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The Oshawa Times, 19 Jan 1960, p. 2

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THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesdey, Jenuery 19, 1960 2 GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN LAWYERS WILL TAKE TO ICE Talking about super attractions at cut-rate admis- gion prices, did you hear about that hockey game sched- uled for Brooklin next Saturday? I'wo teams of Oshawa and vie for supremacy in what was d agent tocay as "an hour of good, Good clean, fun? We hope that the Oshaw branch of the Society for Ti Prever Cruelty Second Hockey Play- alert eve on it has definite ex- plosiye pussibilities and al- most anything could happen § if some of. these lites ever decided to carry their court room battles on district lawyers will scribed by an advance clean fun." tion of Class keeps this one ers an 4 leg to the ice surrounds lineups Roger Russ Murphy, Don- Dodds and John Wil- definite starters; here's absolutely neo truth in it fantastie report, how= ey Mr. T. Kelso Creighton (the distinguished authority on municipal law) will start at centre for one of the teams with Mr, George K. Drynan, as an alternate. We shudder to think what might happen if somebody should, even accident- ially, deliver Mr. Drynan (a sedulous and fiery toiler in the vinyards of education) a solid bodycheck, or if somebody like Crown Attorney Alex Hall ended up on # team opposing John Greer, and they should both end ap in the corner at the same time, Perhaps Dr, Claude Vipond would organize a team of doctors to challenge the winners? SAYS DOGS DUMP GARBAGE CANS Hundreds of city dog-lovers are naturally elated that their pets can be legally released from the tie-up period after Jan. 31 next, but there is also a strong wave of protest noticeable as the following anonymous letter (name will be furnished on request) indicates: Dear Mr. Gearin: I am in agreement with you and the MOH on the dog question. It seems the only ones that want the dogs rune ning loose are the ones that don't like cleaning up after their own dogs, and are too busy to take the pets they claim to love for a run where ft would do the dog the most good. Too many dogs run the streets and dump over garbage cans. I would like one of the alder- men who voted to free the dogs to volunteer to clean up Leslie street on garbage day -- it looks more like the city dump after the dogs get at the pails, My son was out delivering sale papers this morning and he said three dogs chased him. Dur- ing the summer when dogs are supposed to be tied up, we have to clean our lawn at least once dally after dogs. I hope something can be done about permit ting the dogs to run loose The city has had the expense of cleaning up 916 strays and it seems that they aren't satisfied and want to increase the dog population by let- ting the dogs run again GRATEFUL THANKS TO EMPLOYERS A most grateful employee of a city employer writes as follows I read your column regularly and wonder if you would help me -- please excuse writing as I am flat on my back in a Toronto hospital Could you put a few words in your column regard- ing Mr. and Mrs. J. F, C. Seigner? They own Seigneur"s Sportswear Ltd. (using this spelling in their business, in the Oshawa Shopping Centre. I would like our people of Oshawa, to know we still have bosses that are really out of this world. I worked for Mr. and Mrs. Seigner ever since the store opened, but I had to take time off for sickness since last March. These people not only stuck by me, but got the best doctors they could get and offered to help me to get better at their expense They also see to my needs and talk things over with me to help me. They are just as good to the other girls at the store. Would you tell our city what good people we really have? They really are like God's chosen few. Great the exact secrecy nt 1B are a t RUSSEL MURPHY el that re | | CAN DO ALL TRIC dl JACOBS IN COPTER = KS By PETER EMMOREY Canadian Press Staff Writer EDMONTON (CP) -- An ad- vanced helicopter trainer has been built by a man who never flew an airplane. The tiny Jaycopter, tethered to a 25-foot steel tower, can per- form all the tricks of the stand. ard helicopter, except crash Other flight simulators built in Germany and the United States do not leave the ground. They operate like the Link trainer de veloped during