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The Oshawa Times, 20 Jan 1960, p. 3

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2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, January 20, 1960 A model rattlesnake that spits and rattles is among a display of 142 amazingly life- like creatures in a new natural histor" collection at the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto. The mcdels, 32 of them of Canadian - variety reptiles, are displzyed . am'd natural set- tings and are discernable from PERFECT MODELS FOR COLLECTION the real things ozly by a train- | job of painting the color de- ed eye. Long hours of exacting tails to a green Inguana, na- cork" w : | work went into building the tive of South America. The | rubber-compound models. Levi | Sternberg (left) uses a dentist's | model had to be made in 20 parts to give it a natur2l | drill to cut away slight imner- appearance. A photo « electric | fections in a cast of a renlica of an Australian frilled lizard. | eye starts the rattlesnake's ac- tion when a spectator gets T-rry Shortt (right) adds fin- | ishing touches to a two-week ' within range of the glass case 'Record Output YREDERICTON (CP) -- While the coal industry is in difficulty elsewhere in Canada, it has a bright future in New Brunswick. Last year preducers had a rec- ord output. The report of a 1959 royal com- mission is expected to recom- shaft mines and several strip mine operators want to improve their operations if they can get the financial assistance. Provincial ccal production per {man had tripled in the last 25 : |years and producers believe this i |e'ill can be increased. Coal has : |a'ways been important to the pro- | |vincial economy, The industry | $3,000,000. Some 10,000 people in| i lemploys more than 1,000 men in the Minto and Chipman mines with direct annual payroll of ' la dozen towns are dependent on while a concealed microphone accounts for the rattles. The complex casting technique de- veloped at the museum is con- sidered the mest advanced in the world. Museum staff member; predict the gallery | will be the finest in the world when completed in the spring. INTERPRETING THE NEWS African Leaders In Long Struggle By ED SIMON Canadian Press Staff Writer A sardonic cartoon in The Eve- ning Standard shows Prime Min. ister Macmillan stretching out a hand to Dr. Hastings Banda, the imprisoned Nyasaland nationalist Jeader. The caption reads: "Ycu've just about served your apprenticeship for becoming prime minister." The cartoon is topical beyond the borders of the troubled Cen- tral African colony, where the overnment has just reaffirmed ts intention to keep Banda in cus- $ody = In London this week Archbishop Makarios, president elect stages of the Mediterranean is- land's independence barely months after Britain released s.ands accused of {him from internment as a po- of|in due course, Banda also will| {Cyprus, wes negotiating the final take his place as the recognized | olresman of the African major-| six ity in Nyasaland, although he now | ry. inciting his| people to violence in last year's|the key submission of the Crown Testimony In Beer Trial Ends TORONTO (CP) The Su- prema Court of Ontario was told uor Control Board of Ontario could not regulate beer prices established by the brewing indus- This statement emerged as Tuesday that before 1953 the Lig-| 17. Production last nearly 1,000,000 tcns, There now are four shaft mines in the M'nto field, employing 400 men underground. A brief to the Deportation Order Dismissed TORONTO (CP) -- The Su- prcme Court of Ontario Tuesday year was anainst Imre Hirsch, 27-year-old Hungarian who flew here from B;ivia to visit an aunt, r, Justice Charles D. Stewart, the court hearing last month, said he would hand down the rea- |sons for his decision later. ton Airport from Jamaica Sept. |26. He had a Bolivian passport! and a three-month visitor's visa !tor Canada from a British con- isul in Bolivia. A special inquiry officer, Rob- litical exile. |viots in proest against the col-|as It continued its argument be-lert A, Gracie of the immigra ion EXCLUDE ADVISER [rican federation. At the same time, another con- ference over the future of Kenya BARRED FROM KENYA was