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The Oshawa Times, 4 Nov 1959, p. 2

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THIS PLANT of Quebec Iron and Titanium Corporation at Sorel, Que., is turning out a special kind of pig iron for small foundry use, The new product has helped build up markets and keep 1000 men at work after their jobs were FOR SMALL FOUNDRIES Special Pig Iron By Quebec Industry By JOSEPH MacSWEEN Canadian Press Staff Writer The success of the United Na- tions resolution on disarmament negotiated by Vasily V. Kuznet- sov of the Soviet Union and Henry Cabot Lodge of the United States gives hope of some pro- gress on the peaceful uses of outer space. The 'Russians, riding high on the prestige of moon missiles and Premier Khrushchev's suitcase diplomacy, have been playing a starring role at the 14th General Assembly. It's likely they'll try to continue. Kuznetsov took the initiative on the disarmament proposal and apparently made some fairly worthwhile concessions, in phras- "The Russians really wanted this one," said one diplomat. "They didn't want anything to go wrong." AGAINST SIN True, the resolution reads along the lines of the proverbial injunc- tion against sin, which is all the more reason people aren't scof- fing at it. No one was scoffing, either, at Khrushchev's plan for total dis- | armament within four years. That would have sounded like mock- ing peace. It would have been equally fool lish to dismiss lightlv the Soviet call for an international confer- ence of scientists to swap exper- fences in exploring outer space, especially in view of Russia's ing at least, to get unanimous agreement. feats out there. Lodge let it be known that he Comedian Gobel Has No Grudge HOLLYWOOD (CP) '-- Come-|wood in September, Gobel told dian George Gobel sald Tuesday Mirror-News writer Lee Belser he is not harboring any grudge|/in an interview published Sept. because of 17: against Canadians what he described as an unfor- tunate experience at the Cana- dian National Exhibition in Tor- onto last September. "1 like Canadians and I like Canada and 1 certainly would be happy tc p'ay up there again-- anytime they want me," he said. "Prnv.ding the money is right," sa.d the comedian's man-|that ager, David O'Malley. Gobel said he was point of a political wrangle that 1 never really understood." | Gobel was paid $50,000 for a 16-day apoearance at the exhibi-|I tion. He said some Toronto news- papers asked why the CNE didn't hire a Canadian instead. He said Jack Arthur, delete the words 'hell" and "damn" {rom the seript. "I did delete them," Gobel sald, "hut thst was certainly an odd way to request it." After he came back to Holly-| Conditions Of Prison Investigated ST. CATHARINES (CP) -- A full report on conditions of the Grimsby Township jail was or- dered submitted to Attorney-Gen- cizing me People shoved notes under my door and politicians used me as a football." sent a memo to Gobel asking dropped from the act. An assist- "a focal ant had sipped it under the co- |median's hotel room door. about." themanager of show's producer, shoved a. note/mented: under his door asking that he|rather shahbily. He didn't quite] ' come um to my expectations but| that may have been because of| e that de-| * "I still don't know what it was all about. They started criti- in the newspapers. In Toronto, Mr. Arthur said he the word "damn" be . threatened by a five-month. shutdown early in the year. --(CP Photo.) was looking for more private talks with Kuznetsov, leading ob- servers to believe that he was hoping to reach an accord as agreeable, or nearly so, as the one on disarmament. ESSENTIAL POINTS A working paper was drawn up By ROBERT RICE Canadian Press Staff Writer SOREL, Que. (CP) -- One of Quebec's newer industries, an iron smelter using Quebec ore, has devised a special kind of pig iron for use in small foundries. The Quebec Iron and Titanium Corporation, set up 10 years ago to smelt ilmenite ore from north- eastern Quebec, has produced the new pig iron in a bid to build uj its markets after a five - mon shutdown earlier this year. in this area, 40 miles northeast of Montreal, were at stake in de- veloping the new line, chieflv to meet the needs of small foundries within Quebec. The company also rkets elsewhere in North Am- a per t body to I? the peaceful uses of outer space. But the working paper left blank the crucial question of the membership of an outer space West negotiations foundered last session, The Soviet Union, Poland and Czechoslovakia were placed on a temporary 18 - nation committee estapiished by the General As- sembly last December. However, the three Soviet bloc members boycotted