2 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Wednesday, August 12, 1958 (nee rk. the arrival ef their son, John G 1 Hos- OSHAWA AND DISTRICT tal, on Monday, (Weight 8 lbs. 13 ozs. ROOKS--Mr, and Mrs. Stanley Brooks. Bh (nee Boyd) wish to announte the birth of a daughter on Monday, Aug. 10, 1983, at the Oshawa General Hos pital. Mother and baby fine. ELL--Mr. and Mrs. Don Camp- A to announce the birth of their daughter, Carole Diane, Wednes- 1853, at the Oshawa pA A sister for Douglas. MAGEE-Jack and Edith Magee (nee Stone) are happy to announce the birth of their son, 8 1bs.,, 13 ozs., on Wednesday, Aug. 12, 1983, at the Osh- awa General Hospital. OSTLE--Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Ostle (nee Joan Winton) are happy to announce the birth of a baby boy, Randy Nelson, on Sunday, August 9, 1053, at the Oshawa General Hospital. A brother gor Terry and Janice. OWELL--Mr. and Mrs. Edward Pow- POM (nee Floyd) are happy to announce the birth of their daughter, Dorothy Mae, on Saturday, Aug. 1, 1953, at the Oshawa General Hospital. ITH---On Tuesday, August 11, at St. BN osebh's Hospital, Sarnia, to Mr, and Mrs. F. Smith (nee Ila Me- Lachlan) the gift of a daughter, Lianne Rose. DEATHS --In Oshawa General Hospital on ba vn Aug. 11, 1953, Alice Martin Hinton, beloved wife of Theodore Carey and Tothes iy Fred. Hinton of to, in her year. Funeral' from Luke Mcintosh Funeral Home on Friday, August 14th at 2 p.m. Interment Mount Lawn Cemetery. IN MEMORIAM FOWLER---In loving memory of our dear dad, Albert George Fowler, who passed away Aug. 13, 1950. Years of striving, little play, Loving and giving the whole of the way, A cheery smile, a heart of gold, To the dearest Dad the world could From us --Sadly missed but lovingly remem- bered by his daughter Alice, son-in-law George, grandchildren and great grand- ehildren. Donald at the y August 10, 1953. ) WINTERS--In loving memory of my brother, Gerald, was killed in by Sister Nol . MRS. ALICE HINTON CAREY Following a len, illness the death occurred in Oshawa Gen- eral Hospital on Tuesday evening, August 11, of Mrs. Alice Hinton Carey, beloved wife of Theodore Carey, 80 Bloor Street West, in her 73rd year. Born in Peterborough County on February 3, 1881, the deceased who was Alice Martin, had lived prac- tically all her life in the Oshawa area. She was first married to Robert Hinton of Harmony, who died in 1930. In 1938 she was mar- ried to Mr. Carey. Mrs. Carey was an adherent of United Church. Besides her husband she leaves to mourn her Jong one son, Hinton Toronto, seven grandchildren and five great- SER poor of oe . G. Saywell, United Church, will conduct the funeral service at the Luke-Mc- Intosh Fyueral Home a 2 a 2 Friday, Augus 3 rment w be in Mount Lawn Cemetery. HIRING DROPS OFF Because of plant holidays, hiring of new employees has dropped off from normal during the past three or foureweeks, officials of the Na- tional Employment Office said to- . However, by the end of Au- , they expect to have more 'orders' for help on file, Construc- tion work continues brisk in On- tario and Durham Counties. INSTALL NEW FLOOR Within the next few days, a new floor will be installed in the base- ment auditorium of the UAWA Hall, Bond Street East. This room is used principally as a banquet hall and is in demand by many organizations during a Fa The new terazzo flooring will be a de- cided improvement. FORESTER IS ILL : Well known in Oshawa and dis- trict, D. M. Kirk of Lindsay, Zone Forester for the Department of Lands and Forests, has been taken to Riverdale Isolation Hospital suf- fering from polio. QUELL TRUCK BLAZE The Cedar Dale fire department was called yesterday to put out a small fire on a truck transport. A truck on Highway 401, near Drew Street, had a tire on the trailer afire. It was quickly put out and damage repored as small. Pelletier On First |Lap Home By BILL BOSS Canadian Press Staff Writer SEOUL, Korea (CP)--Corporal James Pelletier of Chatham, Ont., Canadian prisoner of war returned by the Communists Aug. 5, today boarded a United States Air Force Globemaster for Tokyo and then Canada. The quiet-spoken veteran of the 3rd battalion, Royal Canadian