THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesdey, Februory 17, 1959 AJAX JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOL BAND CONDUCTED BY DR. KARL LINDEMANN # (tion Carillon" : |United Church here at Sunday | {morning worship, : (band and Rev. Wm. K. Houslan- GL (Photo by John Mills) INTERPRETING THE NEWS Young Musicians 'In Fine Concert AJAX (Staff) -- A capacity|the band and Dr. Karl Linde- audience heard the Ajax High mann, its conductor, as it com- +School bands give their first pub- pleted the program, lic concert in the town on Mon- - Mayor William Parish said "I day evening. The demand for ght the music was superb, Historic Move Made By West On Germany Evidence continues to mount dg memory of Church Bells Are Dedicated BOWMANVILLE (Staff) "The Old Rugged Cross" which | was the favorite hymn of the| late Dr. Llewellyn B. Willlams was the first hymn fo be played on the newly installed "Corona- bells at Trinity The new bells were donated to the church by Mrs. Sarah J. Williams in memory of her hus- der, minister of Trinity United held dedication services Sunday morning. In a responsive prayer, the minister sald "In the faith of Jesus Christ, to the Glory of God, the service of man and in Dr. Llewellyn B, Williams, to call people from the crowded ways of life to the place of worship and prayer, and assist in the proclamation of the Gos- pel," with the congregation re- peating 'We dedicate these gifts" between each line of the prayer. Following the service, organist Arthur Collison gave a recital on the bells from the church tower. The bells may be heard in the church auditorium and out- side for a distance of a mile. Mrs. Williams also gave the church a public address system. BOWMANVILLE (STAFF) T. W. S. Pogson of Toronto, speaking to the Women's Cana- dian club here Monday, said he Describes Life _In Middle E ast felt there would be a major § clash in the Middle East between the western world and Russia over oil, . Mr. Pogson spent the eleven years in the Middle East, eight of * them in Kuwait on the Persia Gulf as a senior administrative | officer with an oil company, one year in Iraq with the Iraq De velopment Board and two In Iran on an 8000 kilometer road construction project. He described the Middle East as a land of corruption and dou- ble dealing where a monarch may drive 50 gold Cadillacs and watch his subjects live on a handful of grain dates. He sald that some monarchs there are earning close to two million dollars a 'day from oil royalties. "I feel that the west has fail- ed so miserably in the Middle East it is too late to rectify these mistakes," he said. : He said the Arabic nations along the shores of the Atlantic and Mediterranean and across and a few| T. W. 8. POGSON Before this he said the British, French and Turkish had Kinoven Lodge Celebrates 9th Birthday By MRS. ARTHUR ELLIOTT BROOKLIN -- Kinoven Rebec- ca Lodge No. 853 Brooklin held its regular meeting in the IOOF Hall, Bagot street, Noble Grand, Sister Della Jones and vice-grand Sister Velma Ross presiding. - A guard of honor was formed by 16 members of Lodge, attired in pink and white formals, carry- ing candles and sprays of flow- ers to escort Sister Louise Clarke. Warden of the Rebekah Assem bly of Ontario introduced by Sis- ter Helen Batten JPNG; Sister Isabelle Carr PP introduced by Sister Ivy Arksey PDDP; and Sister Gloria Bailey DDP District No. 7 Oshawa West, introduced by Sister Mildred Barrett PNG. The guests were welcomed by the Noble Grand Sister Della Jones. Plans are underway to receive he president of the Rebekah As- ed to keep Russia out. "Russian authorities have said they do not require the Middle East oil, but during the past year have built one' and a half mil- lion tons of freighters in Baltic sea ports for hauling oil from the Middle East, This is more than the British and French have built since they have been there," said sembly at a special meeting, Feb. 27, when the Lodge with Joy Re- bekah Lodge, Brougham, will hold a joint meeting in the IOOF Hall, Brooklin. Kinoven Lodge will ex- emplify the Rebekah Degree. Vice-grand Sister Velma Ross reported several get-well cards sent to sick members and a flor- al tribute sent to the late Sister tickets was so great that a sec- these youngsters are a credit to By JOSEPH MacSWEEN scribed as a historic move to-| north Africa have three things in ogni Chamberlain, NG of Easter Reb- gad ooneent Wil he Zen oun the school, tele teacher and he Hg 1 |town. I e youth of Ajax ed hii get 3 on Money intr 4 getting a very complete musi- from th h nid oth n |cal education, keeping in mind stitute an important diplomatic sters in action. od of 58 instru. the Music Festival that is spon- move, but an even more impor- ments was first on the program.