imperilled by British refusal |to permit the attendance of an ange, The dispute over Peter Koin- the excluded Kenya ad- African adviser who was impli- viser, differs from the others in ca'ed, cused, in the Mau Mau uprisings Kenya on pain of imprisonment, five years ago. |is permitted his freedom in Lon- Two graduates "apprenticeship" training al- Macleod has declared him per- [ready have their invitations to|sona non grata at the constitu- 'Professor 'Invents New Spelling LONDON (Reuters) -- The Daily Telegraph outlines a new «method of spelling English in- ~vented by Swedish Professor * Axel Wijk. | Under the headline '"Inglish the «az She Shood be Spelt," story says: . "A niew propozal for a re- | form ov Inglish spelling, which «'wood bring greit advaantages to teaching in schooles and to "forreners hoo wish to lern the language,' iz put forward by a Swedish don az the latest addi- ticn to the speit ov language | reforms. "He iz Dr. Axel Wijk, hoo woz lecturer in Swedish at Uni- versity College, London, and iz now instructor in Inglish at Stockho!m University. "Unlike udher spelling re- formers, he seeks to chainge oenly between five and 10 per cent of the wurds in the voca- bulary. "He haz establisht, by statis- tical investigation, whot iz the | spell- Inglish norma!, mrste frequent ing for the speech sounds. "Wijk claims that hiz propo- zal. which he ~auls regularized Ing'ish, wood not only bring greit advaantages to the Ing- lish speaking peoples, but wood increase very consider- ably the prospects ov Inglish becumming a truly interna- tional language." various |growers who are though never directly ac-|that Koinange, while barred from| of Britain's don. But Colonial Secre'ary Iain|combine w |formed a merger that operated r was likely to operate against| the public interest. | The Crown claims a 37-brewery| as created across Can-| ada by the company since 1930] and was detrimental to the pub-| ony's inclusion in the Central Af-|fore Chief Justice J. C. McRuer| department, said he found that |in the . combines trial of Cana- Hirsch had only $175 with him-- dian Breweries Limited. | The brewing firm has pleaded | Bolivia. Mr. Gravie decided he| {not guilty to a charge of having|was not a suitable entrant to not enough to return him Canada because he was likely to become a public charge. Hirseh was taken to a down- town hotel and kept under watch until the next day, a Sunday, when a deportgtion order was drawn up, He had told immigra- tion officers that he planned to join the Commonwealth prime tional conference and the Afri- lie interest because it reduced] ci "hic aunt, Mrs. Joanne ministers' conference in London ean nationalist delegates refuse to competition within the industry. pico." at her Toronto home. next summer, attend without him. Prime ministers Nehru of India | Special prosecutor R. F. Wilson| F. Andrew Brewin, lawyer for The Times, no advocate of ex-|séid Tuesday the company both|gi oh cid pending the possi- and Nkrumah of Ghana both have treme African nationalism, has eliminated many competitors and|yuito of an appeal by the immi- seen the inside of British prisons. urged Macleod to reconsider. influenced remaining members of There is tacit recognition that,| "The African delegates cannot [the industry in the matter of |be prevented from with Mr. Koinange outside the conference room," the newspaper observes. 'He will advise them all the better if he has first-hand Advice Given consulting | Prices. | Defence witnesses said last week that Ontario beer prices could not be manipulated by the| brewing industry because they were regulated by the LCBO. To Fruit Men TORONTO (CP) -- Dr. John Carew of Michigan State Univer- sity told the Ontario Fruit and Vegetable Growers' Association Tuesday night that only they could change conditions about which they complained. He said, "As long as there are willing to sell products at distress prices there knowledge of what has passed." rags tmomoent rl Cad will be buyers to buy them." Dr, Carew told the annual; {meeting here that chain store | buyers bought certain items be- | cause of personal preference {need for continuity of supply and | quality and demand of custom-|: LAA A 8 Fria aS iL LEAD IT IN RELINS WINNIPIL