Durham Region Newspapers banner

The Oshawa Times, 8 Jan 1960, p. 2

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

WII R SERY Lt a Ep ee RE -- THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridoy, January 8, 1960 This Is a general view of the Big Baboon Errives At Toronto Zoo TORONTO (CP) -- Sultan IV d asylum in Canada sday and showed no signs of antagonism over being de- i from the United States. T 5-pound baboon seemed f being separated 2 wives at Chicago's zoo which gave him wn "VIEW OF CRASH SCENE scene where a National 23: | Wiss pigve lppiey Io, egies -- : -- - -------- - ---------- | GS Opera 'On Agenda | At Stratford | 34 persons abroad | --AP Wirephoto News Media 'Aid Resources WINNIPEG (CP) -- President|Brunswick and are also big busi B. F. Avery of the Canadian ness in British Columbia. TORONTO (CP) -- The Gilbert Forestry Association said Thurs- In New Brunswick, Mr. Kelly and Sullivan opera HMS Pinafore day that news media are play- said, harvesting of Christmas will be ing an important role in conserv-| trees isn't only profitable but al- Tyrone ation of the nation's natural re-'most mances JourCes It had been found that balsam, The July 15. opening night will Mr. Avery, of Espanola, was when too plentiful, becomes a begin the biggest year yet for ected for a second term at preeding ground for budworms, the Stratford Music Festiva held ravage the spruce on iB conjunction with the Stratford staged at Stratford by Guthrie for 24 perfor- necessary. re-ele the association's annual meeting which tc to be rid of his jy... which the lumbering industry de- Shakespearean Festiva Casanova antics Reporting on . publicity given pends 1 in Toronys Thursday, nyse oe the activities on the national and! The association was told that director Lows Apple Daum an { orocineial - assoot he . said forests make money for others nounced selection of the opera. f prov i a wall besides lumber companies He said casting is still being ne- its n the press aaio "CV] hy nalti vol: n __|gotiated but that many Cana- Ca ree Ie or. trib tins" t pile v ioe So oe : hii Mg i Pi _-- dians will participate pi + tributions fo conserva C ive, I 8 soiine 3 . io lan. a ced bi ay Then oe. shat HL ons Mio programs "of oil to the millions of Canadians Mr lop lebaum a 5 2 nauriced bi BR Aree . Cherry! great value lo the eountrs who drive to forests and lakes will lg a sl a pr rator Norman Scollard He said the main purpose of is big business. . res dence. He will appear in set ielighted with the [the forestry associations is '"'to| Additional thousands of gallons , 10" Or 00 owe 'onnorted t in Chicago for disseminate programs of public/of gas and diesel fuel were sold , = the National Festiva yh ches- h s insuffe le vanity information on our renewable na. for motorboat users ire Laughing Girl, a hyena tural resources." FARM INCOME Violinist Oscar Shumsky and tossed in by Chicago 8 hav. |YULE TREE BUSINESS R Raynauld of Montreal, [cellist Leonard Rose ha n to Toron o for dd The Christmas tree business editor of the French -language|2€€n invited to Lake up re , \ d up hid t ® yan, was wortth 7 to! fa ical La Ferme, said|if ratford for the music work yed | somewss! more re (Cenadian forest 1959, Que rmers get a good pro- fhe) ond chaibe: topserts Bra ¢ a quick look at the [J. Br Kelly portion of their income from an jp nA prt "of pt s and ducked un- {ported. Chr forest products. Jthe workshop, ¥ : a substantial addition to farmers'| 'Farmers in heavily - wooded *¢ Workshop areas cour SENSATIONAL TURN on cuting of trees coqpoSERS TO MEET for woodpulp for extra income Mr. Applebaum described {Those in the less heavily-wooded giratford's international compos {areas oiten have stands of. map\é org conference, starting Aug. 7, Professor Claims {trees for sugar and syrup, Both o¢ the largest and most signifi- {classes make extra money in|sant in the world. At least 20 of inter ng Christmas trees, the 30 countries invited have re- |wild or cultivated." sponded to the invitation, he { In view of this, the Quebec aid Russian composer Dmitri |Forestry Association paid special|ghostakovitch has signified that attention to disseminating infor- he will attend. All events but the o ° 11 Anastasia A ive |mation on tree farming and pro- opening and closing banquets will By HAMBURG, Germany (AP)--A|t r man anthropologist t y he is 1 that Anastasia, youngest! Hes said no previous expert their works. da f the last Russian ever had compared the heredit- He said festival officials are eza ar a Bolshevik firing ary characteristics of Mrs An- also considering a two week sq e than 40 years ago derson with those of the Schanz- workshop for amateur musicians West G )tto Eg Mr Anna that | right tha