soon be(he could reach the swamp and were captured {than an hour later after flound- Falzatta in view of the must send them to courage of hers, R.A Scott of the Geologi- Uni ted Sue es, 55 To 60 Miles On All Highways TORONTO (CP)--More speed fected by the proposed increase within the law has become a re-|in speed are Highway 115 from newed possibility for motorists Nev castle to Highway 28 and on Ontario highways. |portions of Highways 69 and 17 Deputy transport minister D. lin Northern Ontario. A 60 m.p.h, J. Collins said Wednesday that|limit has been proposed for these speed limits on practically all of highways. d he province's two-lane highways| Ontario highways which al- will be raised to 55 or 60 miles|ready have 60 m.p.h. speed lim- an hour withir two months. its are 400, 401 except for parts The announcement follows an|in the Brockville area, a section intensive survey carried out dur-|of 11 near Long Lac and a por- ing the past seven months on - |tion of the Queen Elizabeth Way 000 miles of two-lane highways | from Highway 27 to the Toronto and several reports predicting | city iimits. higher speed limits. S---------- General speed limit on On-| Mercury ES Ore Claim 'Fantastic' were recently placed in the 55-| mile or 60-mile categomy. {QE WAY BOOST | The report also recommended | JUNEAU, Alaska (AP) -- The Alaska department of natural re- sto be ai-| sources said Wednesday it has a_i py record of a mining claim an a 60 m.p.h. limit on the Queen Elizabeth Way from Highway 10 force sergeant 7 be Spies' Tried oy In E. Germany to Fort Erie as soon as current |construction work is completed {and detours eliminated. That st tretch of highway now is a §5- Sgt. Thomas L. Howlett, sta- tioned at Castle air force base near Merced, Calif, returned to his base after he said he re staked a mercury claim in the (Reuters) A 37-year-old Fast|Aaska. le geologl i German factory worker said tel its value at the high fi- iw ednesday the United ' States bi Jaa him nearly $3,000 for spy-| Howlett said he and his wife over a period of 3% years. Were willed the claim by a Mrs. Fe rich Keimling and two other East German men and a woman, all described "highly danger- ous spies," went on trial before the East German Supreme Cora Dinsmore whom they be Court. Keimling sald that he sent 150, friended prior to her death in 1958. But the resources department invisible ink reports to addresses in West Germany, giving details of Russian and Fast German armed forces and factories. The woman defendant, Berlin photographer Gisela Beghard, 26, a onetime model, admitted read- ing Western newspapers, listen- ing to the American radio station in West Berlin and attending| Western Jazz shows and movies: | East Germany men| terms J. A Hendlick, director -of the Federal Bureau of Mines office, discounted the reporied size of the claim. "There may be mercury ore in that area, but anything the size of this would be fantastic." Auto Company May Return BLOOMFIELD HILLS, Mich. (CP)--George Romnay, president |of American Motors, says the Sompany is studying the possibil- of producing cars in Canada. I" "Our sales have moved up in [Cana da to the point where -- je d Sefigtton looking into it," said 28, of on a away less Crops Low Due To Lack 1 wy "0f Moisture Lo from | How to get there: Turn north off Rossland Rd. W. on Hortop Street and watch for the signs. FURN! 1270 SIMCOE ST. NORTH HE IDEA HOMES FOR 195 794 SOMERVILLE STREET Four bedroom and family room 795 LAW STREET Two bedroom and family The Idea Home will be open Monday to Fri- day from 1 p.m. to 9 p.m. and Saturday and Sunday from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Be sure to see these 1959 Idea Homes for the finest in de- sign, construction, furnishings and decorating. Also while in the area don't miss seeing the other six modern homes by McCullough Homes Ltd. Savi asi SHED AND DECORATED BY EATON'S OF CANADA M:CULLOUGH HOMES LTD. OSHAWA RA 5-3539 TORONTO (CP) -- Ontario [Boma to say when the move | grain, corn, soybean, white bean|might be made, but suggested land potato yields will be lower | Toronto would most likely be the |this year because of a lack of|location. {moisture, A. H. Martin, director of the field crops branch of the agricultural department, said] | Wednesday. The white bean crop may 110. per cent lower than last year, | the other crops--including | P wheat, oats, barley i mixed | grain -- having yields some | areas as much as nine BN cent lower than in 1943. Mr. Martin said if rain comes soon, sugar beets will show a | good yield. The tobacco crop in dry areas is' requiring a large | amount of irrigation water but a {good crop is expected. Market garden produce, parti- cularly tomatoes and cucumbers, is suffering, and fruit is ripening too quickly, which is us indication of a reducti he said, Kent and Lambton counties (have been hardest hit by the drought and "parts of Middlesex, | Elgin and Essex counties also] have suffered. Renfrew County | was extremely dry until recent| rains. Good rains have been reported {in northern parts of Middlesex, fHturon, Bruce, Wellington and | Grey on in yield, omer Theft le | I | | Brings Trouble | MONTREAL (CP)--Three men pleaded guilty here Wednesday toy stealing three tons of copper cable from an unused tram route and police testified they had nothing but trouble for their ef- "orts, After laboriously sawing down he first load, other thieves hi- jacked the ruck. A second truckload was . sold {for $101. Police enquired as they vere busy getting a third load Tuesday. Normand Groulx, 22, Roger Le- page, 32, and Jean Bedoret, 25, were given suspended sentences and told to post $950 bail and ay the Monireal Transportation : n $10 a week to cover of cable. th man, Andre s released for pre \o ng Sept. 2 after pleading ii Two years ago, A.M.C. suspen. |ded production in its To onto plant and from that time on all {units sold in Canada have been Mr. Romney said when mported. be | action is undertaken the old {plant in Metropolitan Toronto {probably wend be would be used. 0ld Loan Doubles Since 1937 TORONTO (Cp) -- A loan of {$20,000, made 22 years ago to an {On Wario finaucier and piling up linterest ever since, will cost the man more than twice the original amount. Robert O. Denman of Greens- {ville, was ordered in Ontario Su- reme Court Tuesday to repay the {loan, made by a Montreal com: [pany in 1937. | In his rulicg. Mr. Justice H.A. Aylen upheld a 1955 promissory pote from N. A Timmins (1938) |Ltd., for $70,881.52--the original {loan together with accumulated compound interest. The note was the last of a iseries given to Mr. Denman by the corporation's predecessor, "the N. A. Timmins Corpora- |tion." | Leo Timmins, a director of the company at the time, had made he loan in order to clear Mr. enman of a $30,000 bank debt that Mr. Denman could, "give up" his other business interests and devote his time entirely" to his new company, EE Mining and Smelting Corpora- tion Limited, said His Lordship Chromium Mining became a wholly-owned subsidiary of the plaintiff company. As security for the loan, Mr. Justice Aylen said, Mr. Denman was to pledge 75,000 shares of the chromium company. The actual number of shares owned by the defendant now amounts to 7,500 as a result of reorganization of the company. They are still held by the plain tif as collateral. The defendant resigned as vice president and managing director of the chromium company in 1942.

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