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The Oshawa Times, 12 Dec 1959, p. 9

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3 762 Sim- has LESLIE H. GUY, coe street north, Oshawa RESIDENT OF OSHAWA HAS Hh Pheasants Pheasants Golden Amherst He raises and Lady two most interesting hobbies. | as well as r g-necked doves In Christmas Tree Can Be Dangerous The traditional burning of the Christmas tree outdoors is a thrilling sight, but when accident- ally ignited indoors it can be a flaming funeral pyre, the Nation- al Safety Council said today "Filled with natural pitch and resin, the Christmas tree is one of the most combustible objects! known -- virtually impossible to| extinguish by ordinary methods. "When the needles fall," the Council said, "it should not be burned, branch by branch, in the fireplace, because the roaring fire is difficult to control. It should be burned outdoors, in fire-safe areas. "The months of December and January," the Council added. "are the leading months for fire burns, and last year 93 fire deaths occurred during the Christ-| mas holiday alone." | SOME PRECAUTIONS The Christmas tree tradition is a wonderful part of the season, the Council said, so keep it won- derful by observing these few precautions: 1. Buy a tree no bigger than you need. The larger the tree, the larger the fire hazard. 2. Wait to put it up until just before Christmas. Keep it in a cold place until then. 3. Saw off, diagonally, at least an inch of the trunk and place in a stand filled with water 4. Place tree away from sources of heat such as TV sets, ratliators, powerful electric lights, which speed up the drying pro- cess. 5. Use nonflammable decora- tions. Keep metallic icicles or tinsel away from light sockets Dangling into the socket, they can cause short circvits or flash fires Do not overload circuits, or re- place normal fuses with over- sized ones. ELECTRICAL HAZARDS 6.Use electric lights only. Be sure they bear the Underwriter's Bccused Gets Doubt Benefit \ "If I have a 50-cent piece in my pocket now," Crown Attorney Alex C. Hall told Magistrate F. S. Ebbs in court Fridav morn- ing, "and four months earlier you had had a similar coin of the same vintage in your pocket -- I'd hate to be implicated for stealing your coin on that basis." With this logic Mr. Hall said he could not prosecute further against Tsatsanis Dimitrious, of Toronto. He was charged with stealing 10 Turkish gold pieces valued at approximately $300 $300 from Nick Petkoff of Green- bank, Ont. Magistrate Ebbs gave the ac- cused the benefit of the doubt, after hearing three witnesses, and dismissed the case Nick Petkoff = had testified earlier that he missed the coins ; about two days after Dimitrious left his employ. Another witness, Velinir Duko-) vie, told the court that he had given a similar coin allegedly re- ceived from the accused, to a! third party, Zivorad Sajnivic, as collateral for a $10 loan The witnesses, of Yugoslavian descent, had trouble making the court understand their testimony and in the confusion n interpreter was given oath It was when the fnisunderstand ings were cleared the crown at torney decided there was not a sufficient case for the crown and discontinued prosecution. the Laboratories label. Check for frayed cords, faulty sockets, loose connections. Provide a switch some distance from the tree fo turn it on and off. Do not unplug tree lights underneath the tree. 7. Never use candles on the tree or around any combustible decorations. 8. Turn off tree lights before leaving the room or the house. 9. Don't operate electric toys such as trains, beneath the tree. Arcs can ignite decorations or wrappings. | USE A LADDER 10. Use stool or ladder while trimming the tree. Let children decorate only lower branches. Don't smoke while trimming or dismantling. 11. Burn the tree in a fire-safe area outdoors. Some communities have tree-burning bonfires under the supervision of the fife depar{ ment. If your community does not, contact your fire department and seek its co-operation. Youth organizations may ' collect the trees. 