Reg- iment, was captured in a battle last May 2. He was accompanied to Tokyo today by ol. Bev Le- fevre, a buddy from his cab-driv- ing days in Chatham. Lefevre was assigned by brigade headquarters along with Lieut. Des Goodwin of Toronto to escort his friend to the Japanese capital. It will be the first visit to Tokyo for both Pelletier and Lefevre. Pelleteir is scheduled to leave Thursday morning by Canadian Pacific Air Lines for Vancouver, where he is due at 12:45 a. m PDT (3:45 a. m. EDT) Friday. Minister Nosing Out Pollution BRANTFORD (CP) -- Health Minister Phillips will inspect pol- lution in a 45-mile stretch of the Grand river today. With him on the inspection tour of 18 points up-river from Brant- ' {ford between the city and the The funeral service for William Parker, Sutherland Avenue, who died in the Oshawa General Hos- pital on Sunday, was held from the Luke-McIntosh Funeral Home at 1 pm. on Tuesday, August 11. Rev. S. B. Coles, minister of Knox Presbyterian Church, con- ducted the services. Interment was in the fi plot Prospect Cemetery, Toronto. The pallbearers here were A. 8. Clark, James Neal, Percy Lang- an, Robert Moore In Toronto the pallbearers were Gerald Hughes, Harold Hughes, Ray Hughes and three employees of the TTC with which the deceas- ed was associated for many y KR Sharp J. Petherick and E. J. FUNERAL OF WILLIAM HENRY MUNGAVEN Rev. Father Firth conducted high requiem mass in St. Gregory's Ro- man Catholic Church at 9 a.m. to- day for Wiliam He Mungaven who suffered a fatal heart attack at the Oshawa Golf Club on Sun- day. Fhe allbearers, all members of the Knights of Columbus, of which the deceased was an active mem- ber, were F. Meagher, J. Wood, J. Callaghan, T. Forrestall, T. Le- veque and F. B yrne. Interment was in St. Gregory's Cemetery. FUNERAL OF JOHN CLIFTON McDIARMID The victim of a fishing accident at Sturgeon Lake, last Friday, John ton (Cliff) McDiarmid, 19 Whiting Avenue, was buried in Mount Lawn Cemetery yesterday afternoon following funeral ser- vices at the Armstrong Funeral Home. A large number of friends and associates attended the service which was conducted by Rev. R.E. Dargan, minister of the Free Me- thodist Church. The pallbearers were five bro- thers of the deceased, namely Harold and Leonard McDiarmid of Oshawa, Ross and Elmer McDiar- mid of Carleton and Wilbert Leem- GUN DUEL (Continued from Page 1) heaps of twisted metal. They car- eened over a sidewalk, teasing out sight store fronts before coming to rest. CALLED ON ; Officers called on the s 3:30 a. m., but that it - eluded .patrol cars. Then it 'was about a half-hour later near midtown Toronto and the chase which ended in death for oe of fugitives began. Shand Dam five miles north of Fergus will be other members of the legislature, health and engin- eering officials and members of councils of centres on the river. Means of overcoming the pollu- tion, which is said to be gett worse each year, will be discusse: at a dinner meeting at Preston after the tour. Jockey Strike At Fort Erie Is Postpond FORT ERIE (CP)--A threatened strike by jockeys here has been postponed pending a meeting Thursday of the jockeys and their advisers and members of the On- tario racing commission. The jockeys will explain their grievances, centring round the $50 fine imposed on apprentice jockey George Duprey for what the com- mission termed "causing interfer- ence" with the favorite, Jay H. The riders claim that Teddy Brook, rid- den by Jose Vina, was responsible for the trouble. The jockeys will also ask for a which they call excessive. They say that in the last 31 days, there have been 21 fines and suspensions, totalling some $575. Peterboro Fire Chief Resigns PETERBOROUGH (CP) -- The resigation of fire chief Ralph Leonard, 45, because of ill 'health became effective today. He is suc- ceeded «by Capt. William Sorrie, 42, a member of the department reduction in fines of $100 and $50, |, Reds Nag Parcels Off East Germans BERLIN (AP)--Communist po- lice today were reported 'brain washing East Germans who re- turn from West Berlin with U. S. food parcels. The new tactics were disclosed by Germans who showed up at the food centres to pick up