the Second World War to train pilots of fixed-wing aircraft Inventor Leo Jacobs, 42, Ed monton welding engineer, de signed the craft with the help of| two brothers, a nephew and the| Alberta research council. During the war Mr. Jacobs won the British Empire Medal for de. signing an aerial gunner's train-| ing turret for the RCAF, | MAY BE LICENSED Department of transport offi clals here sald the Jaycopier| may be licensed for pilot training| in the near future. A spokesman said the department is interested| and has made recommendations| to Ottawa. It expects to have all its reports finished before the| end of February. | Okanagan Helicopters of Van- couver, a big private helicopter| group, {is also interested and plans to send men here to try| the Jaycopter. Two eight-passenger Jaycopters| are being built for use as mid-| way attractions and may even-| tually go to Disneyland in Cali-| fornia and the Canadian Na. tional Exhibition in Toronto. The prototype, built at a cost of $30,000 and operating at Ed-| monton Airport, is countér-bal-| anced to within 50 pounds by weights on the end of its main boom {ELECTRIC MOTOR The extra balance which allows {the craft to fly is provided by| chopped rotors powered by a 7%. horsepower electric motor Engine emergencies can be simulated on the Jaycopter"s full instrument panel. From a standstill the Jaycopter They do so much good and no one seems to give them credit 27 OSHAWA CURLERS FOR QUEBEC Contractor Clair MeCullough will depart soon on his annual pilgrimage to the American Homebuilder's Convention in Chicago; he will later leave Jan. 27 with a contingent of 27 Oshawa curlers for the Quebec Inter- national Bonspiel in Quebec City . Voice over- heard on a city bus: "lI understand Lyman wanted to naugurate the new service by driving the first bus down Simcoe St, but that Walter couldn't get the road ready in time" , , , There's some interesting data on E. P, Taylor in a new book "Flame of Power" (Longman's, Green and Co.); for instance, Taylor's $10,000,000 farms at Oshawa and near Toronto have a 100-man payroll and an $800,000 annual turnover. He makes no money on his equestrian subsidiaries but doesn't lose any either. One of Taylor's senior partners n Argus Corporation is Eric Phillips who made his tirst fortune manufacturing glass in Oshawa . . Pearson Comes To Grips With Diefenbaker Speech OTTAWA (CP) -- Opposition Macmillan of Britain as saying Leader Pearson made a sharp|in March, 1957, that the service personal attack Monday on rendered by the Canadian gov- Prime Minister Diefenbaker for ernment will always be remem- what the Liberal leader said| bered by Britain with gratitude. were stupid, false and malicious) Mr, Pearson also quoted Sir statements. | Anthony Eden, British prime During the throne speech de-iminister when Britain and bate, Mr. Pearson referred to an| France invaded Egypt, as sayin address by Mr. Diefenbaker last/in 4 recent television interview year to a Progressive Conserva-|that if the United States had tive group in Toronto. |taken the action Canada had in He quoted the prime minister| 1956 the position in the Middle as saying that the action of thé East today would be much bet- Liberal government in the 1956/ter than it is Suéz crisis put Britain andl uy pone we will hear no more France "in the same bag 88. thee stupid and false allega- aggressors" with Russia and that| (by Mr. such a thing never would take| i. 0 place under a Conservative gov-| ernment Mr. Pearson said that at the height of the Suez crisis Canada nitiated action at the United Na- tions that led to intervention in the canal dispute by the United Naions Emergency Force. Ha then moted Prime Minister ences, and which have no truth behind them," Mr. Pearson said Speaking later, Mr, baker said the position he took in his Toronto address did not differ in any f said about Commens at + Wavy ay Suez issue in the can hover, fly straight, turn and {fly sideways. It has a ceiling of northern Quebec. Canada Sees Trade Problem OTTAWA (CP)--Canada"s gov. ernment, worried that European trade blocks may mr er overseas trade, hopes for full Canadian membership in a vamped Organization for Euro- pean Co-ope~a 'on Finance Minister Fleming re- ported to the Commons "I:nday on last week's meetings of Euro- pean trade groups In Paris Three resolutions emerged from the OEEC meeting--on re- organization of the group, inter- national ald, and 'rade prob lems, Mr. Fleming said. He and Trade Minister Churchill repre sented Canada which, like the U.S. is an associate member of OEEC. "Machinery which could come to grips" with problems raised by the blocs the six-nation European Common Market and the seven-nation European Free Trade Association--was set up, Mr. Fleming said, "The Canadian delegation was successful in its attempt. to pro- mote acceptable solutions for ¢ R| seneral problems while protect- {ing Canadian interests." | POST-WAR EFFORT OEEC, grouping 20 members, was set up after the Second World War to speed European economic recovery. 