a | Sa { {honor porting a Venezuelan, i office department will gration depar'ment, his client will probably apply for perman- ent admission to Canada. At the hearing, Mr. Justice | Stewart criticized the discretion-| ary powers held by special in- quiry officers, Three years ago he also criticized Canada's immi- gration department procedures when he quashed an order de- MAY HONOR POET BRANTFORD (CP) -- The post| consider stamp to Johnson, noted | | poet from the nearby Six Nations Indian reserve, A Brantford a commemorative Pauline ; {Stamp Club spokesm2n said as-| Criticizing some producer ad- : vertising, Dr. Carew said grow- ers could sell on the basis of pro-|i {viding low-calorie energy foods. |! |"But don't try to sell on the! |strength of the area in which the {fruits and vegetables are pro-|| & |duced," he warned. } TWO CHILDREN PERISH BOTWOOD, Nfld. (CP) -- Twc H's |youngsters died in their beds Tuesday night when fire ripped through a one-storey frame house | here. The victims, aged 6 and 7, were children of Mr, and Mrs. William Hemeon. Jewel Thief 'Wins Appeal WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. (AP)-- An international jewel thief re- turned Tuesday to the court swhi®h sentenced him to 18 years to life in prison and had the term reduced to 15 to 23 years, The legal coup was pulled off by Gerard Graham Dennis, who has spent the last 10'2 vears at Sing Sing and Auburn prisons for stealing valuables worth more than $500,000. He picked his vic- tims from the Social Register and Hollywood set Dennis became eligible for pa- role immediately because of the time he has already spent behind bars but authorities gave no in- dication he weuld be freed Should he get out, he would be liable for deportz'icn to his na- tive Canada to finish a prison term. He escaped from there in 1943 with two years to serve. Still handsome and debonair, Dennis, now 39, looked more like a business executive than a con- viet when he appeared before Judge James D. Hopkins for resentencing. He was born in St. Catharines, Ont. UNUSUAL CASE Sentenced as a fourth felony offender July 19, 1949, he was back Tuesday. for sentencing as a first offender. His own legal 'spadework had made it possible. Legal reading in the prison li- braries convinced him that three PRECIPITATION H Except for a part of south- western British Columbia, Can- aa will have near-normal and above - normal temperatures | from mid-January to mid- according to the forecast of the | convictions against him in Can- lada should not have counted February, against him when he was sen. lODg-Tange PRECIFITA TION FOR HY MIRIOU ' ¥ 4% IRON Rtas NORMAL WEATHER United States weather office. Map also shows expected pre- | across the country | cipitation during the period. Tables give normal readings for various centres. --(CP Newsmap) surance of consideration has| |been given by Postmaster-Gen-| mend more mechanization of quashed a deportation orde r| to Coal In NB. royal commission from one of the| operators, V. C. McMann, pro- posed a mechanization project costing more than $750,000. VITAL MACHINERY In an interview recently, Mr, McMann said the new machinery is vi'al "if the Industry is to sur- vive." One Minto strip mine operator, R. A. Mills of D, W. and R Mills, said his company is in- terested in procuring a new, | large dragline. "But the cost wou'd be $2,000,000 and we would need help." Many producers, who worked at full capacity during the summer, |say they would have taken on more men, had they been avall- lable, | New Brunswick coal is already | {sold to Quebec and New England | customers, as well as in New Brunswick. Now operators are looking even further afield for new markets, "The New Brunswick coal in-| dustry at the moment is probably the brightest of any coal-produc- ing province in Canada," said |one producer. | "We are honing we can keen it that way. We have problems] but not as great as those of Nova | €-otia. All in 2'l we had a good year in 1059 ard hope to have the | same this year." I GooD FoOD | BUSINESS MFN'S LUNCH 12 to 2 P.M ¥ HOTEL LANCASTER who criticized certain immigra-| tion department practices during | Hirsch arrived at nearby Mal-| SEND FLOWERS by Wire Delivery and Quality Guaranteed by the world's most responsible florists Look in Yellow Pages FLoriste' TELEGRAPH Devivery R. B. REED & SONS FLORISTS 10%2 KING ST. WEST | RAs JOHN BURTINSKY FLORIST Flowers for all oceasions 124 Dundas St. West, Whitby MO 8-3324 Whitby Stocked with the country's finest {cods at lowest market prices. Toke your savings in cash gt Sproule's. Va's TIN 1-LB. PKGS. 12-0Z, PKG. 6)2-0Z, ® Best Value for your Food Dollars et SPROULE'S eo AMPLE FREE PARKING eo DELIVERY AT A NOMINAL CHARGE eral Hamilton, l | fi -- a beautiful portrait p your family, in black an the most personal valenti home. HORNSBY Dial RA 5-0151 a Ualentine You know Valentines Day is just around the corner, and more than any other time of the year, that's when you want to be sure to send the warmest greeting to the ones you love, Here's our suggestion not only a personal expression of love but will give that added personal touch to the decor of your For An Appointment Call 314 Simcoe St. South, Oshawa Nn hotograph of yourself or d white or full color -- ne you can give. This is STUDIOS A tenced in New York state. He ap- pealed. Last Oct. 23 at Syracuse, Judge Stephen W. Brennan unheld Den- nis. None of the charges on which Dennis had been convicted in Canada was .a felecny in New Harness Racing Driver Killed York state and, additionally, he] COLDWATER (CP) -- Edward | hed not had a lawyer, the court Hawke, 82, was killed Tuesday Tuled. when struck by a transport truck Authorities estima'ed that Den- : issi nis' loot totalled $250,000 from which Jacknifed after missing a the Holly wood area, $140,000 'um at an intersection. from Westchester County man- Mr. Hawke was well known in Sous and $170,000 in Canada, Ontario harness racing as Actress Loretta Young was listed : among his burglary victims, driver and trainer. | 4th Annual Missionary Convention TONIGHT--"'A CRY IN THE NIGHT" World Vision Film of Asia. Thurs., Fri. and Sat. nights slides and color movies of AFRICA. MISSIONARIES--Rey. & Mrs. W. DeMille will be the guest speakers. The Free Methodist Church wy sr. REV, R. I. DARGAN PASTOR al Howe & Millen, Realtors RA 5-7732 1960 DESIGN--6% iNTEREST Beau Valley A six - room plan with carport, panelled living room with beamed ceiling and featuring the originality, Ristow & Kassinger flare for Olsen, Realtors RA 5-6165 Schofield Insurance Assoc. Ltd, RA 3-2265 FLUFFO SHORTENING In Free Kitchen Canister 3-Ib. 87¢ Container 12.0Z. TIN Lge. Pkg. 37¢ 35¢ 54 Household Items WAX CANDLES "2 28° Heavy Duty For Outside Use PUSH BROOM 99¢ ICE SALT 5b. 26¢ Box EDDY'S BEEF STEW NO. 1 WHITE COMB HCNEY ns, 39¢ GOLDEN HOUR POPPING CORN 1-Ib. Cello Bag 19¢ GOLDEN HOUR CHOCOLATES, MACA- ROON BUDS, CHOC. BUDS, CHOC. WAFERS Cello 2 ge Pkg. FAB Sine How Much It Can Cost Until You've Shopped HERE! QUALI TY MEATS with Friendly Personalized Service PORK SHOULDER ROAST = 29: FRESH PORK BUTT ROAST n 39: SPROULE'S BEEF IS RED BRAND BEEF--CANADA'S FINEST 4 b. 69 SILVERBRIGHT SALMON Viz i. 49. PORK CHOPS FRAMES. oda FRESH CY R BACCN 15 rls di 5 GRCCERY DEPT. PURE CANE PARAMOUNT FANCY Sockeye SALMON J ROSE Margarine 2:43 BEEHIVE GOLDEN TNS 57 FE A oO U Rn ROBINHOOD 7.18. BAG 3 5¢ / ALL PURPOSE COUNTRY FRESH GRADE A LARGE € EGGS 29 STORE HOURS | ""Marchem sate Prous king o ven | CORN FLAKES FRIDAY Op en Till PKG. saturoay 10 o'clock | Sugar Smacks "no SPROULE'S--Simcoe at Mill Sugar Corn Pops so, Sproule's--Simcoe at Colborne a «1.00 BLUE OR WHITE -- 5c OFF WAGSTAFFE'S PURE SEVILLE Cp 29° TEA BAGS "* 2 .. 39° Breakfast Prunes Coton §9¢c FRESH FULL CUT 5 TO 7 LBS. PRIME RIB ROAST SWIFT'S PREMIUM . 49 1h. AS SWIFT'S PREMIUM -- RINDLESS SUGAR 5» 39- CORN SYRUP 25.18. 8AG 1.85 SPROULE'S--King at Ritson SPECIAL "K" PKG. Open Thurs. and Fri. Nights Breeze Deiergent Fresh Daily MILK LESTOIL CLEANER os 47¢ ZIP DOG FOOD 15-o0x. 29¢ Tins SCOTTIE DCG MEAL BOOK MATCHES 2b. 20c Ph. of Qe FRUITS and VEGETABLES FRESH TENDER BROCCOLI 45¢ OFF 99¢ CRISP CRUNCHY. : CUCUMBERS 2 for 25¢ ANJOU PEARS 4 for 29c ONTARIO FANCY DELICIOUS IMPORTED FLORIDA 3.Ib. APPLES coesey 29° CELERY HEARTS ,.... 23° Attractive Fruit Baskets made to order for all occasions BORHOOD FOOD STORE \ 4 | 4 | 4 [7 1d |

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