the coveted packages. A metal werker from Fursten- walde said: '"They are not forcibly taking the packages away any more. Now they take a person caught with a package into an interrogation room. They talk and talk for hours and hours and do it in relays. They say we are hurting the un- employed of West Berlin by tak- ing the American food handouts and also that we are damaging the honor of East germany. "The people get so weary of the thing after awhile that they vol. untarily give up their packages, anything to get out of there and go back home. That way the police can. always brag that the ple gave up the packages willingly. The man said he had heard the same story from so many persons that it is probably a general order applying to all the principal out- g points where travelling East ners can be nabbed by the police patrols. Other East Germans reported that the ban on travel tickets to Berlin is a¥ strict as ever but that travel from the surrounding area by intercity elevated train still is controlled only loosely. As a result, the flow to the food centres appeared this morning to be as steady as Tuesdays when 80,000 packages were distributed. Selfish Frenc Strikers Can Ruin Foreign Policy By PRESTON GROVER PARIS (AP)--Premier Joseph Laniel's proposed economy crees have precipitated a labor re- bellion so strong that it could shake French policy from Indo-China to Germany. Many foreign observers already are fearful that the strikes, so far peacefully directed agains possible cuts in pensions and government payrolls, could develop into vio- lence. That might produce a swing from the rightist governments of the last two years to a left-of-centre coalition. And that could mean unking of a lot of foreign policies, cluding the European Army plan for rearming Germany fight- ing endlessly for victory in Indo- China. Numbers of foreign officials are critical of the manner in which the new government started to shave expenses. The economy cuts were aimed first at rail, postal and civil service workers without any obvious blows at the big industrial powers which long have enjoyed what most Frenchmen think is an unfair tax advantage. Later revisions may hit the rich with more taxes, but no such de. crees have yet been made public. Unlike most French strikes of recent years, this wave did not start with the Communists. It sprang from the lower level of government workers who fear that their pensions will be cut or their very jobs imperiled by the econ: omies. Even the leaders of their Socialist-controlled Force Ouvrier (FO) and of the Socialist party were taken by surpise. The Communist-contolled Con- federation Generale du Travail jumped happily into the movement. For three years they have been trying without success to get just such a consolidation behind a strike move. Now the strike is aimed not just at the economy decrees but at the government itself. Laniel and his cabinet clearly hope to wait out the current strike, to see if it 'von't wear out under the double influence of the sum- mer vacation. sun and perhaps some softening of the decrees themselves. But one important foreign ob- server said he felt the situation likely would get worse before it got better. If Parliament turned on Laniel is a widespread belief. that the next government would be de- Sidedly farther to the left and com- mitted to cutting France's military costs by negotiating an end to the war in Indo-China. So many Socialists are opposed to the rearming of Germany at this - time that a leftist govern- ment might also sack the Euro- pean Army plan. 250 Sick South Koreans By FORREST EDWARDS PANMUNJOM (AP)--One hun- dred hale and happy Americans streamed through the Bamboo Cur- tain at Panmunjom today to start the second dramatic week of Kor- ean war prisoner exchange. But their South Korean comrades ain came home in wretched con- dition. Pitiful living skeletons were passed tenderly from Communist ambulances to litters carried by Allied soldiers. Four hundred in all got their freedom during the day. There were 100 Americans, 25 Britons, 25 Turks and 250 South. Koreans. The Communists promised to Go Home As Living Dead hand over 75 Americans, 75 Britons and 