2 Qualify At Uxbridge Two candidates qualified, Fri- day night, out of four nominees to contest the remaining seat on the Uxbridge town vote, Wilfred Gould and Fred Kel- land were the ones that qualified The other nominees were Stanley Beach and Mrs. Margaret Chat terly. The other five seats on coun- cil were filled by acclamation at an earlier nomination meeting. French Elite' College Goal Prelate Says AZILDA, Ont. (CP) -- Rev. Emile Bouvier, rector of the Uni- versity of" Sudbury, says he is sorry to see that the younger generation of French - speaking Canadians in Ontario lacks true conviction in its mother tongue. Addressing a parent - teachers association. meeting Wednesday in this Northern Ontario commu nity, the Jesuit prelate said this lack of conviction might be at tributed to a lack of knowledge of the history of French Canada A true French-speaking Cana- dian elite would not be formed in Ontario until this anomaly was corrected and that was why the University of Sudburv was seek ing history professors among the best in the country The University of Sudbury has he said, taken upon itself mission of forming French language elite "The yeung .generation must he taught French and the history of French Canada," he said. "The university will form a French elite on these two conditions." He said that by elite he means well-mannered people, who think and wi firm conviction ed on thorough knowledoe of Canada ar ind future and a sufficient knowledge of French langu: to be able speak it properly and to be proud to speak it, he a 0 tory i of he present mn the to | | NESE EST A # INTER the upper picture he is seen with some of his pheasants. The lower picture shows a pen | Counsel for the accused pair COL. C. D. WISEMAN Army Officer Club Speaker The members of the Oshawa Kiwanis Club, at their luncheon meeting next Tuesday, will be privileged to hear an address by Col. Clarence D. Wiseman, chief secretary and second in com- mand of the Salvation Army in Canada. A native of Newfoundland, Col. Wiseman graduated from the Sal- vation Army Training College in Toronto in 1927. He served for several years on the staff of the Army's editorial department in Toronto and later served the South London Corps and wa¥ in «command of the historic Toronto Temple Corps. as well as being in charge of the Montreal Citadel Corps. During the Second World War he served overseas as a chaplain with the Second Battalion of the Royal Canadian Engineers. He also ha oversight over the Sal- vation Army Wellare work in Britain and Europe as well as the Middle East, India and Cey- lon. Well known a writer and speaker, Col. Wiseman was later in charge of the Army's work in Newfoundland for 8'2 years. Cornerstone Ceremonies Lose Flavor HAMILTON rstone as (CP)--The ec Hamilton's nel Il be laid today bu he Spectator i * teremony won't be same ue with a for ea in 1 hat year 000 838 event he stone of the went down and Doran - threat- ened call for the paddy wagon when guests partook too liberally of the 16 toasts Somebody lunch into In presen May ity hall or William to his box tossed the cornerstone And the stand of one peanut Charley collapsed Of -this la paper t event, the J: 2A mbed news lot top report sa of I on of arle stand nearby before the ceremony wenced the frail roof and - the boys went into the peanuts, | and ju had comn collapsed bead first ] ING HOBBY Lait? # is [of the service. E i He of the doves. --Oshawa Times Photos Date Set For Preliminary The preliminary hearing of Young Pheasants i Hard To Handle There are pheasants at the bot- tom of Leslie Guy's garden. Mr. Guy, who lives on Simcoe street morth, has a collection of Golden Pheasants and Lady Amherst's.. Pheasant fancier, breeder and member of a pheas- ant club in Woodstock, he has spent a good deal of the last five years looking after the birds. They are really hard to look after when the young pheasants hatch out, Mr. Guy says. As soon as the little pheasants come out of the eggs they run like greased lightning, he explains. A hen pheasant will lay two dozen eggs but sit on only 10, Mr. Guy has found. He then has to take the rest of the eggs away and gives them to bantam hens o hatch. Mr. Guy keeps a small team NES Officer Is Transferred G. J. W. Shaver, supervisor of insurance in the Oshawa office |of the National Employment |Service, has been transferred with promotion to the head office of the Unemployment Insurance Commission, Ottawa. Mr. Shaver will report for work in Ottawa Monday morning. His new appointment was an- nounced Friday by Norman Hodgson, manager of the National Employment Service. |For the past year, Mr. Shaver,| as a Grade 5 officer, has been assistant to Mr. Hodgson. Mr. Shaver has been with the service for 13 years. Before com- ing to Oshawa three years ago, | he was in the Prestcott branch | Students To Attend Clinic By KATHRYN LEARMONTH | Five Donevan Collegiate Insti-| tute students are among the privileged few to attend the bas- ketball clinic in Peterborough, ! Dec. 12. They are: Margaret Gray, Helen Laxton, Beverly Bright, Sandra Dawson -and Theresa Aughney. | Donevan's "Winter Whirl" sche- |duled to be held December 22 is| to take the form of a semi-for- mal, The students who attend will be entertained throughout the evening with sKits and mu- sic | | | Council met on Wednesday. It