'Europe now has fully emerged Diefenbaker), | from the period of post-war eco-| selected political audi- nomic difficulties," Mr. Fleming | {sald, and Canada "with vital | European and world interests en- Diefen- | 8aged should be prepared for full | | participation." Canada is a member of a 20 nation committee formed to om what he study relations between the two | European frees trade blocs. An-| lother four-man eommittes ia to Jaycopter Built By Aerial Designer |76 feet, an operating radius of|the high cost of training on stand- {100 feet and a speed of about 30|/ard machines, says the Jaycopter mph. Controls are operated byicosis $20 an hour compared with a hydraulic power-drive system |$100 for a sta taken from an automobile, Th About 600 testing hours havefA been flown on the machine, Pete|copte |Jacobs, a brother, has 400 hours!|This re on it, | Hes \ who became in-|of inst tion helicopters because ofthe machine solo. ordi heli- an ary i d at first s afr | Jacobs, |terested in Peaceful Valley New Pittsburgh', MONTREAL (CP) -- Boosters BUSY SMELTER of industrial development in the] At Sorel a new iron ore smelter St. Lawrence River valley are employs between 1,500 and 1,800 dreaming up new names for it..men process ng iron ore s i Some of the tags: "The Ruhr of from deposits at Allard Lake. That's a long way from what/C0€USs # land assembly plan is was 300 years ago just a fur under for 'a $150,000,000 traders' route and only 50 years smelter works to process more ago little more than a peaceful | ron ore agricultural valley, i #41 - a Industrial development wlong Alerioa" e "Ruhr of North the river started during the Sec. nels is perhaps most apt for ond World War and now is com-|tDe Montreal - Sorel stretch of ing of age at a multi-million dol- the river. Provincial government lar pace. Undoubtedly one of the|[8UTes show that investment in E: Pel na iron industry n ol "Sm 0 La Gree tale ok oo 1 . 947-58 peri most ol ein ence Seaway, spent in the Montreal-Sorel ig MAY OPERATE ALL YEAR | To fill the power needs of big With it have come new hopes industrial plants, the valley has for year-round navigation -- some its own source of electricity--a time soon--once an economical(1,400,000 horsepower hydro plant way is found to keep ship chan-|near Beauharnois, about 20 miles nels ice free during the winter upstream from Montreal. It can months, {also eall on power from other Even so with only eight months| parts of the province. of navigation this Inland harbor| is second only to the year-round| port of New York in volume of| cargo handled by a North Amer-| ican port Winter navigation now is open as far inland "as Quebec City,| only 180 miles downriver from| here. And some ships have ven- tured to Trois-Rivieres only 80 miles fr-*n Montreal. The river has its shipyards at Montreal, Sorel and Lauzon, op- posite Quebec City, Some of the industrial develop- ment is linked directly to the] mining of vast ore resources in way 2 make recommendations for re organization of OEEC Opposition Leader Pearson said if the result of the Paris talks was to change OEEC into an or- ganization fostering Atlantic. eco- nomic co-operation *'it will cer- taloly receive the support of every member of our party." CCF House Leader Hazen Argue said steps to discuss Euro- pean trade developments 'should |have been taken long ago." He future reports by Mr. Fleming would show 'more in ithe way of concrete progress' |than this report. | Mr. Fleming sald European |members showed an increased {willingness to provide ' interna- | tional economic ald. An eight | country committee Canada in- cluded--was agreed on to pool experiences in aid programs. "No financial commitments were involved," he said, and | Go< tors, firemen and policemen [there was no anticipated change Robert Clifford, 11 months, {in Canada's aid program for the choked on the shell of a net he |coming year, inicked up at his ehome. As Wreckage of a National lines plane that crashed near Bolivia, N.C., Jan takes shape as CAB investigators Afr. f CHOKES ON NUT SHELL NEW YORK (AP)---A mother watched her infant son die Fri- day despite desperate efforts by F. RICHARD BLACK, O.D. 136 SIMCOE N. AT COLBORNE The Examination of eyes Fitting of Contact Lenses And Glasses Children's Visual Training For Appointment Please Call RA 3-4191 EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT | Irish Most Prone To 'Alcoholism TORONTO (CP) -- A member of Alcoholics Anonymous claimed Monday that the Irish 'are most prone to become alcoholics. Speaking. to a service club here, the member, introduced only as "Joe C.," said his claim was based on information sup plied by an alcoholism re searcher at Harvard University. But, he added, "my own observ. ations convinced me this is the ase." Argument | nalt Of Crown In Death Penalty Bows Trial Before House OTTAWA (CP)--No cousidera-jgeneral from the cabivet; and a tion has been given by the gov-|bill to authorize dormitory sle¢p- TORONTO (CP) The Su- ernment to preme Court of Ontario was told whether there will be a vote on|ti the question of{ing quarters in federal peniten- "les. Monday a 37-brewery combine the abolition of capital punish-] Mr, Winch--A bill was created by Canadian Brew- ment for murder at this session!corporal punishment P eries Limited as a means of re-lof Parliament, Prime Minister ducing competition and to con-|Diefenbaker said Monday [ONTARIO MPs foal trol policies of the brewing in| He gave this reply to a query| , Douglas Fisher (CCF Port dustry. {in the Commons from Opposition Arthur)--A bill which would pro- Special Crown prosecutor R. Leader Pearson after Frank Me-| vide for appointment of a com- F. Wilson charged the ultimate Gee (PC -- York - Scarborough) [Mission te handle redistribution i t : rR i igh |0f federal constituencies. aim was to get maximum profits had introduced a bill to abolish Arnold' Peters (CCF - for the company. |capital punishment except in| Arnoid Peters (CCH mis oid _ |some cases of treason. kaming)--A bill providing a mi- "The Crown does not complain| "qu. oo cir was seconded by Dimum wage of $1.25 an hour for|¢ about the attainment of maxi- Harold Winch (CCF--Vancouver |all workers under federal juris to abolish hill vill od ad | Cyprus Birth | 2 Months Late fot Brother Denies Any Threats | VANCOUVER (CP) CHURCHILL LINK | Canada's Churchill River is | named after Lord Churchill, later {Duke of Marlborough, Hudson's T he Bay Company governor in 1685, and presents statistics scampering everywhere -- in tiny print. brother of a slain woman denied to be able to fly A paintakingly re-assemble the | INTERPRETING THE NEWS Arms Variety New Concept By HAROLD MORRISON Thomas D. White, sees a need Canadian Press Staff Writer |[however, for greater flexibility. The United States seems to be|The conception that emerges Y | Mr. Rivers replied: 'No, toying with a new concept of air{from his thinking is one in which Kept Secret ast) sald. He said his theory for the size of a particular firm result.|;p, house that, had the rules per-| Maurice Allard (PC Sher- (predominance of Irish among al- ing from the normal interplay of mitted, it would have had a third | brooke) A bill providing for a|coholics is "because we are a "In this case, however, the po. william). nal anthem. The seconder was| 'The Irish can be very hap) i attained by Canadian| No mally, wm private member's Eric Winkler (PC--Grey-Bruce). one moment and at the depths Werles was the result of arti would have little chance of Bs ------ TT despaie tlie Het: aa al consolidation of various .oming to a vote unless the gov- "ye r. Gordon Bell of 1] companies in the Industry pis Rte Bey #" Court Conditions |ciinic for alcoholism said in an The brewing firm has pleaded _ | . [interview later that it does ap- not guilty to a charge of having 28 BILLS OFFERED : : pear that the Irish "both cone formed or operated a merger| The McGee bill was one of 20 Under Criticism |stitutionally and possibly psycho. that operated or was likely to ree government and the) TORONTO (CP) Conditions in logically" cannot tolerate heavy operate to the detriment of thejothors those of private members ooiic and courtrooms in the city Arinking without breaking down. public interest --introduced Monday. {hall were criticized Monday in a, He said this may equaily apply The prosecutor's final argu.| Other bills and their sponsorsieno+ prepared by the "grand|to other Celtic people such as ment is expected to end today included: jury of the winter assizes. |the Highland Scottish and the when the defence argument will] Frank Howard (CCF--Skeena)|" my. report condemned the cells Welsh. stamps; a bill to permit the civil| hare prisoners are herded to- [service to bargain collectively) gather Jike swine." It said condl-| {with the government; a bill to|¢tione are so "degrading" 3 be cause "a lessening of respect for ior against hiring persons exceit pe Tu» LIKE PHONEBOOK {when this is a qualification for n J | Boi a bill 2 gus vould 8 for} The report also charged that| WASHINGTON (AP)--The Inarcotios charges are "kept in| budget President Eisenhower LONDON (AP) -- The Cyprus act to the civil service; a bill to|a ctody for Aue : conference Monday night [custody for as much as a full] gay E, something ke & met, layed the birth of the independent) ia] ropolitan phone . pen ; trial," weighs four pounds, has 952 but held fast to gains already| {made in working out the island's duction), costs $5.50 a copy future. gaining, the delegates agreed that the origi t date of Feb. 19 this could not be met {Monday before an Assize Court They moved the deadline back|Jury that he was out to "get"| ohe month the suggestion of|the dead woman's husband, who| ; s president-elect. They re-| John Rivers, was testifying at ferred to existing working groups|the new trial of Raymond Leon- of experts the remaining points|ard Schultz, 27, accused of mur- size of the military bases the of his wife, Lois. A jury was un-| British will retain there. The able to agree following. Schultz' British want more than Makarios| first trial last month. "I'm Irish too," the spokesman mum profits in industry or the p and Mr. McGee informed | diction competitive forces," he said. sponsor in Hubert Badanai (1 (distinctive Canadian flag and na- very emotional people." be presented also --A bill to outlaw use of trading|anq courts as "tragic sights ; nd: BUDGET PRINTED | prohibit age being used as a fac- . ; tox | Women prisoners to be tried on| |the fair employment practices | presented to Congress Mon- de-| remove the position of solicitor- | yaar without being brought to Cypriot republic until March 19 y pages (plus a 78-page intro. After three days of hard bar Bri colony into ation » the re.|/is accused of murder, | lof disagreement, including the der in the Oct. 4 shooting death is prepared to give Defence counsel Harry Rankin | | One British of said the drew the denial from Mr. Rivers] alks were cor in alwhen he asked him If it were ndly atmospl true "you have been telling peo- - = |ple you are out to get Schultz, | ii a |no matter what happens?" Report On Pa uded re and now haven't." striking power, based not so/huge bombers--capable of stay- Mrs. Schultz, mother of one much on a preponderance : of|ing aloft for months on end-- [child was a native of Minden, long-range, ground-based missiles make continuous global flights, | Ont Her widowed mother mar. 88 on use of manned long-range Within these giant atomic air. ried again lives at nuclear jet bombers armed with| craft would be huge built - in : 2 | Donald, Ont medium-range ballistic missiles. [radar units capable of continual OITARA {CP Talli Soverp r---- While the strategists cannot|vigilance on enemy shores. Fi- ment does not intend to table in argue away the value of inter-/nally, these planes would carry the Commons a civil service STOCK MARKET continental missiles in which|1,000-mile atomic missiles for ine comm = on report recommend. {Russia now has the lead, they|stant retaliation in the event of ing a general pay increase for |emphasize the importance of war. federal employees, Finance Min NET EARNINGS flexibility, on the need of draw-| That's the concept. Whether it |ister Fleming said Monday. By THE CANADIAN PRESS |ing on a variety of weapons |can be made into practical real- | The commission report was| Consolidated Denison Mines/delivery systems. ity in time to be of strategic use [rejected by the government last 14d year ended Dec. 31: 1959, The major element the military|ig yet