250 South Koreans, all able bodies, at Thursday's swap, the ninth since the exchange started. The total will boost the number of Americans liberated to 823 of 3,313 thé Reds said they held. A big transport carrying the first of the freed prisoners lands at Travis air force base near San Francisco today. Fourteen ser- iously ill former prisoners and three neuro-psychiatric cases were reported aboard. After transfer to Letterman army ital in San Francisco, the men be moved to hospitals nearest their omes or best suited to handle their ailments. Ajax Store Ransacked Thieves entered Hickey"s Credit Jewellers on Harwood Avenue North in Ajax last night and ran-, sacked the store. It was thought the intruders broke in through a transom sometime after 3 am. the time of the last police pli The value of merchandise stolen could not be estimated accurately this morning, but the loot included costume jewellry, silverware, light- ers and other items. The robbery was discovered about 9 a.m. today by the proprie- tor Hickey. A' veteran of World War II, . Hickey studied watchmaking and repairing under the DVA rehabilitation program and built up a successful business in Ajax. Earlier the thieves had tried to bore tarough the concrete wall from the neighboring store, Harp- ell's Upholstery. Evidently they gave that up in favor of the tran- som. Fingerprints have been taken and Pickering police are continuing their investigatio. HOVE, England (CP) -- After months of work, 40-year-old Basil Currey has finished a 2'%4-foot-high reproduction of Canterbury Cathe- dral made of wood and glass. ROOM AND BOARD Ca PR SIMPLE, BLOWART... | FLOATED 300000 | PING-PONG BALLS ON AN AREA WHERE THE WHALE WAS SURFACE FEEDING! AS IT MOVED ALONG SWALLOWING PING PONG BALLS WITH THE FLOATING FOOD, THE WHALE BECAME SO BUOYANT IT COULDNT DIVE....AN EASY MATTER THEN TO TO A BASIN EPA ROPE ITS TAIL FOR TOWING THE SCIENTISTS HAD Si RED FOR ITS CAPTIVITY/ CO-OPERATIVE COMMONWEALTH FEDERATION C.C.F. CANDIDATE extends his sincere thanks to the people of Ontario Riding for their support ot the polls on Monday. THANK YOU! | Hogs 350; good and choice N. Y. and voted his cabinet out, there | FARMERS' MARKETS TORONTO (CP) -- Official fore- casts i d by the Dominion pub- GRAIN: -- CHI"AGO (AP)---Mixed trends prevailed in grains at the opening on the BBard of trade today. Wheat started %-1% cents lawer, Sept. $1.83%-%; corn was un- changed to % higher, Sept. 77. Soybeans were %-1'4 cents lower, Sept. $2.51%-2.51. WINNIPEG (CP)--Most prices moved narrowly in light trade early today on the Winnipeg grain ex- change. Commercial demand was moder- ate. Processors and Americans were buyers in barley, Some ship- r demand, including purchases y American i terests, appeared in oats. 11 a. m. prices: Oats: Oct. 3% higher 7434; Dec. unch. 70%B; May not open. Barley: Oct. 3 higher 1.15%; Dec. % higher 1.08% A; May % higher 1.07.3; Rye: Oct. 5 higher 1.10B; Dec. 5 Zager 111%B; May % higher Flax: Oct. % higher 2.91; Dec. unch. 2.79; May unch. 2.83A. LIVESTOCK: -- TORONTO (CP)--Prices were steady on early sales at the On- tario stockyards today. Receipts: Cattle 250; calves 90; hogs 110; sheep and lambs 220; holdover from Tuesday 1,300 cattle. Choice light steers $20.50-21.50; good heifers $19-19.25. Calves were steady at $21-23 for choice vealers. Hogs were $35 for grade. A; dressed sows $22. Lambs were $25 for good ewes and wethers delivered by trucks; bucks $24. BUFFALO, N. Y. (AP)--Cattle 550; commercial and good steers and heifers 18.50-20.50; heavy cut- ters, medium fat and fat cows 11-12; canners 9-10; fat yellow cows 9.50-10; medium heifers 11-12; heavy sausage bulls 14-15. Calves 100; good and choice 27- 2 medium 24-26; heavy bobs 19- hogs 20.50-25.90; good and choice sows 17.50-20.50; boars 11-13. Lambs and sheep 125; market not established. PRODUCE: -- TORONTO (CP) -- Churning cream and butter print prices were unchanged here today. Prices were easier on middle grade eggs at the egg market while top grades firmed. Quotations for graded eggs in fibre cases were: A large 69; A medium 60; A small 40; B 48; C 39. Wholesale to re- tail: A large 74; A medium 65; A small 54; B 53; C 4. Butter