There are 18 of them including | The Osharoa Times Need For Drug Price Laws, Senator Finds WASHINGTON (AP) -- Chair-| Kefauver said Upjohn's testi- mony Friday that three large man Estes Kefauver of the Sen- mony would close out the sub-|/pharmaceutical houses have shut ate anti-trust and monopoly sub- committee's inquiry into pricing off wholesale supplies of their committee said today an investi- of arthritis medicines. But more|brand-name products .to a non- gation of drug prices already has hearings, possibly dealing "with|profit cut-rate drug service for shown a ne r federal legisla- antibiotics prices; are planned elderly retired persons. tion. |late next month. The testimony came from Dr. The Tennessee Democratic sen- : : TOO EARLY TO SAY {Ethel Percy Andrus, president of ator made the comment as E.G.) 5 ed both the American Association of while enjoying the air, coo for ypjohn, president of the Upjohn| While Kefauver said the ne ] atig all the neighbors to hear. Lig of he Dighn for new legislation already is evi- fetired Persons and the National Mr. Guy sells pairs of birds to was called for questioning about dent, he said it is too early toqRetired Teachers Association. other fanciers. his firm's pricing of anti-arthritis|say what form it should take. [ She said Parke, Davis and -- drugs. | He expects legislation to be of-|Company of Detroit notified the The Upjohn Company was fered in the coming session of co-operative's main supply source listed by the subcommittee as|Congress. on Dec. 3 that it was "closing one"of the three principal manu-| A small New; ersey drug Your account permanently, facturers of cortisone derivatives maker, Seymour Blackman, | fective immediately." . is used in treating persons afflicted told the subcommittee Friday| This letter was addressed to with arthritis. : |that the prescription drug indus- {Solomon Neustat, head of the Officials of the other two drug trv should be treated as a public|Neustat Drug Stores, a: chain firms, Schering Corporation and utility; with its profits and ad- operating in New York state [Merck and Company, were heard vertising expenditures regulated Which has been the main source earlier in the week. " |by the government. of supply for the co-operative. Blackman, executive secretary| Neustat testified that Elderle of Premo Laboratories of South|Laboratories and the Merrell Hackensack, N.J., contended the Company of Cincinnati have noti- public is being overcharged for fied him by telephone they also drugs to the tune of $750,000,000 are shutting off further wholesale e ann 1ally. |dealings with him. He blamed high prices for| Dr. Andrus said this meant loss lrugs on what he called the of discounts now passed on to as- "huge profits and huge advertis- sociation members. They had OTTAWA (CP) -- George Bur- ing expenditures of the big phar- been able to buy thek dici AW! ge Bur-\ pmaceutical firms. able to buy their medicines 1 {through the co-operative at 25 to |{ton's death sentence for a July 40 per cent below the retail prices PAGE NINE of bantam hens to sit on the eggs. hey make wonderful little mothers," Mr. Guy says. In June and July the pheasants moult and Mr. Guy collects the cock birds' beautiful tail feathers. Mr. Guy also has a number of ring necked doves. two fledglings. It will take the young birds a year before they have the black ring round their throats, Mr, Guy says. Some of the doves are build: ing nests on shelves in the ga- rage that they live in. They have a mesh wire enclosed balcony on one side of the building, and ---------------------- CELEBRATING BIRTHDAYS Congratulations and best wishes to the following resi- dents of Oshawa and district who are celebrating birthdays this weekend. Those who celebrate today are: Louise Murdoch, 1259 Meadowvale street; John Sul- livan, 68 Garrard Road; Vie Smith, RR 3, Oshawa." Those ° who celebrate on Sunday are: Mary Straugh- ef- re SE 'Holdup Killing 'Death Sentenc i ner | Now Commuted Welland avenue, | The first five persons to in- form The Oshawa Times of their birthdays each day will receive double tickets to The Regent Theatre, good for a four - week period. The cur- | rent attraction is "The Jay- hawkers". Reports on birthdavs will be received only between the hours of 8 am. and 10 a.m. 16 Toronto holdup munder has HEARS SUPPLIES CUT been commuted to life imprison-| The subcommittee heard testi-|in drug stores. ment, it was announced Friday, --mMm@M@M8M8M -------- Burton, 42-year-old former Tor- onto resident, was convicted Oct. bd 9 in the shooting death of Ronald en 1n TOW S Watts, 23, also of Toronto, his {partner in an attempt to hold up the Electric Diner. The jury - made a streng recommendation for mercy. am u.o. ores Fl in Club | Evidence at the trial was that Y g {Watts was attacked by a cus- By JACK LEFLER | Shipments of finished steel . omer, CBEiceman Arr] NEW YORK (AP)--Business in gained ground but lagged behind Wins Award stone Keay with his revolver the United States hummed along ingot production. This kept steel- the NCaDUn discharged killing this week at a swift pace sparked using industries in a bind. Car- The Royal Canadian Flying Watts. d S|by Christmas buying of unprece- rier Corporation in Syracuse, Club Association announced re-| Burton's appeal to the Ontario dented proportions, record steel|N. Y., laid off 400 workers for a cently that it is awarding a safe|Court of Appeal was dismissed production and stepped up auto- week because of steel shortage. flying award to the Ontario|and he was to have hanged next|MoPile output. J | Freight car loadings increased County Flying Club for it's per-|Tuesday. | Free-spending crowds 'jammed|, 649,639 this week, mainly on formance during the fiscal year| The commutation, made by or-|Stores almost everywhere. Mer-|stee] tonnage, Loadings last week ending Nov. 30, 1959. der-in-council, is the 10th since|chants were nearly unanimous in|\ere 574,126 and a year ago 504, The local club has had no ma-|the Progressive Con ser vative| confidence that Christmas buying ggg, rd jor accidents although it's pilots|government took office in 1957.|18 headed for a record. | have flown a total of 3193 hours Since then there has been a com-| Retail trade's dollar volume AUTO BOOST and 40 minutes during that per- mutation for every mercy rec-|Was up from one to five per cent The automobile industry iod. ommendation. over a year ago, boosted its production about 50 In the regulations governing) But in the 25 cases in which| Steel mills operated at an es- per cent over the previous week the award a flying club is allow-|there was no mercy recommend-|timated 94.3 per cent capatity, a and scheduled another big jump Steve Aukszi, 321 Albert St., and was decided, at the meeting that|ed one minor accident for every ation, the sentences were carried|rate capable of turning out 2,671,- néxt week in a drive to make up Steve Bartoligeti, 476 Albert St,, student address books would be 1000 hours : I was set for Wednesday, Dec. 16, made available in the near fu- Couty Flyig Club is below this in/ture. The books will contain the limit with only two slight acci-/in Kingston Penitentiary. by Magistrate F. S. Ebbs court Friday. he pair are charged by Michael Breda, also of Oshawa, with wounding with an intent to maim, disfigure or disable. The attack allegedly occurred on or about Nov. 14. stated they would elect the type of trial preferred Wednesday. OCVI Frolic Planning Is Under Way By SANDRA PITMAN Plans for the annual frolic at O'Neill Collegiate and Vocational The move this week has yet to as- Institute are in full swing. various committees are discuss- ing the refreshments, entertain- ment and, of course, the door prizes, for the best one. This award is kept for a year by the winning for the low volume and investors by Friday showed an almost com-|sent Norman Siebern, a good-hitt roem., On Thursday in assembly a ample skit was provided for the inant though are tight money and ward trend and picked up on thi $ n e juniors, who, for the most part,/the 1960 U. S. presidential elec- strength of senior nickels. Inter- fect world series game in 1956, have never attended our Christ- mas party. Thursday evening another ses- sion of Congress was held. A high point of interest was a 12- minute speech by Howard Schwartz, who is an active mem- ber of the Debating Club. In his speech, Howard appeal- ed to Congress for the proceeds from the Sadie Hawkins Dance, which the Club handled. It is hoped that some members of the Debating Club may go to the U.N. in the spring and the mon- ey would be helped to pay their expenses. Last year a group of students from the Debating Club went to Ottawa for a few days and, from all accounts, the trip was successful. There were reports from sev- eral committees too. The chair- man of the booklet committee, Donna Howard, gave a report to the effect that her committee had found the booklet quite use- less and that they had decided to leave it for a while. The cheerleaders are going to. In another week they begin to cheer the basket- be busy again. ball games and the first one will be on Friday, December 18, a 5.30 p.m. The game will against Donevan at OCVI Junior French Club met Thurs- production in the first nine the year, day at noon and everyone was in the Christmas spirit. They Christmas carols and studied different proverbs in French. fruit and candies incorisolable. ~ The old cornerstone