ie sole Nicholas II could mean ac in the world- a case which has of German aid that anthro- nce disproves the the German royal » that Mrs. Ander- tually a Polish farm 1ziska Schanzkowski essor, who had been the court for his opi- case n an interview. The ot yet reacted and ing has been set yet case, EXPERTS sses from many parts of F da and the United S ave testified both in sup- t and against Mrs. Anderson. Groon Talks To Students On Chinese | VANCOUVER (CP) -- Recog- nition of Red China by Canada es a heavy blow to Cani- ! in Southeast Asia, Ex rna Affairs Minister Green MANY kely would do little to in- re: trade between Canada and Red China, he added. The minister told 600 sludents who packed the University of B.C rium here: any Southeast Asian coun- ries now are fighting commu m and our recognition of Red China would be a heavy blow to| friends and allies there, par- Malaya.' In answer to a question from i ¢ he added that recogni- f of the Communist govern it would have little bearmg on Canadian trade." This view also held by other Common- wealth countries, the minister Britain ( and has recognized Red West Germany has West Germany's trade China has been in-| far more rapidly than| Britain's in the last few years. The students gave Mr. Green a warm reception and mes™ speech with applause. HANS G. FREITAG Most virtually the cza many. ko Reche said he she a Hamburg court Hesse in contending fingerprints, surviving hands and ears offered a disclosed hist lespecially who was responsible their several and replaced with a deficiency] nterrupted his 90-minute payment plan, based on a figure {of $22.64 a hundredweight. i vided awards for good manage- be open to the public. medical experts have sald ment of farm woodlots and sugar, Five or six concerts of new here is no evidence of any rela- bushes. works will be held and some of fon between Mrs. Anderson and --------------the composers are expected to family, n the performance of take p Differential On or- ki farming family of which 7 of whi Butterfat Seen to be a: member TORONTO (CP) -- A butterfat aid that his studies of differential in direct relationsh to the price of butter at the level was supported rsday at the annual meeting of the oie one wie wi =) Eyaoyation Of Experts to include artists from civie chestras in such- places as Lon- don, Kitchener, Sarnia and Ot- tawa. Reche eyes, face,' nose, : -- "num- wi olesale to Mrs. An- he czar's ber of definite clues" derson's relation with family Mrs. Anderson r appearance n I 1 shortly through h ¢ after the First World War. She butors, a differential which at was pulled out of a Berlin canal. | Thursday's butter prices would de he first seek, listri negotiations w listri Police said she had attempted amount to about 6.5 cents for suicide each percentage point of butter-| F Fl In 1957, a West Berlin court fat above 3.4 per cent. | rom oe ruled there was no evidence sup-| Delegates also made it clear| porting her claim to be Anas- they want no change in the base] FAIRBANKS, Alaska (AP) -- tasia. The ruling was chiefly buying percentage of 3.4. Many The United = States Air Force based on testimony from an Aus-{felt such a change would be went calmly today about the task' rian who said he saw the Bol- sought by distributors as soon as of airlifting a group of scientists sheviks burn Anastasia's body in there was a move toward in- and servicemen from a research INTERPRETING THE NEWS Disarmament United States authorities sug- hammering away at his proposal gest some progress in world dis-| REASON EVIDENT for total world disarmament over armament may be made. in 1960| The reason for this also is evi-\3 four-year period. but they caution against hopes dent. Britain has achieved nu-| while Khrushchev and Presi- for any spectacular results. |clear capability--she knows how dent Eisenhower exchange | Ten - power bargaining on dis-|to make an atom bomb and has| friendly notes, there still is larmament is to open at Geneva tested her production success- great deal of Washington suspic- [March 15, ending a 30-month sus-|fully. France is still in the pro-/io;n about Khrushchev's real in- pension of East - West negotia- cess of attempting manufacture, |tentions. tions , tial testing scheduled for) Qualified authorities say the Beginning in mid-January andthe spring. France also has the U8 would never agree to com- periodically thereafter, represent- Algerian war on her hands, re-piete dismantling of its atomic atives of the five Western powers quring the maintenenace of mili-'stookpile. But it might agree to Canada, U.S.; Britain, France tary strength. partial disarmament, provided and Italy--will meet in Washing-!