to be séen. The U.S. is cur. fall, and since then it has re- $17 808000, $4.02 a share; 1958,/want to maintain is that of SUr-\rently obsessed with costs and sisted demands by civil servicelsg 556,000, $2.14. prise and it can be seen that an/with an economy drive that is |oraduizations that the report be| Dover Industries I ey atrerall, roaming he shies, may| cutting into new development. | made public ended Sept. 30: 1959, ,693,(not be so easy to pinpoint as aj I onlay. the oot a0 a De HS re These, A Wiomie air poser plast 4 {tion committee of civil service a share. |ground - fixed missiles neverthe- year to bring it into full produe- organizations made public a let-| Canada Permanent Mortgage less have their tremendous speed {0 There has been some crit- ter to Commons members and Corp., year ended Dec. 31: 1959, which in itself contains an ele; the U.S. is not moving as |senators proposing parliamentary | $2,020,572; 1958, $1,905,849 |ment of surprise, fast as it could on production. |action on the wage intrease and| Canada Permanent Trust Com-| a i |suggesting the report should be|pany, year ended Dec. 81, 1959, CONTINUOUS FLIGHTS EYE ON SKY BOLT |obtained by the MPs 1$234,234; 1958, $226,538, The US, air chief, Gen. yn savy he also has the mis o--- |slle he wants under study. This {he has nicknamed the "Sky Bolt." He says it will have a range of up to 1,000 miles and that prototype tests have provem the weapon capable of being fired from aircraft at subsonic {and supersonic speeds. | Again production is reported to | be still some years away, despite | White's enthusiasm for It. "This combination of aircraft and missile will provide our coun- try with the most mobile striking power ever achieved," he re- |cently stated. 'Sky Bolt aircraft {would possess true global mobil | ity. "They could operate over the (high seas, friendly land masses or areas inaccessible by other means--with the capability of at- tacking within minutes. In addi tion, they would be essentially invulnerable to surprise attack." This invulnerability to surprise attack seems to be White's key selling point. But it may well be that this valuable invulnerability will be reduced by the time the aircrafi are made ready to fly. | Did You Know . .. lin the main Dining Room of the GENOSHA HOTEL you can have a Full-course Dinner for ONLY 95e. TAKING SHAPE IN HANGAR body and part of the wreckage | | was found 16 miles from the spot | where most of the wreckage fell. --AP Wirephoto | pieces, hoping to learn exactly what caused the disaster that | took 34 lives. It's suspected that | a passenger, Julian Frank, car- ried a bomb aboard, Frank's TENDER NOTICE! Administration Offices and Maintenance Building Board of Education, City of Oshawa, Ontario Separate sealed tenders will be received by the Business Admin. istrator, Board of Education for the City of Oshawa, or by the undersigned office up to 4.00 p.m THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 11th, 1960 for the construction of a Administration Office Building end a Maintenance Building located at Stevenson Road North and Rossland Road West in Oshawa, Ontario Plans, specifications, instructions to bidders ond forms of tender may be obtained by General Contractors after 4.00 p.m, Wednesday, January 20th, 1960 from the office of the under- signed. Plans, specifications, instructions to bidders and forms of tender may be obtained by Mechanical sub-trades after 4.00 p.m. Wednesday," January 20th, 1960, from the office of the undersigned. Plans will be on view at the office of the Board of Education, Oshawa, and at the Toronto Builders Ex- change. A certified cheque in the amount of $50.00 is re- quired as deposit on plans Tenders will be accepted subject to the approval of the Oshewe City Council and the Ontario Municipal Board, Lowest or any tender not necessarily pted JOHN B. PARKIN ASSOCIATES, Architects' and Engineers 1500 Don Mills Road Postal Station "J," Tor he lost consciousness and his|Police and firemen administered mother, Mary, 31, dashed with oxygen until doctors arrived, but him in her arms to a street nothing they could do revived corner and pulled a fire alarm. him, | ( | f CHAMBERS 2: 65 UNDERWRITERS RD. [oY RET: STAN BRYNING OSHAWA REPRESENTATIVE 420 ELIZABETH RA 8-5358 THE FOOD PLAN THAT ace onto, Onta HAS™PROVEN ITSELF 4

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