|sored by the Rotary club. They tant step is yet to come. is introduction, James Rap-|are all making a great contribu-| Prime Minister Macmillan' In-b > d I bel we can hon- sey. principal, said "These stu- [Gh 85° © CHENS We CAL Cic/mission to the Soviet Union-- dents have had a minimum of 8 rogram now being provided here scheduled to begin this coming year and a half of training. 4 Ie Every student in the school has i J the hii ign no| formalities of diplomatic ex- an opportunity to take part in Orr Veh oi reves more of Hue i les when we look for mater- change an rs rr i hey ial for a town band." |sian thinking and real aims. | A few tickets are still avail-| The United States, Britain and tinue in the band." A standing ovation was given! able for tonight's program. |France have made what is de- Canadian Press Staff Writer Monday's messages to Moscow | ward compromise on the German question with their call for a e Western biz three con-|foreign ministers conference in-| |cluding advisers from the Allied land Communist sections of Ger- many. : MACMILLAN'S ROLE Now it will be up to the ex- perienced and skilled Macmillan weekend--is likely to get past the ty try to determine whether the| Russians are really willing to negotiate in a genuine way or whether Premier Khrushchev has merely been seeking propaganda advantage all these months. of a powerful' movement in the US. for a new look in foreign relations, and this inevitably is {complicated by the illness of |State Secretary Dulles. This was underlined with the appointment of Senator J, Wil {liam Fulbright, who has often {been sharply criticai of Dulles, as chairman of the Senate foreign relations committee. | Senator Mike Mansfield, an in- |fluential member of the same |committee, now has come out |with the view that the U.S. needs |a basically new policy on Ger- many. Compromises, says Mans- field, are needed by both East and West Germany, Dulles himself had been work- Extra Payments Asked By Firms On St. Lawrence OTTAWA (CP) -- Twenty-two| contracting firms that worked on the St. Lawrence Scaway have! | submitted claims for extra pay-| ment beyond the terms of their| |contracts, Transport Minister Hees reported Monday. | | He told the Commons the| |claims involved such factors as| rising wages, alleged undisclosed) ground. and water conditions, flooding of contract sites, alleged | interferences with scheduling of common, alphabet, religion and a common blood stream. He charged that in two years of the Eisenhower administration in the United States, Russia came into the Middle East with a bang. Summing up his talk, the speak- er said if the Middle East oll was stopped from going to Europe, the economy of Europe would gradually grind to a halt. Club Card Party At Enniskillen By MRS. RUSSELL GRIFFIN ENNISKILLEN -- The Service Club held the second of a series of card parties Saturday in the community hall, | Prize winners were: Euchre: of Harold Ashton. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Brunt were Saturday evening tea guests of Mr. and Mrs. Orr Jeffery Port Perry. awa, were Saturday dinner guests| ekah Lodge, Pickering. Sister Bertha Hackney PDDP a patient in Bowmanville hospital, regretted being unable to attend. Sister Elizabeth Brown, ren- dered selections accompanied by Sister Evelyn Croxall, lodge pla- st. Plans are nearing completion for the annual bazaar to be held March 21. Sister Louise Clarke, assembly the Lodge, brought greetings from the Rebekah Assembly of Ontario. Sister Carr, PP, Sister Balley, DDP, and Sister Louella Pine NG. of Sunshine Lodge, Oshawa, also addressed the Lodge. Following the closing ceremon- les a short program was pre- sented, including several monol- ing until his illness In his cus- {oon "oqditional costs of placing|118h lady, Mrs. Lorne Lamb;| Mr. and Mrs. Ollie Weatherilt, tomary energetic way for a new flexibility in the Western position. He apparently was able to con- vince West Germany's Chancel- lor Adenauer that free elections are not specifically necessary as| |large construction job for claims toncrete in winter, and other situations. [ B. J. Roberts, president of the St. Lawrence Seaway Authorify, has said it is normal after every high gent, 0. C. Ashton; low lady, Mrs. O. C. Ashton; low gent, G. MeGill. Lost Heir: high lady, Mrs. M. J. Stainton; high gent, H. McGill; low lady, Betty Jane Werry; low gent, Kathryn Slemon. Tampa, Florida; Wilfred Weath- erilt, Caesarea; Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Sadler, Wilfred Williams, Nestleton; Mr. and Mrs. Harold McLaughlin and family, Black- stock, were recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Toms. ogues by Sister Jackson of May- belle Lodge, Port Perry. Sister Carr PP, assisted by Sis- ter Gloria Bailey DDP, cut the birthday cake and expressed wishes for continued success to the