box was recottred Thursday after a three-day - search. Coins that were supposed to be in it weren't. They turned up in the mortar A menu for eon marking in the old box Charley was the civie lunch- occasion Some items on it Caif's head with brain sauce, ox heart stuffed with brown sauce and green tea. was be - addresses and phone numbers of each student in the school. flow. BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT | By GREG MacDONALD [ Canadian Press Staff Writer | Spearheaded by paper, steels and nickel issues, Canadian stock markets this week began a late- season climb. | It 'was no longer a watch-and- {wait game for investors as .re- surgent buying power on the New York market began to spill over into Canadian exchanges. However, say investors, | the sume the proportions of a trend reversal. The average volume for the week was slightly more than 2,- To encourage classes to[000,000 shares which was about|stole the limelight. In the midst trade bait in an effort to present skits, there is a trophy|the same as in previous weeks. [of the U. S. steel strike they sud- strengthen the pitching staff. There are a number of reasons are quick to name any one of them. Among the most predom- tion. { IU. 8. TAX SELLING Tax selling in the United States is another reason and this has been specially hard on oil and gas issues. | What tax selling amounts to is Isimply this: An investor in the U. S., in order to beat income |tax on any capital gains he has {made on stocks, will sell at a loss| and immediately buy into another |stock. As most of this occurs near the end of the year the in- vestor is safe because he can't be taxed on a loss and the gov- {ernment has to wait for another year before nabbing him on his second investment, providing he makes a gain. The investor takes a chance when he sells his original hold-| ings at a loss because he has no| guarantee his next investment will go up. However, investors say it usually pays off and the Ontario Fish Output Higher . TORONTO (CP) -- The depart- ment of lands and forests said Friday Ontario commercial fish months of 1959 was 2.4 per cent 2|higher than in the same period Side the a in 1958 | The department estimated that {25,332,000 pounds of fish were landed Jan. 1-Sepl. 30 and were worth $2,964,000. Production in Lake Erie in-| boon 7.5 per cent, in Lake On- arid by 18.7 per cent, and i Lake Huron by 7.9 per cent. | Landings in Lake Superior de- clined by 11.5 per cent, in Lake St. Clair by 41.8 per cent and in Georgian F by 66.9 per cent Total production in northern in land waters remained relatively stable, while landings in southern inland waters slipped 42.7 per cent. | No Major Trend In Market Lift dustrials up 8.16 to 529.85; golds occupants, n|- | it was steels denly reversed their- losses and| To Kansas City the Yankees plete turnabout. {ing but weak-fielding outfielder, Base metals bucked their down-|pitcher Don Larsen, plagued with e/a sore arm since hurling a per- up 1.15 at 86.63; base metals up 3.54 at '169.63; and western oils up 1.60 at 101.63. Index changes at Banks up .70 at 61.29, utilities up 2.3 at 145.6; industrials up 5.9 at 318.2; combined up 4.8 at 260.7; papers up 7.2 at 452.8, and golds Burton is to serve his life term age on record. due to steel shortages. me r-- [the steel dispute, meanwhile, |Tid-November to a total of 3,- Id ers |grew darker. The industry was [ i |with jobs declined by 1,191,000 to |unproductive and to allow the| Consumers got a break in the During the week, the st york- . g the week, the steelwork. |, ,.q on' jnoreasing volume of Yankees and Kansas City Ath-|can and Continental Can com- players, have com-|general wage increase of 28 2-10 slaughter were the largest since lowing year. ada as capital gains are not tax- player in a seven-man deal. jounced slight price increases. Isince that week. climb was also due to Christmas leagues, the Yankees Friday ob- ing power stood out as the main since 'they wound up third in the Papers led industrial stocks hitting outfielder they also got| VATICAN CITY (AP) -- L'Os- changed. A Yankee spokesman said De- : the centre of the Roman Cath- earlier this week sought curbs on editorial entitled For Morality in L'Osservatore says it was erred in headlining its account of Press "where it becomes abus- of the week and closed at Toronto fielder, and Marv Throneberry, questing limitations on freedom Point.in the Pope's speech--that mild buying interest spilled over| The deal came four days from |I'Observatore, should have been reted" and had been raised to champion Chicago White Sox and thoritative Vatican newspa- but only the limitation on the so- |selves in another seven player- everywhere and is everywhere ence of the 'second'--the judi- tled back and forth between New| L'Osservatore recalls that the accepted by all reasonable {per- up 2.58 at 81.35. |phia in 1954. Several have made sexy posters on walls and bill- dom consists in not offending that dents in more than 3000 hours (SETTLEMENT FADES The government. reported un {670,000 an increase not as large ool to a union proposal for eom- any - by - c yb ining, |. 3 Da pany bargaining 65,640,000, slightly more than the Ball Players {union to turn its attention to the meat department. Prices went igned contracts with Ameri- . |cattle, hogs, sheep and lambs letics, pleted their 15th transaction with cents an hour over three years. the week ended Dec. 1, 1956. Meat able, Thwarted in an attempt to - ° buying but gains by all indices tained Maris, on whom they had Pope Misquoted reason. merican League last season. with eight of 10 seniors showing veteran shortstop Joe Demaestri| titude is that this is particularly servatore Romano has denied However, that | maestri probably will be used as olic Church, freedom of the press. the Press, says an Italian news- 'Very clear" that the pontiff's the Pope's address to Italian ive: or (more exactly) licence." with a gain of 3% points. {utility first baseman-outfielder. |of the press." of the reporting of crime news-- trom Now York. [the end of the interleague dead-|"the Pope requests limitations on 'an argument about freedom." the runnerup Cleveland Indians per says the pontiff was referring called 'fourth estate' of not in- Montreal | SWaPp: | criminal, but which is least of all ciary." York and Kansas City since the late Pope Pius XII also criticized sons), first of all by moralists, [the trip both ways. boards of Rome. The Vatican at-| (freedom) of others." ls i - The Otario out on schedule. {000 tons of steel, the greatest ton-|the more than 750,000 cars lost flying time Prospects of a settlement of SWPloyment rose by 308,000 in as expected. The total of workers - A aln Swa | Federal mediators broke off ne-| 1 | gotiations because they had been | USUa seasonal drop. aluminum industry. down as livestock growers NEW YORK (AP)--New York ©rs 8 old hands at swapping Panies, calling for an average|into markets. Sales of hogs for cycle starts all over again the fol- [baseball There is no tax-selling in Can-|outfielder Roger Maris the key Both companies immediately an- production also was the biggest Some investors said this week's trade with other clubs in both showed that the Wall Street buy-|designs to plug an outfield hole Le A PAPERS ADVANCE *~ |" With the 25-year-old, heavy-| nN Tess iberty gains, One lost and one was un-|and first baseman Ken Hadley. unseemly in Rome because it is that Pope John in an address The Vatican newspaper, in an MEANING "VERY CLEAR" paper, La Stampa of Turin, Words referred to freedom of the national Nickel was strong most Hank Bauer, 37 - year - old out-| Catholic jurists Tuesday as "re-| L'Osservatore says another Western oils also advanced as| SECOND BIG TRADE IN WEEK| The newspaper's headline, says 2150 was "not precisely interp- Index changes at Toronto: In. line and five days after the licence of the press." The, an- In this matter "a limit is asked, apparently strengthened them- to lurid reporting which "extends vVading the freedom and independ- | Fifty-nine playars have shut- admissible in Rome." "It is well known and well {Athletics 'moved from Philadel- lurid reporting and plastering of jurists and socialogists, that free- 7 Russian Plane Wreck Sighted REYKJAVIK Iceland (Reut- ers) A United States Navy plane Friday spotted a two-ene {gined Russian plane crashed on an icefloe 160 miles northwest of Iceland. The plane apparentlv crashed recently Since it"was not covered by snow. : The wreckage was spotted deep in an icefield and it would be difficult," if not impossible, to reach it by ship at this time of Soviet plane crashed in-: ea covered by the Ice- landic air traffic control~But the control had no knowledge of the plane and there was speculation here it might have been on a secret flight. vp n : a There was no immediate indi- cation of what happened to its e STUDENT WINS DAMAGES WHITBY (CP) -- The Supreme Court of Ontario. has awarded Allan Sande Brown, 19, an O'Neill Cc ite and Vocational DON'T SHOOT MISTER Institute student, $3,510.65 dam- ages for injury to an eye from Roberti Lee Council, 30, one | prison, begs State Trooper L. | ly Keesed frisks Counefl and an explosion in a classroom of the escapees from the Ivy | O. Carter to hold his fire. | finds a .38 calibre revolves. April 24, 1958. Bluff, N.C, maximum security | Campbell County Sheriff Reve-

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