solids: 1st grade tender- able 58; non-tenderable 57-57%; Western 58 cents nominal. TORONTO (CP) Wholesale fruit and vegetable price changes, uoted here today were: Beans, amington, 11-qt., rounds 75-1.; carrots, bus., unwashed $1.25-1.50; lettuce, Cdn. doz. $1.75-1.85; tomat- oes, Leamington, 11-qt. No. 1 85-1,; staked, six-qt. 75-85; peaches, six- qt. leno, No. 1 65-85. Potato prices were unchanged. Tank Pays Social Call On A House CROOKHAM, England (Reuters) An 11-ton, army tank today crashed through the wall of a house intn the living room where 15-year-old Greta Moley was sitting reading. ' The runaway tank's driver s. ped out politely and reached for | the family's badly-frightened par- | rot whieh had escaped from its cage in the accident. '""Here's your parvory the army private said with a bow to Greta. RCAF (Continued from Page 1) gument an air force officer agreed that RCAF purposes would be served by confiscating the nega- tives. They did this, he said, after searching him for more film. Juster said the guards did not know that the film they seized was unused. During the chase he had slipped his exposed negatives to his young brother who managed to evade the pursuers. Photographer Bob James of the Montreal Herald, who carried both a press and movie camera, had the latter taken away and the film removed from the former. lic weather office in Toronto at :30 a. m, x Synopsis: Westerly winds, circu- lating around a disturbance centred over the Hudson Bay, are sweep- ing somewhat cooler air across the Great Lakes region. The leadin edge of the cool air has move across Lake Superior and into northwestern Ontario. Farther south the cooler air is moving across Lake Michigan toward southwestern Ontario. Occasional rain spread across Northern On- tario ahead of this cool air during the night, and this belt of rain and scattered showers will move eastward across the northeastern half of the province tonight. A few showers are expected to occur in southwestern Ontario in |Y the night but skies will clear again on Tsursday morning and pleasant, sunny weather will prevail once more. Regional . forecast valid until midnight Thursday: Western Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Southern Georgian Bay, Windsor, London: Sunny, clouding over this afteroon with scattered showers late' afternoon and evening, clear- ing tonight. Thursday sunny with afternoon cloudiness and a little cooler. Winds light today west 15 Thursday. Low tonight and high Thursday at Windsor and St. Thomas 60 and 80, London 65 and 80, Wingham 60 and 75, Muskoka 65 and 80. Summary for Thursday: Sunny, a little cooler. Eastern Lake Erie, Niagara, western Lake Ontario, Hamilton, Toronto: Sunny today, clouding over this evening with scattered showers tonight; Thursday sunny with a few cloudy intervals and a little cooler. Winds light becoming west 15 Thursday afternoon. Low tonight and high Thursday at To- ronto, St. Catharines and Hamilton 65 and 80. Summary for Thurs- day: Sunny. TORONTO (CP)--Observed tem- peratures bulletin issued at the oronto public weather office at 10 a. m, Min Max. Dawson 46 64 Victoria Edmonton ... Regina .... Winnipeg .... Port Arthur .... White River .... Kapuskasing North Bay London Toronto Ottawa Montreal . Saint John Halifax .... BUREAU RSRRR2LLRE dRIBVRIB TRAFFIC TOLL Yesterday Accidents Injured Killed Les Year to Date Accidents Injured Killed PLEASE DRIVE CAREFULLY BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT PEI Spud Crop Is Looking Good CHARLOTTETOWN (CP)---Pota- to growers of Prince Edward Island looking forward to a bumper crop this season, are keeping their fingers crossed. weather the last few months has been exceptionally good for growing and with the harvest little more than a month away present signs Jott to the largest crop on the island in some years. Farmers have 28.346 acres of seed potatoes planted. This is re- ported 5,200 acres more than last ear. The island growers have been sending seed potatoes to the south- ern United States and South Amer- ica and already the Argentine gov- ernment has shown an interest in buying seed spuds this year. For the farmers, the next two weeks will tell the