Lodge. a prelude to German reunifica-|¢, 40 'made for additional pay-| Crokinole: Neil Yeo, Lawrence Over 125 members and guests PARADISE FOR PHOTOGRAPHERS The icy rains of the weekend turned the country side into a photographers' paradise, Cam- eras were to be seen every- where as beauty lovers tried to | one of thousands of trees, all reproduce the Jacy ice patterns with their own pattern, This on film. This Im tree on the | J base-line west of Ajax was but | Photo was shot at 1.22 at 100 of { [CONCRETE OFFER Ff (not be exactly what Khrushchev { /[mean a May 27 deadline. a second using a K 2 yellow fil- ter on super pan press film. --Photo by John Mills BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT Montreal's Shipping Prospects Uncertain than if you studied a crystal 453,388 bushels in the previous ball," he said. "There are too year. uncertain. many unknown factors and noth-| Both deepsea and inland vessel MONTREAL (CP)--Montreal's shipping prospects for 1959 are E.R. Murrow Takes Leave From CBS NEW YORK (AP) -- Edward R. Murrow is taking a year's leave of absence from the Colum- bia Broadcasting System, begin- ning July 1. The commentator will discon- tinue his documentaries and his At the root is that multi-mil-/ing concrete to indicate what the arrivals increased, In the deep- lion dollar engineering marvel, future holds." {sea class, arrivals climbed to 2,- the St. Lawrence Seaway. | A few observers say Montreal's 637 from 2,252 in 1957 while 3,305 Lake and ocean shippers, fear- 1953 port activity permits some inland vessels docked against 3,- nightly radio program of news and commentary. On a reduced basis, he will continue Small |World, a filmed Sunday evening {television series of international tion. The Allies -- notably Britain -- are prepared to offer Moscow concrete security guarantees against a united Germany. The Kremlin, #t appears, has been manoeuvred into a position where it can hardly sidestep ne- gotiations, even though they may had in mind in the beginning. At the same time the West has given Khrushchev a chance to save face on his threat to turn Russia's responsibility for four- power relations in Gemany over to the East German puppets, Khrushchev, in his proposal that all foreign forces be re- moved from a neutralized Berlin, said Russia would act unmilater- ally unless negotiations began within six months, which would The Western plan provides for talks, but not on Khrushchev's ments beyond contract terms. LARGE RED-HERD WANTED BY LAW CAMPBELLFORD, Ont. (CP)--A large red-head is on the '"'most-wanted" list of the Campbellford police force. A *"'shoot-on-sight" order is out. '"He's a crafty one," said Publie Utilities Commission Manager Arthur Evans, who patrols the town daily with a double - barrelled shotgun but hasn't been able to get a shot at him. "We want to get him before he costs us any more money." A big red - headed wood- pecker has taken a fancy to the town's power poles and pecked into them so vigorously that the town will have to replace 25 of them at $100 each. terms. | TORONTO (CP)--The Ontario legislature tonight will start hold- ing night sittings, two weeks ear- lier than last session. Speculations about an early election was spurred as Speaker the Rev. A. W. Downer made the announcement in the House Mon- day. The government apparently is anxious to make up for time lost through debate over natural gas profiteering. Night sittings usually don't be- gin until about two weeks after the budget is brought down--last year budget day came after 17 days of sitting and in 1957 after 18 days. Monday was the 15th day of this session, and although bud- get day is usually set a week in advance, there has been no in- dication from Premier Frost as to when it will come. With only 36 -bills introduced out of an estimated 170, the House has' just started to debate the speech from the throne and still faces debates on the budget, the pipeline controversy and the report of the select committee on Night Sittings Start In Ontario Legislature Premier Frost wasn't in the legislature to explain the speedup --the entire government was at- tending the funeral of Tom Ken- nedy and the House adjourned out of respect for the former pre- mier. But observers were quick to speculate it may be more than Just an attempt to end the session before Easter Friday which comes this year on March 27, only 28 sittings days away. Forecasts of a May or June election -- maybe even earlier-- were strengthened last week when Mr. Frost told the House he will take the pipeline issue to the people if necessary. |Wright; Lorna Yeo, Gall Stain- |ton. | The Service Club held a clean- ing bee at the community hall |instead of the regular meeting. | All hands were busy scrubbing cupboards, cleaning windows and floors.' The regular meeting will be held at the home of Mrs. S. Lamb Feb. 18, at 8 p.m. Mr. and Mrs. S. R. Pethick visited Mr, and Mrs. Willlam| Chester, Oshawa. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Langmald,| Solina, were visitors of Mr. and Mrs. R. McGill. ! Mr. and Mrs. W. Gingerich and family, Oshawa; Mr. and Caesarea; Mr. and Mrs. C. Pet- hick and Ruth, visited Mr. and Mrs. P. Ellis. Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Wearn and Susan visited Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Wearn, Claremont. Mr. and Mrs. Vern Schell, {South River, are visiting their |daughter, Mrs. E. McNair. | Mr. and Mrs. Cameron Oke, of |Oshawa, were recent visitors of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. Oke. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Coombs and girls, Clara Page, Toronto, were Sunday visitors of Mrs. E. Page. Mr. and Mrs. S. Kersey, Grace Kersey, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Lyon and family, Hampton; Mr. and Mrs. K. Pooler and family, Osh- Queen's Park At-A-Glance Monday, Feb. 16, 1959 The House adjourned after Speaker the Rev. A. W. Downer eulogized Thomas Laird Ken- nedy, former premier and mem- ber for Peel who died Friday. The Speaker announced night sittings will begin tonight. Tuesday, Feb. 17, 1959 Throne speech debate will re- sume.. : Debate may resume on the: re- port of the select committee on labor relations. ELLOW PACES AULETTNY EPOWER WAS HORSE POWER CHARIOT RACES DREW CROWDS ESTIMATED AT 350,000 TO THE Mrs. Gordon Gettins, and Patti, Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Beckett, and family were Friday evening tea guests of Mr. and Mrs. How- ard Stevens and Gordon. The occasion 'being Mrs. Beckett's and Gordon Stevens' birthday. Mr. and Mrs. G. Calnan were Saturday evening tea guests of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Ashton. Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Griffin and family were Saturday eve- ning visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Ross Sharp. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Oshton, Clare and Douglas, visited Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Ashton, Purple Hill. . E. C. Ashton, Maple Grove, spent a few days with . and Mrs, O. C. Ashton, Mr, and Mrs. Alex Flett, Fene- lon Falls, visited Mr. and Mrs. Lorne Lamb, Mrs. G. White, Mr, and Mrs were present for a social hour convened by Sister Robena Nes- bitt PNG and her committee. Visitors were present from To ronto, Oshawa and Port Perry. STOCK MARKET NET EARNINGS By THE CANADIAN PRESS Craig Bit Company Ltd., 3 mos. ended Dec. 31: 1958, $11,832; 1037, $26,112. Imperial Tobacco Co. of Can ada Ltd. year ended Dec. 31: 1958, $10,665,282, $1.05 a share; 1957, $10,954,108, $1.08. Standard Brands Inc., year ended Dec. 31: 1958, $14,600,214, $4.26 a share; 1057, $13,837,624, $4.01. Alfred Randle, Hampton, visited Mr. and Mrs. Walter Oke. Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Wright were visitors of Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Sanderson, Columbus. Joan and Annette Laviolette, Port Perry, Jo Collins, and her brother Bill visited C. Ferguson. Mr. and Mrs. P. Tresise and girls, Oshawa; Marguerite Wright, St. Catharines, were Sun- day visitors of N. E. Wrights. Mr. and Mrs. Ross Lee, Ked- ron, were recent dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Allan Werry. Mr. and Mrs. Allan Werry and girls were Thursday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Percy Werry, Tyrone. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Thomas, Niagara Falls, visited Mr. and Mrs. S. R. Pethick. Mary Griffin spent the weekend with Pat Hoskin, Blackstock, Mr. and Mrs. .J E. Griffin were Sunday evening callers on SUBSCRIBERS THE TIMES BOWMANVILLE FOR MISSED PAPERS AND BOWMANVILLE'S FINEST TAXI SERVICE PHONE STEVEN'S TAXI MA 3-5822 If you have mot received your Times, phone your carrier boy first. If you are unable te con- tact him by 7:00 p.m. TELEPHONE STEVEN'S TAXI Calls Accepted Between 7 -7:30 p.m. Only - - + of Mr. and Mrs. Russell Griffin. ful of undercutting, have adopted |ontimism. 086 in 1957. t optirmis | n | conversations. labor relations. In addition six CIRCUS MAXIMUS IN ANCIENT ROME, a "you go first" stand on estab- lishing rates up to this point, | shrouding further what was al-| ready shaping up as a dim pic-| ture. | "Nobody dares to move," said| one shipping official who asked| that his name be withheld. AFTER YOU, ALPHONSE "The ocean shippers are wait- ing for the lake shipper to set| their rates. And the lake ship-| pers are waiting for the ocean shippers to do the same thing. Guy Beaudet, port manager here for the national habors board, said shippers are natur- ally hoping for a sharp upswing in activity with the scaway's ad- vent, continuing the 1958 trend. | "But you can no more accur- ately predict what will happen| TRAFFIC INCREASE Despite the business recession, vessel arrivals, water - borne cargo tonnage and outgoing pas- senger traffic all increased sub- stantially. In the case of cargo tonnage, other bulk commodities such as coal showed improvement. But the prospect for grain ship- here said it is contrary to gen- eral polity to announce what of 43 eastbound sailings in the 'welcomed a British government [shipping contracts have been 0 signed at present. Last year shipments from the board's four elevators here rose to 125,268,378 bushels from 86 Federal Help Asked For Sewage Plants TORONTO (CP)--The Oftario Association of Rural Municipali- ties Monday asked federal and provincial governments to share makes no contribution to educa-| equally the costs of constructing| sewers and sewage disposal plants with cities, towns and vil lages der the plan submitted in a resol- ution sponsored by the City of Port Arthur and Grey County. Other - resolutions asked costs to be carried by the pro- vincial and federal governments D. J. Bucknell of Lincoln County said Canada "is one of the few countries in the world where the federal government tion." ICELANDIC GROUP The first group of settlers from p | Each would pay one-third un:(jceland reached Gimli, Man., af | previously-chosen site, in 1875. ! Though passenger arrivals {dropped five per cent to 218,385-- mainly as a result of decreased immigration departures in- creased by almost the same per- centage and early reports point |to another bright season. {sharply - higher grain shipments EXPECT HEAVY SEASON sparked the movement although! At least one line, Cunard Steam-Ship Company, said early bookings and inquiries indicate a heavy volume of outgoing traf- » ments in 1959 remains clouded.|fic. The company has scheduled {An official of the wheat board the Carinthia to sail from here| April 13 for Liverpool as the first rthcoming season. The date of the first deepsea arrival is still indefinite, hinging of weather conditions. The freighter Valeria was last year's * [first arrival March 30, equalling an early-record set in 1954. Although 13 ocean vessels trapped here by ice were able to for escape down the frozen St. Law-| {more equitable distribution of|rence Jan. 14 escorted. by ice- Kingdom fell off sharply last| {taxes on industry and for a|breakers, a harbor spokesman year to 26,800 from {greater proportion of education said this did not indicate milder|1957- |conditions on the river and a pos- sible record - setting arrival this spring WHAT IS EVERYONE SAYING? SEE WED. PAPER The 50-year-old commentator told CBS his only reason for re- {questing a leave is to engage in {leisurely travel reading and con- templation. The network said it |was happy to grant the leave. Higher Transfers For Immigrants OTTAWA (CP)--The Canadian immigration department today move to increase sharply the maximum amount of money that British immigrants can transfer resolutions are on the order| paper. Ruto-Petroleum | Research Linked MONTREAL (CP) -- Lucien Raymond, president of the Soci-| ety of Automotive Engineers, | said Monday night research pro-| grams are needed to meet the mutual needs of the automotive | and petroleum industries. The impact of automotive de- velopment on petroleum research showed the need for close rela- tionship between technical men in both industries, he told the so-| to this country. Laval Fortier, deputy immigra- tion minister, said Canada 'no doubt" lost some prospective British immgirants because of {the former ceiling. | Immigration from the United 112,800 in DOMINION GIANT AS g | 60c vALDE---25¢ { GET ACQUAINTED ore Fi ln F loveliest lors: | BOGE, CEtiMdON™ ROSE, WHITE. Out finest seed in four full size packets (value 60¢), all 4 sent postpaid for only 25¢. Neo F RE E Our Big 184-page ant RS Seed Nursery Book. Sead today. DOMINION SEED WOUSE, GEORGETOWN, ONT. ciety's Montreal branch. { | FOR MISSED PAPERS | IN AJAX I you have not received your || Tines by 7 p.m. call AJAX TAXI PHONE AJAX 333 AN calls must be placed before 7:30 p.m. WHEN BREAKDOWNS OCCURRED, WHEELWRIGHTS, JOINERS AND SMITHS MADE UP THE AND FOR TODAY'S CHARIOTEERS CHANGING A TIRE WAS BECOME A MATTER OF MINUTES IN A GARAGE OR SERVICE STATION LOCATED IN A JIFFY BY LOOKING IN THE YELLOW DID YOU KNOW CHARIOT RACING WAS 2 POPULAR AS LONG AGO AS 4000 B.C.?7 and we'll have fun is a steady saver at Main Branch--N, S. On the way up! We're on the way up every way... all the way. Why? Because all our family started the saving habit early. Everyone of us THE CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE McFayden, Manager Simcoe Street North Branch--D, D. O. Bell, Manager F. A. Mcliveen, Monager--Oshawa Shcpping Cemce 1465 King Street' West and. Stevenson Rood