Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 23 Nov 1959, p. 10

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10 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, November 23, 1959 TODAY'S TORONTO, M TORONTO By The Canadian Press Toronto Stock Exchange--Nov. 28 (Quotatiins in cents unless marked §. xd -- Exdividend, xr--Ex- Odd lot, rights, xw--Ex-warrants.) om Ch'ge Stock Sales --% ONTREAL STOCKS 11:30 Net 11:30 Net High Low a.m. Ch'ge 55 Eg A BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT Refused Entry By JOHN LeBLANC Press Staff Writer Rail Rates Under Study Into Jerusalem BELLEVILLE (CP) a special meeting Friday. an Ottawa firm City council appointed an auditing firm and an acting treasurer at George Welch and Company, with offices here, will take over the job left vacan) earlier this month when the mu- nicipal auditing licence of J. D.. Lewars was cancelled by the On tario- government, John Canning of the Welch companv was appointed acting city treasurer succeeding Drury Denyes. Mr. Denyes was dis- missed as city manager and ,|treasurer following the royal commission report. Canadian OTTAWA (CP)--The problem|it may be time to look at the matter from the community BEEEENESYY. EH INDUSTRIALS Net Stock Sales High Low 11 a.m. Ch'ge 515 305 120 $30% 239% 39% 285 285 285 $26% 26% ¥% $36% 36% 36% 828%, 28% 28% $8 8 $31% 31% 5 813% 13% 5 $25% 25% $5414 54% Abitibi Alta Dist Alta Gas Algoma 146 Alumini 316 Analog 100 Argus 1 Ashdown Atlas Steel 8 31% 13% 6% 54% $41 475 475 5 $31% 31% $88 E 88 $13 12% $35% 35 5 $41 41 $133 13% 5 $921 92% 5 8571 STW $32% 32% 550 $6% $8 $73 8% $28% 28% $16% 16% 16% -- $53 RK 514 $16% 15% 16% ++ | ++ 23 g Barf tzeBrernales § $ = 3 HEH + % EN BEastEnd EEEF LL EF F EFF E°5 1000 2 1742 810% 500 © 62 1000 3075 1500 31 60 2 CG Arrow C Halliwell C Marben C Marcus Con M and 8 C Mogul Cun Negus C Red Pop Coprand Deer Horn $131 $43% 4 506 525 300 Ee iat LL A $19% } EERE El gosE.ranfaniiclce 8.288528 §afsE8.aehint sFisunessilesstnais Baye a =F 5100 1500 2000 Sales to 11 a.m.: 308,000. MONTREAL 1000 1250 2000 Bailey § A 100 Bail 8 5% pr 25 Calalta 1300 Cal Ed 300 § + C Oil Lds D'Eldona arad Frobisher Giant YK Glenn Uran Gunnar Gunnar wis Headway Heva Hollinger Hud Bay Ind Lake Irish Cop Iron Bay Jacobus Jellicoe Joburke Kerr Add Kilembe LL Lac Lorado i Lorado wis Lyndhust Lynx Macassa Madsen 1 C West Pete 100 2640 Mcintyie Merrill Milliken Nat Expl Nes Lab New Bid N Dicken N Mylama New Rouyn Nipissing Noranda Norgold Normetal Norpax N Coldstrm N Goidert N Rank Northsp Norvalie Opemiska Orchan Ormsby *» 1 + % u% MONTREAL 11:30 A.M. STOCKS By The Canadian Press Montreal Stock Exchange--Nov. 28 (Quotations In cents unless marked §. 9--0dd lot, xd -- Ex-dividend, xr--Es- rights, xw--Ex-warrants.) INDUSTRIALS 11:30 Net High Low a.m. Ch'ge $395 39% 39% -- bh $36% 36% "a -- $2805 28% -Y 25 $48% 48% 71 $49 150 $31% 190 $26% 25 Sales 405 25 1603 Stock Abitibi Algoma Alumin Ang Tel pr Ang C Pulp p Argus Asbestos Atlas Steel 9 31% 26% 25% Bangue CN 50 52% Bank Mont 150 Banque PC 65 Bath Pow B 220 Bell Phone 1575 Bow Cp 5% pr 55 Bow Mer pr 220 $46 BA Oil 380 BC Forest . 2400 BC Power 205 $ Cal Pow 5 Can Cem Can Cem pr 25 215 176 300 225 213 Cockshutt 450 Con M and 8 100 Corby B 25 Dist Seag 150 § D Bridge z5 D Glass 5 140 100 25 $50% 50 $34% $11% "BROKEN PROMISES Indians To Lose Ancestral Lands By JOHN KOENIG JR. KINZUA, Pa. (AP)--When the Seneca Indians signed a treaty with the United States govern- ment in 1794 they expected the pact to hold "as long as the moon would rise, the grass be green, the river flow and the sun shine." But not, 165 years and several court cases later, the government is ready to break that treaty and take back a portion of the land granted the Indians in western New York state. The proposed $113,000,000 flood- control dam to be erected just below this little river valley com- munity will create a huge reser- voir that will take an estimated 9,000 acres of the Senecas' rich bottom land along the upper Al- legheny river. The Senmecas would be com- pensated for their property. But that promise fails to gratify them. WHERE CAN I BUY? "Maybe the government will give a lot of money for my park," says Franklin John. "But "Payola' In Broadcasting Stirs Up Dark Corners By CYNTHIA LOWRY NEW YORK (AP)--"He won't But they'll tell you about some who, they insist, are. Payola, the knowledgeable ones make him "rich," in cash at| least, according to Leo Cooper, a| former president of the Seneca Nations. "But he doesn't want the money," Cooper adds. 'I've seen| that big man break down and cry at the mention of losing his| land." | DON'T WANT MONEY i And it's the same way with| the others. They don't want the, money, they just want to hold on |to their ancestral lands. Stretching 1,900 feet between two wooded mountain slopes, the| Kunzua am will be the largest| project of its kind in the north-| eastern states. Although the dam| will be in Pennsylvania--12 miles from the New York border--the Allegheny reservoir it forms will reach far into New York state. | For more than two years the| Indians contests the right of the |garage will be just about com- {pletely inundated by the reser- Vi of their reservation, taking their case right up to the U.S. Supreme Court. government to appropriate any|,ecervation just above Morrison's| Last Court refused to review lower court decisions upholding the government, thus ending the legal battle. So the army engineers now are ready to proceed. With a new congressional ap- where can I buy the equal of what I've built here? And where ean I get other tax-free land?" John, a mountain of a man, is the "biggest dirt farmer" among the Indians in the southern por- tion of their 30-000-acre reserva- June 15 the Supreme | talk about payola," said the press agent for an important television singing star. "I just don't want i {his name mixed up in it. He's Some area residents continue ot lev lved, of course, bit Jost to have doubts about that date, " however. The threat of the dam talking, about it will dirty up his and its great reservoir has been|" : x hanging over their homes and) | Thats 2 typical Tesponse these business places for more than 20/days. Since, in fact, the Unit years. | States congress 1 ee "I've won seven bets over that |°® legis] a : Wi SYerifit a : i nounc plann o follow its in the last couple of Years: $aY8| investigation of rigged TV quiz Richard C. Morrison, who OPer-|ghows with lighting up another ates a garage along the Tiverigary corner of broadcasting: road at Kunzua. "I still don't be-/payola, In Tin Pan Alley slang lieve they're going ahead With pavola means the widespread it. |custom of under-the-counter pay- Morrison, who heads an asso- ments for playing or singing cer- ciation of white residents oppos-/tain pieces of music. Involved, ing the dam, says the ""old-| according to reports, are some of timers will take it hard.' {the country's 5,000 radio disk A descendant of the first white Jockeys and some television pro- settler in the area back in 1801, | duction men willing to use songs Morrison was born in a century-|of an individual music publishing old house adjacent to his garage, | house for a share in broadcasting | performance royalties. All will be under more than 60| feet of water when the dam is| The committee announcement completed. |resul uu 2 neta au |remarkable clamming up on the The small Cornplanter Indian). of many persons with music connections. And most of those | willing to talk freely insist mow jon complete anonymity. "It's a joke, dragging this thing out like they'd just discovered it," says one veteran of the music field. "Everybody knows about it. It's a big, powerful racket, and it's been going on for years." It may be big, it may be pow- erful and it mav widespread, oir. Here lie the remains of old| Chief Cornplanter, a Seneca who| lacted as peacemaker between {the federal government and the Indians in th post-revolutionary days. As a reward for his efforts, ithe Commonwealth of Pennsyl- tion bordering the Allegheny. Many of John's fellow Indians would pay him enough for his land to believe the government propriation of $1,365,000, the engi-| explain, is well organized and business-like. Small fry are likely to be the most willing to accept cash--some are actually on a regular secret salary from some of the smaller publishing houses. It is the big boys--the ones who can reach the large audiences-- who can and do demand more. "Some guys will call up a pub- lisher and tell him they saw a car they like," says one record company executive. "He'll get the car the next day." Some big operators, the reports| |say, have branched out from the {mere spinning of records to the ownership of retail record stores (which can be stocked cheaply by 'gifts' of platters) to owning fac- tories where records are made. One powerful man in the enter- tainment business is rumored to insist on ejther owning a "piece" of a song or holding the contract to manufacture its records before he will consent to use the piece. "I'm clean," protests one pop- ular disk jockey, "and I think most of us are, But look at it this way: A disk jockey gets about, 200 records a week. If I'm lucky I can play maybe that number in a month--so that leaves about 600 records that never get on my air. And naturally, the people who make those 600 records are going to try to get them played--some- how." It appears that the trying often involves the dispensation of such things as cash, cases of liquor, furniture and household of railway commuter fares, long a bone of contention among all concerned, is far from settled permanently by an increase awarded the railways early in November. Apart from the fact that com- muters are appealing to the fed- eral cabinet, there is the future possibility that communities that keep clamoring against higher fares for suburbanites may be in- vited to contribute towards the exp of this ic type of service. This could apply particularly to the clusters of municipalities around Montreal and Toronto, where by far the bulk of com- muter traffic is concentrated. To a lesser degree it could take in the environs of Quebec City, Windsor, Hamilton, Halifax and Winnipeg. Scattered through the board of transport commissioner's 40-pagel standpoint. PREVIOUS COMMENT In a similar case in 1954, the board observed: "Any solution, even it it is to be but partially successful, be- speaks the consideration and as- sistance of the governmental au- thorities and other public bodies] most immediately concerned." In the latest judgment, it drew attention pointedly to a 1956 rec- ommendation of its United States counterpart, the Interstate Com- merce Commission, which was somewhat more explicit on the point. When the railways cannot oper- ate an essential commuting serv- ice at a profit, that tribunal proposed, state and local author- ities should contribute so that the carrier gets its expenses plus a reasonable profit. By DAVE McINTOSH Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP)--What prom-| ises to be one of the briskest| Commons debates in years on de- fence policy is already taking shape. Parliament will open Jan.| 14. Opposition Leader Pearson and| National CCF Leader Coldwell last week gave an outline of their| parties' general stands. Their| comments were touched off by| Defence Minister Pearkes' state- ment the week previous that stor- age facilities for American nu- clear warheads will be available in Canada in 1961 by the time| the Bomarc anti-aircraft missile| bases are ready for operation. Gen. Lawrence Kuter, com-| mander-in-chief of North Amer-| ican Air Defence Command, un-| intentionally put his oar in by saying at a press conference here that the Canadian govern- ment should plan now for early replacement of the RCAF CF-100 jet with a new manned intercep- tor. Mr. Pearkes declined comment Adlai Debates India, China CHICAGO (AP)--Adlai Steven- son predicted Sunday that China |and India will surpass the United |States and Russia in industrial) production within the next 50 years. "Our day at the centre of the stage is going to be brief," Stevenson said. Stevenson, Democratic presi- dential nominee in 1952 and 1956 made the remarks in a television program. Participating in the discussion were Sir Charles Darwin, grand- son of evolutionist Charles Dar- win, and Sir Julian Huxley, Brit ish biologist. Darwin and Huxley disagreed with Ste . They tended that overpopulated nations, be- cause of the unsatisfied demand for food, find it exceedingly dif- ficult fo industrialize. Stevenson said the United States should attempt to improve the lot of underdeveloped nations by extending more foreign aid, Darwin and Huxley contended this simply would act as an in- centive for them to let their populations grow even faster. Local man, 70, asserts "There is a real Defence Policy Storm Brewing on the U.S. Air Force general's GIFT FOR Boys have great fun statement. RELY ON BOMARC? But informants have said the likely course of government ac- tion is the gradual dismantling of the nine RCAF CF-100 squad- rons and reliance on two Bomare bases for air defence against the manned bomber. At the last session of Parlia- ment, the main defence debate revolved around one specific item equipment --- the supersonic Arrow interceptor, which the gov- ernment cancelled. The debate at the next session probably will be much broader. Basic questions, such as whether Canada should get out of the air defence business altogether to-follow instructions. FITS at your dealer's. FOR CHRISTMAS MECCANO is engi- neering for boys. By adding accessory outfits it is a fascinating hobby that grows with the boys. See MECCANO OUT- MECCA SEE MEC MECCANO...THE IDEAL CHRISTMAS building with MECCANO. Bridges, cranes, helicopters, tanks, planes, in fact hundreds of models of all kinds are built from easy- MECCANO MAGAZINE Read all about rockets, planes, ships, railroads, Meccano model building and other hobbies In MECCANO MAGAZINE, only 15¢ a month; $1.80 @ year postpaid from your dealer or MECCANO LTD, 675 King St. West, NO. ANO SET Mr, Pearson has called again {for a special parliamentary in- |quiry or royal commission into |defence policy. He says the advent of the inter- continental rocket with hydrogen warhead should push into the dis- Warhead sioud push iow the dis. KING ST. £. AT. TOWN THE HOUSE THAT JACK BUILT LINE PHONE RA 5-2178 cepts. KHRUSHCHEV BOAST Soviet Premier Khrushchev said last week that one Russian factory alone in one 'year has turned out 250 rockets with hydro- gen warheads. Mr. Pearson says that any lear warheads for the B 38 BOND ST. W. VICTOR'S SPORTS RA 3-3141 a1 should be under C control solely. Mr. Coldwell says Mr. Pearson misses. the point entirely. He says the Bomarc is useless militarily whether fitted with nu- clear or conventional warhead. "The only defence against the H-bomb is. peace," says the CCF leader, SUDDARD'S 295 SIMCOE ST. §. RA 5-3979 Print Tan HERE IN OSHAWA ON WEDNESDAY |vania in 1896 designated 874 acres neers are preparing to relocateon the west side of the river tol highways and railroads along the be maintained as a reservation river, Then will come actual con-|for Cornplanter and his descend- Skunk Stirs Havoc In IGA Store ALEXANDRIA (CP) -- The business district of this town 20 miles north of Cornwall has been just about deserted since Friday, when a skunk invaded a large IGA grocery store at the centre of the main business block. The store was closed the rest of Friday and all day Satur- day, and was to remain closed today and until the air cleared. Neighboring shops kept win- dows and doors wide open to allow a sickening aroma which permeated the vicinity to escape. The skunk entered the gro- cery store about noon Friday through a rear storeroom. Em- ployees and customers threw things at it to make it retreat, but the animal defended him- self as best he could and ran about the store, driving some women customers to near hy- sterics. Finally a 22-calibre rifle was produced and the skunk shot. Everything in the grocery store not protected by cans or sealed containers has been re moved and written off y the owner, Mrs. Thomas Gauthier, as eomplete loss. struction of the 180 - foot - high ants. dam. The Seneca reservation begins | By 1962 says Col. William W. at the New York border and |Smith, chief of army engineers runs for many miles, encompass- for the Pittsburgh district, the/ing the entire city of Salamanca. first water will begin to build up. From this the Seneca naticns de- {And by 1965 he says, the dam rives some $11,000 a year in will be completed. rentals. FOR EXAMPLE: You | Mombly | $50 to $5,000 hn Without Endorsers or Bondable Security Loans Life Insured | ES UPERIOR FF. NAN Open Fri. Until 8 p.m. Open Set. Until 12 Noon 17 Simcoe St. North RA 5-6541 OFFICES THROUGHOUT ONTARIO $22.00 S 506.94 | 31,826.72 | $2,500.00 $60.00 $98.25 [op > {but nobody is admitting they are ap- or ever have been payola men.|pliances, cars and boats. WHO THINK OF TOMORROW PRACTICE MODERATION HN AA Ly Che House of Seagram DISTILLERS SINCE 1857 Santa Claus" Recently at a family gethering to celebrate his Oth birthday, Mr. H. B,, emphatical ba made this statement-- "There is a real Santa Claus". Later, when asked what he meant, he replied that he was going to be Santa Claus as of Christmas 1960. You see, last week Mr. H. B. enrolled as a member in Imperial Bank's new Christmas Club. With regular weekly deposits of 60¢, $1, $2, $5, $10, (whatever sum he decided on) come Christmas 1960, why he is indeed going to be Santa Claus to all his family and friends! Why don't into Jou nearby Bank ranch? Ask about the Christmas Club. If you join soon, you can Santa Claus next year to all your relatives and friends. Team IMPERIAL % BANK &7 wn bot . w Don't miss this rates of pay. WORK ON NOVEMBER 23RD at the ARMOURY 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Flight Lieutenant Hoover, RCAF "3 haha Counsellor is here to give you complete information on what the Air Force offers YOU as an Air Crew Officer or as a skilled Airman Technician in a modern aviation trade. opportunity right here in Oshawa to get the facts you want to know about RCAF training and FLY ON JET POWER IN THE ROYAL CANADIAN AIR FORCE

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