the group on the ground that it had a Western ma- jority, and they were joined by India and the United Arab Repub- lic. Gilier members of that commit- tee are Argentina, Australia, Bel gium, Brazil, Britain, Canada, France, Iran, Italy, Japan, Mex- ico, Sweden and the United States. WON PARITY Canada, among other countries, has been trying to work out a formula that the Russians would accept. The Russians won parity on the 10 - nation disarmament committee that will begin work in Geneva early next year, but that body was established outside the UN, and few--if any--Western na- tions are willing to grant the So- viet bloc parity on any similar committee within the UN. It is believed that on the outer- space issue the Russians--eager to bring their initiative to a suc- cessful conclusion--are in amood to negotiate the member- ship problem without demands of containing the essential points of a resolution for establishment of parity. That might be enough to get the show on the road. rr | 2 "I had a huge cast to worry Mr. Arthur said. "Td ike to be able to deal all the| time on a person-to-person basis! {but it's just not possible." Hiram McCallum, general the CNE, com. "Geerge was treated the peculiar at ph veloped." Liberian Ship Free Of Shoal ST. CATHARINES (CP) Aided by high offshore winds, a salvage tug pulled the Liberian freighter Carribbean Trader Monday from a sand shoal off Port Dalhousie where it had {been stranded since Saturday night. | The vessel, loaded with pulp- wood, struck the shoal just east [of the entrance to Port Dal- FILM STARS Anthony Quinn and Yoko Tani stand on the ice of Hudson Bay near Churchill, Man., during shooting of the full-length Eskimo feature film, "The Savage Innocents." Mr. Quinn, Mexican-born, and Miss erica and in Europe. GOOD CHARGE MATERIAL Called Sorelmetal, it is a spe- cial low phosphorus pig iron of high purity, the company says. Its high carbon_and low sulphur features also make it a useful charge material for steel plants in the production of high carbon steels. Timenite ore is an oddball ore. It contains iron and titanium ox- ide. The iron makes the titanium unsuitable for the paint industry, while the titanium makes the iron unsatisfactory for conven- tional processes. The ore comes from Allard Lake, almost 600 miles northeast of Sorel. It is shipped in bulk up the St. Lawrence River to the Sorel plant and put through a The jobs of some 1,000 workers 8 Red Star Rises In UN Assembly series of processes to separate the iron and the titanium. During the last decade, a num- have been the Sorel plant. is 300,000 tons a year, The main ore body at Al- lard Lake contains more than 100,000,000,000 tons of ore, aver- aging 36 per cent iron and 32 per cent titanium oxide. CONTINUOUS OPERATION At the Sorel plant, which oper- ates around the clock, the ore is crushed, graded, roasted and mixed with anthracite coal before smelting. The Sorel plant heats its smelt- ers with electrical arcs, using enough electricity each year to light a city of 250,000 people. The final pig irons are poured smelting process is high in titan. jum content and is smashed into pure white titani pigment in colors, in white-wall tires and stove enamels. By DAVE McINTOSH Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP) -- The govern- ment has set a target date of April, 1961, for the first flight of a Canadian-built Starfighter jet plane, informed sources said Tuesday. The aircraft industry regards this is a tough schedule but is determined to meet it. A delay in any one area could hold up the entire project. Canadian Limited, Montreal, will build the airframes for the 200 Starfighters, to be known in the RCAF as the CF-104. Orenda Engines Limited, Malton, will | supply the General Electric J-79 jet engines and Canadian West- inghouse, Hamilton, the arma- ment control system. Sinking-Fund Debentures TORONTO (CP) -- An issue of $24,357,000 six-per-cent instalment and sinking fund debentures of the municipality of Metropolitan Toronto is being offered by a group of Investment dealers headed by Wood, Gundy and Co, # |Ltd.,, Dominion Securities Corp. Ltd, A. E. Ames and Co. Ltd, 4 and McLeod, Young, Weir and cogs i i Tani, a pretty Japanese now living in Paris, played the lead roles in the film, shot in the Canadian North, Greenland and London, England. --(CP Photo.) "THE SAVAGE INNOCENTS Movie Stars In The North Co. Ltd. The issue consists of $1,249,000 sinking fund debentures due Nov. 2, 1964; $1,573,000 due 1969; $282, 000 due 1974; $17,700.000 due 1979; $835,000 due 1985; and $2,718,000 instalment debentures to mature 4 |[Nov. 2 in the years 1960 to 1974 inclusive. The six-per-cent sinking fund debentures due 1979 are being of- fered to the public at 96.25 to yield from 6.31 to 6.36 per cent. The sinking fund debentures due 1989 are being placed privately. | Soldier Families Without Homes PEMBROKE (CP) -- Eighty families of soldiers with the 2nd Battalion, the Canadian Guards, are without homes here two weeks: after returning from serv- ice' with NATO forces in Ger- many. Married quarters at nearby Camp Petawawa are filled. Some are occupied by families of sold- iers now in Europe as replace- ments for the 2nd Battalion. The families are awaiting accommo- dation near Canadian bases in Germany, FT) Starfighter Target Date The deadline set by the gov- ernment means, one informant sald, that if there is a delay in any one sector of the program more purchases of components would have to be made in the United States. CONTRACT CEILING The ceiling on Canadair's con- tract for construction of the air- frames is $91,500,000, which will allow for a profit of five per cent. If Canadair can complete the contract for less than this amount, it will get one-third of the consequent saving and the Crown two-thirds. If costs exceed the contract ceiling, they will have to be borne by the company. Ceiling on the Orenda contract is $80,000,000 About half the work involved will be sub-contracted by Cana- dair, Orenda and Westinghouse. Some components will no doubt have to be purchased from American companies. But these firms will award contracts of the same value to Canadian com- panies whether or not these con- tracts are associated with the {Starfighter porgram., SEND FLOWERS by Wire Delivery and Quality Guaranteed by the world's most responsible florists Look in Yellow Pages Firorisre' TeLecraPH Devivery Suggestions and Special Prices for Nov. 5, 6 and 7th. Sproule's Beef is red brand beef Canada's Finest to assure quality flavour and tenderness, cut and trimmed to give complete satisfaction. BLADE BONE REMOVED 4 R. B. REED & SONS FLORISTS 10% KING ST. WEST RA 5-1131 Rented in Pembroke and Petawawa village, 10 miles northwest of here, are almost all occupied. TREES AND SPUDS Maine, with the largest forest JOHN BURTINSKY FLORIST Flowers for all occasions 124 Dundas St. West, Whitby 3324 eral Roberts after a Grimsby housie harbor in Lake Ontario, lawyer described the jail as|about five miles north of here. "primitive and dangerous" Mon-| Adverse winds that whipped ay. up heavy waves Mondav halted Judge Helen Kinnear, a visit- attempts to dislodge the ship ing judge at Lincoln County gen-| which was headed for the en- eral sessions, reac a letter from|trance to the Welland Canal at lawyer L, A. Lillicoe which|Port Weller. 'claimed no improvements to the] High winds also prevented two cells had been made since 1952|other ocean vessels from enter- with the exception of one toilet|ing Port Weller harbor Monday. bow! installation. Lake ships were able to pass "Since the sanitary system [through the narrow gap between By ARCH MacKENZIE drawn sleds cross rugged rafted Canadian Press Staff Writer |ice when smoother -- but less OTTAWA (CP)--When an Es- dramatic -- stretches were close kimo shoots a bear he shoots it|at hand. dead, but that doesn't always fit, At Resolute Bay, 1,700 miles |in with making a movie. {north of Winnipeg, an Eskimo The problem of getting shots of handled the hunting. Asked to a polar bear in its death throes shoot a bear, he did so neatly was just one of many faced in|and efficiently -- and the animal filming the full - length Eskimo|dropped in its tracks without feature The Savage Innocents. [even a final snarling grimace for Made at Churchill, Man., Coral|the cameras, area of any eastern U.S. state, is the country's largest potato grower, Whitby does not werk in any case, it can hardly be said to represent any major improvement." Mr, Lilli- coe wrote. Mr. Li'licoe said he had pro- the harbor walls without mishap. Chief Opposes Northwest Territories, and in Greenland and London, England, the film is nearing completion. TWO UNITS IN NORTH Harbor and Resolute Bay in the|CcoSTLY PLANE CRASH Mr. Wilkinson lost 5,000 feet of film in a plane crash. He and two others escaped when the plane hit a ski taking off on tested to Grimsby town council but couacil merely talked of im- provements. The lawyer claimed the jail building was left un- guarded up to eight hours at Church Plan GRENFELL, Sask. (CP) Its trials and tribulations were Southampton Island in the mouth outlined here in an .nterview with|0t Hudson Bay and then bounced Baccio Bandini, executive pro- UP on a rock-strewn hillside and ducer and director of f two burned. or On the Canal Mr. Bandini had to go north to times, leavine prisoners helpless in case of fire. Cell temperatures dropped to as low as 40 degrees and there was no beddng Judge Kinnear ordered a re- port and <aid that if nothing is done hy the next assizes the trial judge should be notified. High-Cost-Ship Gets Christened BARROW - in - FURNESS, England (AP)--Princess Alexan- dra Tuesday christened the 40. 000-ton Oriana, the new Orient Line flagship - built at a cost three times that of the twice-as- large Queens Mary and Elizabeth built 20 years ago in Scotland. By the time she goes onto Far East routes in 1961 her final cost will come to £14,000,000 ($39,200, Chief Peter George of the Saki- may Indian band near here is a strong onpouent of the '"'good samaritan plan" through which the * United Church of Canada hopes to promote Indian integra- tion, "No church," he said, "has the right to move Indians off the re- serves." Chief George, 73, a Saultaux Indian, was criticizing a plan in- stituted here in 1057 by Rev. Earl Stotesbury to '"'wipe out bigotry and prejudice and pro- mote integration between the In- dian and white races." The plan, since adopted by the United Church of Canada, calls for employment of Indians in thé fields, enrolment in public schools, high schools and train- ing courses. Chief George said "the Indian 000). [ans as much right te preserve race as the while man." field units working in the Cana- Resolute tc make up the loss, re- -39 BLADE ROAST JUICY TENDER SHORT RIB ROAST FRESH GROUND, EXTRA LEAN MINCED BEEF TENDER BEEF PLATE BONELESS POT ROAST STORE SLICED RINDLESS BREAKFAST BACOP * GROCERY DEPT. Stocked with the country's finest Foods CYPRUS GARDENS ORANGE JUICE == "MIX AND MATCH 'EM" CEREAL SALE 39 39% 17° Kellogg's CORN FLAKES Kellogg's SPECIAL ""K"" CEREAL Kellogg's SUGAR CORN POPS Kellogg's SUGAR SNACKS KLEENEX TISSUES OLD TYME SYRUP SWIFT'S PREM PARD DOG FOOD "*"* JEWEL SHORTENING GIANT BREEZE = BLU KETCHUP 2.7 45° STORE HOURS EREFORD 79+ Corned Beef 2 7s OPEN TILL ALLSWEET 10 O'CLOCK 25° 31° MARGARINE THURSDAY 47¢ 12-0z. pkg. 65-02. pkg. FOR + B-oz, pkg. 1 00 " 9V2-0z. pkg. -- ECONOM soos via. 29° 1601. 936 1201. gee 10 7% 1.00 re. 28° ree. 73° 10c OFF PACK 11-0Z. BTLS. 1-18, PKG. HABITANT FRIDAY PEA SOUP SATURDAY SHIRRIFF'S GOOD MORNING MARMALADE STUART HOUSE FOIL WRAP BAGS ROSE PURE STRAWBERRY 28-0Z. TINS - SPROULF'S -- King ot Ritson SPROULE'S -- Simcoe at Mill Open Thurs. end Fri. Nights SPROULE'S -- Simcoe ot Colborne ® Best values for your food dollars ot SPROULE'S ® AMPLE FREE PARKING © DELIVERY AT NOMINAL CHARGE : 24-07. JAR 25-FT. _RoLL 29 w 13° 12-02. 33* JAR FRUITS AND VEGETABLES FRESH CUT MUSHROOMS n. 49c dian North this summer. Doug Wilkinson, former northern serv- turning later to Coral Harbor to ice officer, National Film Board| get more hunting film. Dog teams hand an an author, handled the|Were lcaded into a plane that other unit seeking action shots of|SOUght out bears and landed as New Donors Urgently Needed FIRM, GREEN, IMPORTED door life. Mr. Bandini, a tall, diffident| Italian working in the Arctic for the first time, said wryly that he| believes the film was the first big one made in the North in 20] |years and "I think it may be an-| |other 20 years before they make |another one there." The Eskimos--"the nicest peo- ple I've ever met" --were frankly pvzzled about the antics under- taken for the benefit of the cam- as costume makers and extras, | turned out weapons, assisted in| the hunting scenes and even as/ technicians. | They wondered, for example, polar bear, walrus and other out: close as possible on the sea ice. In Greenland, a crew filmed the "calving" of icebergs, which {plunge with a mighty roar from parent glaciers into the sea to start their slow drift south as far as comimercial shipping lanes. The Savage Innocents stars Mexican-born Anthony Quinn and pretty Japanese actress = Yoko Tani. It's set anywhere in the North in the days when first con- tact was being made with the Eskimo and depicts the impact of guns and other aspects of agricultural and mechanicalleras. But they worked willingly|civilization on a primitive so- ciety. It was adapted from the novel Top of the World and will be dis- tributed by Paramount, Rank, Consortium Pathe and Magic jwhy the directors had the dog-|Film. Make That Saving Call Now . . . Call Your CANADIAN RED CROSS at RA 3-2933 For an Appointment at the Next Clinie Thursday, Nov. 5th at ST. GREGORY'S AUDITORIUM 190 SIMCOE ST. NORTH CLINIC OPEN FROM 1:30 TO 4:00 P.M. AND 6:00 TO 9:00 P.M. HEAD LETTUCE 2 ~ 19¢ We are big enough to serve you--Small enough to appreciate you [ YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD FOOD STORE 11

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