tale. The blight season is here and every precau- tion is being taken to prevent his fungus-type killers from causing destruction. The science service laboratory, operated by the Dominion govern- ment at Charlottetown, assists farmers in their war against the disease. Officials sgid the only sure way. to kill the blighf is to spray crops twice weekly. The blight attacks vines, killing them, and when rain falls it seeps down into the plant roots, stunting growth or decaying the potato. It has been several years since the blight has caused ruinous dam- age to island crops. As for marketing, islanders are looking to boats, even more . in past years, as a means of beat- ing the high cost involved in shipp- ng. Already vessels are pl trips from Prince Edward otang pose to central Canadian markets y way of the St. Lawrence river. Potatoes are the big cash crop on this island. A good year would see the farmers take in $12,000,000 to $14,000,000. GALLUP POLL (Continued from Page 1) Again, average deviation on a four-party basis was less than one per cent in the above. Quebec CIPO Actual Liberals 64 61 Prog. Cons. 30 30 Others 6 9 100 100 Average deviation in Quebec from actual results was two per- centage points. While this is the sixteenth elec- tion forecast made by the Institute since its formation late in 1941, when provincial forecasts are in- cluded, it is the fourth National vote, which has been reported by the poll. In each of these four fore- casts, error has been reduced con- sistently. In the manpower. plebis- cite in 1942, average error was 3.8 percentage points; in the 1945 fed- eral election 2.1 percentage points; in the 1949 election 1.4 and in 1953 0.7 percentage points. Institute officials stress the fact that in a sampling operation of this kind of margin of error of around four percentage points is to be ex- pected. Thus accuracy of the na- ture recorded in 1953 has a certain element of luck involved, even though efforts are made to reduce the margin to a minimum by con- sistently improving sample tech- | niques, question wording, quality of interviewing and so on. Spain May Grant U.S. Bases For Aid SAN SEBASTIAN (AP) -- The Spanish cabinet is reported to have approved an agreement giving U. 8S. forces the use of Spanish naval and air bases in exchange for military and economic aid. The pact would tie Spain indirectly into the Western alliance against Com- munist aggression. Bunker Hill Monument stands on Breed's Hill, where the battle ac- tually was fought. 2nd Italian Has Had It ROME (AP) -- Attilio Piceioni said today that he has abandnned his efforts to form a middle-of the road government and end the Italian government crisis. The 6lyear--old Christian Demo- crat's statement came as a com- plete shock to Italian political cir- cles. He had been expected to name his cabinet today. Instead Riccioni, the party's deputy leader, told reporters: "I had thought, following the latest consultations, that it would be truly possible to create an active and profitable collaboration (among centre parties). "I was forced to realize with sadness the impossibility, insofar as my leadership is concerned, of positively concluding this task, As a consequence I have asked the president of the republic to accept my renunciation of the task of forming a government." For Footings, Basements, Gerege Floors, Sidewalks, ete. For Lowest Prices Use READY-MIX DIAL 3-7651 CURRAN & BRIGGS READY-MIX LIMITED ONTARIO RIDING FEDERAL ELECTION Jhanks To all the electors of Ontario Riding who supported me in Monday's election, and particularly to my loyal staff of workers in all parts of the riding, | extend my sincere thanks. While our joint efforts were not crowned with victory, | feel that the gains made since the by-election of last year are highly encouraging, and were made possible only through the loyal support of our many party workers and friends. JOHN L. LAY, Liberal Candidate OSHAWA FAI CHECK NOW and PLAN to ATTEND FOUR BIG DAYS! WED. | THURS. AT FRI. AUG UST 1920 21 22 Ontario County's Leading Fall Exhibition EXHIBITS RACES - VAUDEVILLE - MIDWAY FIREWORKS Auspices SOUTH ONTARIO AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY