They will join two officers and ANCIENT BUILDER "PIONEER PAVEMENT |six men now on the Britannia, Stone edifices and canals were The net a paved in bringing the Canadian contingent built in Mexico in the 13th cen-|New York City in 1657, when it 011 the crew to 15 men and two!tury by Acampiehtli, king of the was still known as New Amster- . Nine Seamen officers, . [Mexican Aztees. dam. Battle In ye heamet Join ritannia Five from HMCS Stadacons OTTAWA (CP)~--Nine seamen Halifax, include AB Beverley K, strike, has been confusion, distor- of the Royal Canadian Navy willl H Rexton, V.B., and 2 U t tion and distrust. They have al- fy from Monireal to Erland Dorchester Station, Ont. on roversy aed their own personal greed May 26 to join he crew of Her ou' 'rom Esou'malt include 7% for money 'and notoriety, to ex- Majesty's vacht Britannia for the AB William N, Aller, 26, Fort 7" «i consideration for their Roval Visit to Canada this sum- William, and Victoria, quarter- 'men. mer. ¥ master, again this weekend, calling for a back-to-work movement and a chance for the men to vote on the final offer of the company. "The only thing," continued Mrs, Canie," that these people have contributed to the Polymer © 40 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesdey, Moy 19, 1959 lle Bea IN PARLIAMENT New Energy Board Will Regulate Tolls DITAWA (CP)~The new na-|tolls charged for the transmission|over from the Board of Transpor tional energy board will have or transportation of ofl or gas." |Commissioners the handling of pawer to regulate tolls--but not Armand Dumas (L -- Ville- applications for construction of po" a Taylor s e gol n profiis--of oil and gas pir slines, neuve), presenting the Liberal interprovincial pipelines, also ™ in ! in this Warwickshire town. It held Trade Minister Churchill made view, said authority for policy- subject to cabinet approval. hi a iadio broadcast Monday bacon and eggs, ready to eat. this point Monday as the Com- making and regulation in this! In addition to regulating pipe night, the ladies auxiliary to Lo. ---------------- _ mons began debate on a resolu- field should be divided. line tolls, the board would be|cal 16 - 14, Oil, Chemical and tion for the introduction of a gov-| "We feel that the government given the" say over prices at Atomic Workers, fired a salvo at ernment bill to establish the should not relegate policy making which gas and electric power the Freedom Club, organized by bhard. to any board," he said, advocat- might be exported. wives of strikers who since have "But it took some time--almost|ing instead establishment of a na- As at present, electricity would been "blacklisted" by the union. tirép hours, to be exact--for the tional energy authority to act in be licensed for export on a year- Mrs. Richard Canie of the aux-! preel ing of the minister's an advisory capacity. to-year basis. But gas export pes. Diary Fin "It oaks me fr statement to become clear 0 capiNgT MUST APPROVE mits would cover 25-year periods, w en 1 turn on the radio and he ir | ? he v hat the members of the Freedom many who heard him open they "oy pi gaid the bill TOO MUCH RED TAPE a0 dphgte. ¥ ih 0 Mr. CI Hill also indicated th Club would have you believe that ' would propose that the board be r. Churchill also Indicated the their itt] s caused ' In EABLY WORDS CLARIFIED . eir little group has caused 2 : LARGEST ALL.CANAP empowered to decide on applica- government would like to work these negotiations." AT "Evidently realizing that his tions for export of electricity and out some new: arrangement with The group referred to is, ac- » i A yO 37 KING ST. EAST rooon statements had been natural gas, subject to cabinet the United States to simplify the cording to Freedom Club presi- ian vn 015ml i Alger, Bldg, (next Ly 3 Simore, Theatre), Suite 23, i reted as meaning the board approval. process of moving gas between dent, Mrs. Ray Borland, about | Branches' Tua Conte Saturday wag have power to Tegulate Authority for issuing import or the two countries. 200 strong. This club start Ad a pipeline company profits, he rose export permits for oil would re-| Permission to export gas from iroadcasting last weekend, and aleMonday night's Commons sit- mein in cabinet hands, although Canada to the U.S. now involves -------- ------------ -- ting to emphasize: the bill would provide that the getting approval from the prov- Phere is no provision in the cabinet later could put ofl under ince involved, the federal govern- proposed bill to regulate the prof-|the board's jurisdiction. ment and the U.S. Federal Power| its._of pipelines but rather thei The energy board would take Commission, THE LIBRARY WORLD SARNIA (CP)--Wives support. -c. ing strikers at the Polymer plant fellow continued their verbal battle = -- Monday night with wives opposed USEFUL HAT here--the eve of a renewal of ne- HAMPTON - IN ARDEN ; gotirtions "between management (Cp) . A frying-pan hat was of the Crown-owned plant and worn wy a woman in a "spot union leaders with new mediator what I've got in my hat" contest Bills piling up? You're always welcome ot SAVE MONEY , , . by taking advan of the man offered weekly by your a a vintace of te I Bi vio macist operates on two basic principles: the widest selection of products and money-saving prices. Quality products, friendly advice, relaxing atmosphere and professional service . . . these are the big reasons why it pays to shop at your neighbourhood |drug store. You always get the products you need at the prices |you like at your neighbourhood drug store. (Advt.) AoA m ER "io ima. . | subordinate to the French) {Court, proud and overbearing, {he quarrelled with successive ww >» » » King Jo "Told In - - © The following reviews were $ritten by a member of the staff of the McLaughlin Pub- Pr Library. , KING OF ENGLAND A John T. Appleby, Knopf 21958 "King John was not a good man "He had his little ways. hn's Life Book Mr. Appleby has written a fine readable biography of {John, adding background and color as in a picture, around a central theme. King John emerges in this account as | very real person -- his faults are 'not whitewashed, but we under: Istand him better as a product of And ctimes no one spoke to his time, a victim of circum. him Hor days and days and days. men who came across him "Xhen walking in the town, Gave him a supercilious stare, "Or passed with noses in the air, And bad King John stood numbly + "there, Blushing beneath his crown." «+ --From "Now We are Six", -. A. A. Milne uch is the impression we have this notorious king -- not onlv frem school texts, but also from cliildren's story books. The chron- jclers of John's life were mostly contemporaries, of the baronial cause, which was also that of the church, and they still smarted under the despotic rule of this man. Naturally, their accounts are most unflattering. One cannot deny that John's sins of omission and commission were of great magnitude: that his disloyalty to his father amounted to treason, that he attempted to usurp his brother's throne when Richard departed on the Third parliamentary democracy. It was months-old bull {stance too, and not the much- maligned villian of English his- [tor THE WISEST FOOL IN CHRIS- | TENDOM, by William Lloyd McElwee, Harcourt, C1958, | This fine biography covers a |very important period of British history: it is the life of King James I, king of Great Britain land Ireland. and James VI of |Scotland (1566-1625) son of Mary Queen of Scots, and her second husband, Henry Stewart, Lord Darnley: his proclamation as king of Scotland after his father's murder and his mother's én- forced abdication, and as king of England after the death of Eliza beth 1 It tells of James' policy of playing country against country, Protestant against Catholic, baron against baron, his belief in the divine right of kings clashing with the will of the people which culminated in the groundwork for bishops and intendants, and lonce, was recalled to France, As to his character, Mr, Eccles discgrees with Parkman and other historians favorable to Frontenac and describes him as "excessively vain, unscrupulous | ... extravagant." His only sav- ing grace seems to have been a possession of great personal K i n g/charm, 'Charm is a very power-| ful, and sometimes dangerous, thing; it is also one that is not easy to detect in written docu. ments, particularly those of an official nature. Yet without it, Frontenac's career is inexpli | cable." {LIBRARY BRIEFS The films scheduled for show- ing on the Little People's Film Hour on Saturday, May 23 at 2.30 in the auditorium will be: Birds of Canada, Holiday in White, Story of the Violin, Honeyland, Holstein Sale Well Attended GORMLEY (CP)--More than 1,000 persons attended the fourth annual sale frem the Romandale Farms holstein herd of S. B Roman Monday which had a total of $35,730 paid for the offering of 65 head--an average of $549 per animal Mr, Roman is president of Con- solidated Denison Mines Limited Top price was $1,650 for an in- dividual animal was paid by Paul Kilian of Leon, Mexico, for Ro- mandale Supreme Kent, a three calf. His dam Crusade, that he caused Pope In-|the time of the Gunpowder Plot, has two yearly records averaging nocent III to place the whole realm under interdict, that his abuse of feudal customs, extor- tion of money from barons and towns, his lack of foresight, capriciousness, vice and indiffer- ence to public opinion so aliena- ted his people that in self de- fence they forced his signing of this colorful man is inclined to -- the Magna Charta, the greatest document of English constitution- al history. Graduates Receive Address | McClelland, ¢1959. the Puritan revolution, the Eng. lish colonization of America, and the Authorized (King James) ver- sion of the Bible. FRONTENAC, THE COURTIER GOVERNOR, by W. J. Eccles, Mr. Eccles' vivid account of change one's concept of Fronte- nac as depicted in all the school- books. His book is based on ex- tensive original research, and carries the ring of truth. Louis {de Buade, Comte de Frontenac {et Palluau (1620-1698), after a {military career in the Low Coun- |tries and Italy, was sent to New, {France by Louis XIV as gover- nor and lieutenant-general. As- tute in military matters and un- excelled in his dealings with the Iroquois, his record in civic affairs was a sory more than 25,000 pounds of milk. Wilfred Leslie of Georgetown | paid the second highest 'price-- | $1,400 for a five-month-okd bull. | Fifteen bulls sold for an aver- age of $755 each--five of them | brought at least $1,000. Top price for a cow was $1,025. Worry of FALSE TEETH Slipping or Irritating? Don't be embarrassed by loose false teeth slipping, dropping or wobbling | when you eat, talk or laugh. Just | sprinkle a little FASTEETH on your plates, This pleasant powder gives al remarkable sense of added comfort and security by holding plates more firmly. No gummy, gooey, pasty taste or fasling It's alkaline '(non-aetd), Get FASTEETH at any drug counter 4h ER YF ) ¥ CHECK YOUR CAR V CHECK ACCIDENTS The low-cost Ranch Wagon is one of the six beautifully styled station wagons by Ford. Here's Canada's No. 1 Economy Value--the Custom 300 Tudor Sedan with the modern Mileage Maker Six, Ford sales are way up and Ford Dealers across Canada have declared a Special Dividend . . . the highest trade-ins of the year on your present car. And that's just the beginning. Every one of Ford's 20 models is packed with extra dividends like the ones below. See your Ford Dealer now and find how easy it is to step into a brand new Ford during Dividend Days. HAMILTON (CP)--Author and playwright Robertson Davies has advised McMaster University| graduates to examine themselves before they set out to reform the world. | 'What I am seeking to impress upon you is that much of the place you will take in the world . depends upon your know-| ledge of yourself and your atti- tude toward yourself' Mr. Davies said in an address at the university's arts and science con- vocation Monday. | Mr. Davies, who is also editor and publisher of the Peter- borough Examiner, said: "If you wish to do good in the world, begin by doing good in yourself, If you wish to reform the world, or command some as- pect of it, set to work to reform and command yourself. 'For so long as you are un- Kpawn to yourself, nothing else oan- be understood by you. And dtl you know the evil in your-| self; you will tend lo exaggerate the evil which you see in other men." He added: 'I am not telling you to live selfishly. I am telling you not to live an unexamined life." 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