| On the other hand, Canada also Russia would agree to complete ton in attempts to' achieve a solid is pressing for disarmament pro- inspection and control of all dis- Western position. gress, conductive with the main- armament measures taken. U.S. officials tend to downgrade tenance of adequate defensive, This automatically would rule the extent of conflict within West- strength by the West, and there out Khrushchev's four-year pro- ern ranks, but it is evident Brit-lare reports in Ottawa the Cana- posal, U.S. officials say, for he ain and France hold opposing'diar zovernment is so optimistic will agree only to inspection and iews--with Britain hoping for alof the future that it plans to cut control at the end of the disarma- |speed - up and France a slow-lits defence budget. [r-- m------ m---------- iS ANEING period. | Nevertheless, there is a feeling | with . {in Washington that some progress Director-General EE meiin aL on, |tinental military manpower and |spection and control. By ALVIN J. STEINKOPF The department, it appeared, is manned largely by women : " Fanti | LONDON (AP) -- The furtive | ; ) | eman is a r ed licuten | A lads explained in a frosty ant-general, splenc ar rec- | VOICE: : ges | ord afraid of nothing that | 'The corporation employs 8, FO a tronere | 199 men and 6,273 hags." comes in trouse A He is Sir 1 ob. who gave Sir Ian was accepting tele- | He is Sir lan Jacob, Who £aVe | ohana calls from men, and to up his job last week as direc- tor-general of the BBC He is furtive because unguarded moment of a one male caller he said: | "It was a joke, a little idea | put into my head by a light- | hearted remark by my secret- | | | | in an fare- In Waterloo well radio broadcast he made ary. She reported that a num- a downright soldierly remark ber of women were waiting to y He said he believed the BBC | consult me, and said with a [University College and St. Je- was somewhat -hag-ridden | sweet smile that I was being [rome's college will become fed- The reaction among the cor- | hag-ridden." erated with the University of poration's wo me n employees But it was no slip of the | Waterloo next July 1, it was an- was explosive. The general | tongue. The farewell program |nounced Thursday. .nsed immediately that he had | had been rehearsed .with a | By combining facilities, a joint ed up something which | woman, Miss Joanna Scott- (statement said, a full university program in arts, sciences and |engineering will become avail lable. Moncrieff, fho is editor of the BBC program Woman's House. They encountered the challeng- ing word and Sir Ian wondered couldn't be settled by summon- ing a few regiments from the reserve. So he retreated to his home in Suffolk. Some of the girls consulted a | whether he should say it out |lies in certain types of govern- ary and established that | loud ment grants available only to a anyone being harassed by a We believe in free speech, |non-denominational university. hag is "being ridden by a ma- | and if you really believe there | Waterloo University | licious female sprite, an evil | are too many hags about you had better say it,"" Miss Scott- Moncrieff advised. The argument mav rage a lit- tle longer. But Sir Ian is out of it, secure in a safe redoubt. At 60 he is joining the board of a spirit, a demon or infernal be- ing in female form." To rtain whether the gov- ernment-run TV - radio service is top - hea with women, a telephone call was made to the BBC public relations depart- ment. Church and became {with University of tario in 1925. It has 550 students terorise. rection and has about 100 sw dents The 700-student Waterloo was University charter last year. By HAROLD MORRISON down in actual disarmament; On the other side of the fence,! Canadian Press Staff Writer [steps taken. Soviet Premier Khrushchev keeps ment process--and not during the in PY equipment such as tanks, guns |, 3 ! | Hubbub |and aircraft, where U.S. likely 1s {will not be so demanding in in- | v WATERLOO (CP) -- veal Osgoode Hall The main economic advantage College town property. to keep cows from {was founded in 1914 by the Can-|wandering onto the spacious ada synod of the Luther a n|lawns which front the old judicial affiliated centre. Western On- | St. Jerome's College was!it might look better if brick walls|] No children under 5. Open for e ) |founded in 1864 by the fathers of on the other sides of the property fertilizer firm--a masculine en- [the Congregation of the Resur-|were replaced with matching of tear down fencing to allow free| incorporated in 1956 and received its universily area. A CRA Agriculture Department Plans To Streamline TORONTO (CP)--A streamlin-| Mr. Frost said of other depart: ing of his department to separate ments: production and marketing was, 'It is intended in the coming announced Thursday by Agricul-|year to make many moves which ture Minister Goodfellow of On-\will not only increase efficiency, tario. but provide better opportunities The move was welcomed by|for promotion and increased op- |Opposition Leader Wintermeyer portunities for the civil service." {and Premier Frost indicated] Mr. Wintermeyer said the re. some revamping is in store for|vamping was a step in the right {other departments as well. |direction and he hoped it would T. R. Hilliard, formerly direc- "usher in a vigorous, new, dy- tor of the extension service namic approach by the govern- a takes over the agriculture de- ment to the whole question of partment's new production divi-/the search for new markets, de- sion. It will include the livestock|velopment of new uses for agri. branch, field crops, agricultural|cultural products, and a new and horticultural societies, ex-/means of assistance to farmers | home ics service,/and to farmer marketing and the farm economics and groups." : statistics branch. The marketing and sales divi-| sion is to be headed by Everett M. Biggs, formerly dairy com-| | missioner whose old post will be dropped. He will head the On- {tario Food Terminal, stockyards, the dairy branch, milk industry board, farm products inspection, the Farm Products Marketing Board and co-operative market- ORGANIST NIGHTLY -- 9-12 "DUSTY SHEPHERD" HOTEL LANCASTER | Mr, Goodfellow said the re- organization will aid expansion of| the province's agriculture. The 32 branches and boards which had grown up In the department! had become unwieldy to admin- ster, | Deputy Minister Clifford Gra- {ham will continue in charge of the technical level of administra. tion. G. Frank Perkin will con- tinue as commissioner of mar- keting, assisted by George Me- Cague, who recently was ap- pointed chairman of the Farm Products Marketing Board. Fence Remains FOUR SEASONS TRAVEL KING ST # AWA, ONT re RA. 86201 GET THE BEST For Less At MODERN UPHOLSTERING 9262 SIMCOE ST. N. OSHAWA RA 8.6451 or RA 3-4131 TORONTO (CP)--A civic bat- tle ended in complete victory Thursday for the 110 . year - old fence at Osgoode Hall, home of |the provincial courts. The fence's chief opponent, metropolitan Toronto Chairman Fred Gardiner, gallantly tossed in the towel and even suggested that the thick iron fencing be ex- tended. The fence was originally built along the University Avenue and {Queen Street sides of the down- HOUSE FOR RENT Available Jan. 15. Located on | Hortop between Beatrice end Sunset, close to schools, 5-room bungalow with attached garage. Mr. Gardiner said moulds for .|the ancient fencing still exist and|| Minimum 1 year leose required. inspection by appointment only, presently occupied. For further details call RA 3-3713, between 9 and 6. RA 5-1671 after 6. -/fencing. Originally his proposal was to pedestrian movement in Da ---- the| 1) 7 Prisoners In Guelph Isolated | GUELPH (CP) -- The seven teen-aged prisoners who caused an estimated $6,000 damage to equipment and windows in the Ontario Reformatory tailor shop Wednesday will be placed in isolation cells and temporarily deprived of privileges, Superin- tendent Charles Sanderson sald Thursday night : The seven, who staged a 10- k minute rampage, also will lose any time off for good conduct for d which they Might have been) i cligible. He said the prisoners, all first offenders, were unable to give any reason for the outburst. The seven tipped over sewing| machines and smashed windows) while another 39 prisoners in the| shop looked on. Two guards and two civilian instructors were able to control the disturbance before] extra guards arrived. Many of the damaged ma- chines were new ones installed after a series of riots last sum- | CITY OF OSHAWA CHRISTMAS TREE PICK-UP In order to facilitate the disposal of Christmas Trees discarded after the Holiday Season. in the City of Oshawa, the City Works Department has arranged a special collection during the week of JANUARY [1th to 15th INCLUSIVE Christmas Trees should be put out during the above mentioned week only and at the same time and in the same place as the garbage for the regular collection. 1 No Christmas Trees will be collected at times other than as described above. Dealer's leftover stock of trees will not be taken. Walter R. Branch, Chairman, Board of Works. mer, said Mr. Sanderson. | BALLISTIC MISSILE guRL ENTRY PROJECT MISSILE ALLEY At Valcartier, P.Q., Flight Lieutenant Murray Sweetman and Defence Research Board technician William Laforge check equipment being packed for "Operation Lookout", to be based on Ascension Island in the South Atlantic. In co-opera- tion with U.S. research agen- cies, the DRB-RCAF team is | to gather information on ballis- tic missile re-entry at the end of "Missile Alley", the range which begins at Cape Cana- veral. Canada's CF-100 was chosen for the job because of its unique qualities. FL Sweet- man, who hails from Little Britain, Ont,, heads the RCAF detachment, leaving this week. AND | 1918. |creasing the differential. samp on a shrinking ice floe in Maj. Phillip Peacock, public in- formation officer at Ladd air ency payment plan on hog prices, first 100 grade A and B hogs from |i. camp was ordered Thursday which comes into effect Monday. each farm, These grades make afar the big chunk of irs hegan cated." sell his hogs in June at $18 per over the next five to seven days Communications director hundredweight; another might] The camp, established last Arctic Ocean. "No sweat," said one officer-- Complicated force base here. "An operations plan was de- "I don't think that 80 per cent Up nearly 70 per cent of total gisintegrating of farmers know how the plan is| production, Lucien Parizeau said some farm- sell in October at $12. The former May, is 400 miles northwest of ers may not get as much money Would receive $26.64 per hundred- Point Barrow, Alaska, and some the air force's way of saying the situation is under control . "There's. always a potential that when you are on an ice floe [like that it could break up," said TORONTO (CP) -- Officials of The deficiency payment will be vised some time ago. We are the Ontario Hog Producers' As- the difference between this figure putting into effect one phase of sociation Thursday claimed that and the national average price, it." most farmers do not understand calculated at the end of the yead.| "myacuation of an estimated' 25 the federal government's defici-' The payments apply only to the military and civilian personnel at going to work," said President| "Assuming' that the national SEVEN-DAY JOB Charles McInnis. "It's not that average weighted price was $14,) Two men were flown here from the farmers are not smart--they then the deficiency payment the camp Thursday night. The are a pretty smart bunch -- it's Would amount to $8.64 per hun- air force said the rest would be just that the plan is so compli- dredweight. One producer might brought out in a series of flights as they expect. He said the agri-| weight and the latter only $20.64. 600 from the North Pole. The culture department should have Both, of course, would receive scientists were studying the explained the plan more clearly, $8.64 per hundredweight above depths of the ocean and the! actual selling price." earth's magnetic currents CHAMBERS for it and how it is going to work | He stressed that the association does not administer the scheme. Mr. McInnes said the associa- tion fears the scheme will hurt premium pork exports, particu- larly those to the United States which in the past six years has taken up to 1,500,000 pounds a week. EXPECT DUTY He explained that importing countries can be expected to im- pose a countervailing duty equal to the Canadian government sub- sidy. This might create a surplus in Canada | From Jan. 11 the government hog price support of $23.65 a hundredweight will be removed FOOD CLUB (e) SARE: STAN BRYNING OSHAWA REPRESENTATIVE 420 ELIZABETH 65 UNDERWRITERS RD, RA 8.5358 THE FOOD PLAN THAT HAS PRQVEN ITSELF YWCA WINTER PROGRAM Choose Pur group and register now for the Winter Term, which Starts on Monday, January I ith Classes For Men And Women ® BRIDGE FOR BEGINNERS ee SQUARE DANCING FOR BEGINNERS e COPPER ENAMELLING ee FLOOR LOOM WEAVING e SLIP COVER MAKING. Classes for Women Only (Slim and Trim Advanced keep fit (Keep fit exercises to music) gymnastic ROOM apparatu Mothers Day out, an afternoon program which offers & choice between Slim & Trim or croft classes Nursery available for pre-school children ® There open to Women is a variety of Social Clubs and e@ Badminton Club and Men Phone RA 3.7625 (Afternoons) for further information rr ywen- | Adeldide House Catholics are invited to, 199 Centre Street, Oshawe charge or obligation INFORMATION CLASSES THE CATHOLIC CHURCH When Every Monday & Wednesday Afternoon at 1.15 p.m. Every Monday & Wednesday Evening at 8.00 p.m. Time: 1.15 p.m. or 8.00 p.m. Beginning : MONDAY, JANUARY 11th, 1960 Where : ST. GREGORY'S AUDITORIUM For: ANYONE--Catholic or Non-Catholic who wishes to learn more about the Catholic Church, INSTRUCTOR: Rev. L. McGough--Phone RA 5-8444 The lectures are arranged for those who wish to learn more about the History of the Catholic Church and its Doctrines, Beliefs and Ceremonies. Questions and discussions are encouraged, and BOTH Catholic and Non- TS TEACHINGS 1 194 SIMCOE ST. N. OSHAWA discuss any Religious question freely. There is no

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy