Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 5 Apr 1960, p. 12

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

12 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, April 5, 1960 Today's TORONTO 11 AM, STOCKS By The Canadian Press Toronto Stock lot; xd -- Ex-Dividend; xr--Ex- rights; xw--Ex-warrants,) Stock Sales High Low 1] a.m INDUSTRIALS Abitibl 75 $37%h 3% Alta Dist 200 265 265 265 Alta Dis wis 100 81 81 81 Alta Gas 1405 $24% Argus 220 $28 Ashdown B 275 $12% 12 23% 239% 2% 2 BC Forest xd 700 BC Pow 200 BC Phone 125 Burrard A 200 Can Cem 200 CCC Stone 100 Can Malt pr- 10 C Bank Com 215 § Cdn Brew 1370 C Brew rts 7464 Cdn Can A 5 C Cel $1 pr Chem C Collieries Cdn Tire Cdn Wall Cal Cell Con Gas Creative Tel Crush Int Dist Seag D Dairies D Fndry Desco Don Dom Tar Eddy A Emp Life Fam Play Fittings Fittings A Fleet Mig Fr Pete pr GMC GL Paper B Stores Exchange--April § .. (Quotations in cents unless marked §. 2--0dd T% --% U% UW --% 2 2 124 Sales High Low 11 a.m. Ch'ge 550 550 25 9% MH 10% 11 + % Th Th ---%W $33% 33% 33% 1% 1% 11% --% 5% 5% 5% $5% 5% M+ WH $5 5 5 135 135 135 --§ $35% 35% 35% + W $42% 42% 42% $57% 57% 57% $5 5 5% + W 220 20 +3 $6 6 6 $24% 21% 24% -- % $25 23 --128 15% + % We -- % 95 170 16% 39% Stock Ch Bug $9% C Bronze $11 Dupont $7 MO Paper Net . Ch'ge Acme Gas In] Gas Int Utilities Int Pete Inter PL Intp SH Jockey C Kelly D A Labatt Lob Co A Lon Hos A MB and PR Mass-F Mass-F 5% Mid-West Mont Loco Moor 2205 N St Car 200 North Star pr 50 NO NGas 80 Oshaw A 50 Page-Hers 845 Pow Corp 400 P Pipe Mfg 650 Roe AV Can 830 Roe AV 5% z10 Royal Bank. 230 $70% Royl bk rts 4520 295 Russell 270 StL. Corp % Shawin 95 § Silverwd A z4 Silverwd B z4 Simpsons 200 1 radio Stedman Sieel Can 100 266 tp zl 300 100 2125 12 200 100 135 750 100 200 100 guiss 5 + % teEnsy -% + % LH $13% 13% $43 43 1800 $13% 13 $7 7 $21% 21% 48 Longpoint Majtrans Medal Midcon Mill City Pac Pete Pac Pete w Permo pr Petrol Provo Gas Sarcee Secur Free South U Tidal Triad Oil Un Oils Wayne 500 W Cdn OG 300 W Cdn OG w 200 W Decalta 100 Yan Can 1000 Curb Dalhcusie 70% 293 10% 15% 26% 10 10 Tr Can PL 33% Trans-Mt 265 Union Ace 150 jas xd 600 2000 MI 700 200 5000 32 290 $13 $26%% 600 20 100 50 Brew W Copper West A wis Wood J A Wdrd A w xd 45 Curb Anglo-Nfld Advocate Algom Anacon Ansil 600 350 %6% 6% Stock Market Listings on T ot Bloek Sales Nigh Low 11 a.m. Ch'ge 350 Exchange Net Sales High Low 11 a.m, Ch'ge 1500 20 2500 44% 1000 oronto Net Sales Wigh Low 11 a.m. Ch'ge 200 & s 100 2000 1500 500 Stock Arion Aunor Stock McKen McWat Midrim Murray Nello Nes Lab New Alger New Bid N Kelore Newlund N Senator Noranda N Gate N Coldstrm Opemiska Orchan Pardee Pick Crow Preston Pronto Que Ascot Que Chib Que Cop Quemont Radiore Rayrock Rexspar Rowan Cons Sherritt Siscoe Stanleigh Stanlgh wits Steep R Sullivan Sylvanite Taurcanis Teck-H Temag Tribag U Asbests Un Keno Upp Can Ventures Wr Harg Yale Lead Yk Bear Curb Pend Ore Sales to 4% + % s LJ 2 M 34 10% prenatal e ¥ Regs $18% 18% 18% 2% 36 26 365 17 Fa.ma Frobisher Frob debs Giant YK Goldray Gunnar Gunnar 'wis Hard Rock Hoyle Hud Bay Int Nickel Irish Cop Iron Bay Iso $113 11% Kilem C wis Labrador Lake Cin Langis Leitch Lexindin Lorado Lorado wis Macassa Madsen Malartic Maneast U Maritime Matatch Mcintyre 500 500 800 1500 5510 1200 1550 26 230 1300 2000 4850 2000 200 Every year more than 20,000 Canadians borrow thousands of sickroom supplies from the Red Cross Loan Cupboards located in over 500 communities throughout the nation, NES 345 11% 55 1 345 113% 35 11 --~18 $11% 55 11 +1 -% INTERPRETING THE NEWS 63,500 Youngsters| Aided By Societies | TORONTO (CP) -- Ontario's 55, children's aid societies took care of 63,500 youngsters during 1959. legislature Monday said the so- cieties spent $12,500,000. i They took care of 41,500 chil-| dren in their own homes, 22,000 in other homes and supervised adoption of 3,200 youngsters. They also helped 8,000 unmarried dren. Witness Baby Society Ward LONDON, Ont. (CP) '-- Judge Donald B, Menzies in a special | court session Monday made a day-old baby girl a ward of the Children's Aid Society after her | parents refused to permit a blood {transfusion. | The parents, Mr, and Mrs. F.| Ronald Wolfe, are members of the Jehovah's Witnesses sect and | refused to permit the transfusion | which doctors said is necessary | {to save the baby's life. She has |a haemolitic disease which could] be fatal unless the blood changed. Magistrate Menzies, in his ea- pacity) as juvenile and family {court judge, decided the baby's {parents were negligent in refus- ling to permit doctors to carry| out the transfusion and that she| {would become a CAS ward for| {three months. | | The infant received the trans- {fusion minutes after the court's |decision was made. The annual report, of the wel- ended Dec. 31: fare department tabled in the/$4.05 a share; mothers and their 12,500 chil- 445 884 ended Dec. 31: seven cents a share; loss $3,757. year ended Jan. 31: isp 'Apartheid Policy Touch Of Irony By JOSEPH M Canadian Press Staff Writer South African Ambassador Ber- sardus G. Fourie, a man medium stature, quick move ments and steady courage, has in alert and keen look in United Nations debates During the Security Council rote on the South rican racial ssue Fri Fourie kept his syes fastened in obvious suspense mm Sir Pierson Dixon, the Brit- sh. ambassador to the UN It 'was as if South African iaw in the itish delegate the mly hope for softening the im ninent diplomatic blow against tis country. of ely that France, criticized er by the UN for Algerian , would follow the British lead. All other countries in the 11 member council denounced South Africa. Observers saw a touch of irony in that the South African govern- ment, which is considering chang- ng the country to a republic, possibly outside the Common- wealth, nevertheless looked hope- fully for British support for its legal position in the debate. This legal argument is based on the UN charter's provision that "nothing contained in the present charter shall authorize the United Nations to intervene in matters which are essentially pol Use Of Steam Engines Discontinued By CNR MONTREAL (CP) -- After 124|pected to be another five years years, use of steam engines on| before the last of that line's color- the Canadian National Railways|ful steam engines disappears will end this summer with retire-; The S, and L. is a coal - hauling ment of the last steam lo-|railway owned by Dominion Steel comotive, |and Coal Corporation, | The CNR said its plan to con The 29 puffers left on the line vert to diesels--started in 1948 are mostly veterans of other rail- ' 3 : will be completed in June. The|ways. Some of the larger units Commonwealth prime ministers. iway will have 2,144 diesel lo- were bought from U.S. railways are scheduled to meet in Londgn|.omotives and 28 railiners--self-| when diesels started to come into May 8 for their eighth POS-WAr | pronelled coaches--in operation, | their own, Seren Bri It Riding Jat representing an investment of The S. and L. has ordered four Sn oy Wi | $397,000,000. | diesels and more are expected Weerd of South Afri a will gitend.] Diesels have proven themselves| but the switch will not be com- Since every Commonwealth cheaper and faster with less| pleted until 1965. country is free to handle its own maintenance and lower long-term| The railway was formed in 1893 affairs, there is no possibility of repair costs than steam engines.| when the Dominion Coal Com- a joint public roasting of Ver-| wman the CNR started its die-| pany was founded. Its chief pur- woerd but it's certain that some|gejization plan it had 2.463 steam Pose was to carry coal and steel of his fellow prime ministers will locomotives in operation. Now| to ocean terminals at Sydney or speak frankly to him in private./there are about 100--all serving| Louisburg from Cape Breton col- Any South African steps to/in Western Canada. lieries and the Sydney steel plant withdraw from the Common-| Most of the abandoned engines Another Dosco subsidiary, the wealth would tend to remove the have been demolished and sold Cumberland Railway and Coal restraint that some Common-|for scrap. A few of the older| Company, has a half-dozen anc- to co-operate in UN recommenda tions. ient steam engines. One of them CBC Turns Down Hockey Interview TORONTO (CP) William |also considered as a public serv- Dulmage a CBC public relations ice but rejected he said. director said Monday the CBC| "Wwe have to be careful not to refused to allow an interview|/get engulfed in the political with Liberal Leader Pearson on|arena. We try to tread the middle Saturday's Stanley Cup hockey|jine." * gatiie here because of the polit- He said the CBC veto of Mr. Mr. Dulmage said a sponsor's Pearson was exercised as pari of proposal to interview Mr Pear- {Lhe CBC's duty to be responsible son about his former sport con- Top the content of commercial > H time told to sponsors. The NHL ry . " ANE | De a a ii ee telecast was sponsored by Im- . a 3 * _"Iperial Oil Limited. would have been political in na- ture." sig NO CAMERA SPACE Mr. Pearson one-time hockey! H, M. Turner account execu- lacrosse football and baseball tive of Maclaren's Advertising player and coach was a spec-|Company Limited said CBC pro- tator at the Toronto - Detroit Na-|grammers were prepared to tional Hockey League semi-final agree to the Pearson interview) at Maple Leaf Gardens. [but that it could not be held be-| - {cause the arena management re- OMIER POLITICIANS ON lfused to allow a rink-side camera Mr. Dulmage described as "ag. tha purpose. He said gardens' little different story" a recent ap-| n,m no 0ement had said a camera) pearance by federal Transport in tre rink-level corridor would Minister Hees during a hockey interfere with spectators. | When Dixon's hand went up in 7 lwealth spokesmen now feel. {ones have been sold to museums game intermission. He said Mr. oken of abstention on the vote within the domestic jurisdiction Although Britain supported and historical societies for $4,000 still hauls a mixed train every Hees member of a panel which] Conn Smyth president and 600, 40 cents; 1958, $3.198,500, 48 cents. J. S8. Mitchell and Company, |year ended Dec. 31: 1959, $56, |191, 1958, $49,917. Northern Telephone Co. Lids Anthes- : 4 year ended Dec. 31: 1959, 7, pel Cg A Teor | 149, 19 cents; 1958, $807,297, 22 1958, $821,343, cents. $4.91. | Triad Oil Co. Lid., year ended A.J. Freiman, Ltd., year ended Dec. 31; 1959, net loss, $3,452 Dec. 31: 1959, $401,713, $4.48; 705; 1958, $5,156,574. v $305,360, $4.37. Bin MIU DE French Petroleum C y of Canada Ltd., year ended Dec. 31: LAST 2 DAYS! Packed with 1659, net loss $1,301,695; 1958, $1,- Suspense ! JAMES STEWART LEE REMICK BEN GAZZARA ARTHUR O'CONNELL EVE ARDEN KATHRYN GRANT om STOCK MARKET NET EARNINGS By THE CANADIAN PRESS Granby Mining Co. Ltd., year 1959, $32,226, 1958, net! Holt Renfrew and Co. Ltd. 1960, $338, 780, $1.69; 1959, $307,473, $1.33. Hooker Chemical Corporation, year ended Dec. 31: 1959, $2.991,- Mr. Businessman ! FUNDS MADE AVAILABLE TO YOUR BUSINESS Solidify Your Position: We con be of service to your business ~-- Write: Guild Placements SERVICES LTD. 99 Avenue Road, Toronto 5, Ont. ADMITTANCE R PIRSONS. ¥ on om © "9 a vans Of ASE awed Jou N. WELCH es ...Yes! and feather- light and crackling crisp because they're "AQUAFLAKED" o baking process exclusive to. .. (Weslon's CRACKERS & SALTINES jA LIGHT-HEARTED LEER AT LOVE AMONG THE ADULTS! J | day over the company's rail line} ented EE the carte, wos managing director of the gar. | | publicising National Health Week. {dens denied any such request |His appearance was approved by was made. |the CBC as a public service and| Mr. Turner said the request for During the past 10 years Cana- Ar, Hees was introduced as a a rink-side camera was made to the arena management Friday | of any state." {South Africa's legal argument in 5 ompz The UN has condemned South the Security Council, vet ae smeered the use of| to the CNR Springhill Junction on Africa a number of times and|other Commonwealth member-- diesels in 1925 when a self.| the Nova Scotia mainland. about the only thing new in Fri-| took the opposite view. Sir Claude powered passenger car went day's resolution was that UN|Corea said South Africa suffers from Montreal to Vancouver in Secretary-General Dag Hammar-|from a "deep malaise" which en-| 67 hours. In 1929 a two-unit diesel|dian Red Cross representatives former football player. skjold was instructed to take aldangers international peace. Am- travelled between Montreal and have assisted in Red Cross relief, Mr, Dulmage said a television afternoon. i personal hand in the matter. |bassadors from such other Com-! Toronto. {work in The Netherlands, Great!appearance by Prime Minister] Mr. Dulmage said that al- COMMONWEALTH FACTOR {monwealth countries as India| Diesel locomotives are coming Britain, Japan, Austria, Greece, piefenbaker at the start of the though the Pearson interview was QVMONWE AL or Harmar. Pakistan and Ghana spoke M| to the Sydney and Louisburg Rail- Korea, Cavion, Morocco and the NHL, season last fall was also proposed to CBC at the same entions by Britain and France skjold were set out and observers equally bitter terms. |way in Cape Breton but it is ex-/United States. considered in a différent categ- time the late date posed mo in , Tr : in-|superable technical problems. | 1s the best that could be salvaged|feel he may well be hoping that I 0 Mee Pearson's progosed 1a The gor oF was a policy de- n the face of bitter denunciation pressure within the Common- Al ® T ! p . j i Mr. : r was | cision. of his country's racial laws. Cor- wealth itself will help his task Mr. Pearson's appearance wa rriticizing South Africa and de- nanding an end to its apartheid racial separation), Fourie smiled and relaxed. Later he put sn a front for reporters that was tlmost gay, and he exchanged santer with them after hurrying wer to talk with Dixon. [WO EXCEPTIONS Fourie apparently saw the ab- | JANET LEIGH o EXTRA "WONDERS or ONTARIO" in eolor The Story That Spiced The Front Pages Of A Nation! 2, JERRY WALD'S rdor gossip had predicted ac-'So far; South Africa has refused ) 'Cigarets Cause 1 CHCH-TV Channel 11--Hamilton CBLT-TV Channel 6--Toronto| ea I nada) es [completely independent Algeria. | Ahmed clenched his fists and medical professional qualified to| Defence counsel Earl F. Reed, n y + TELEVISION LOG | ? Of Lung Cancer! WEBW-TV Channel 7--Buffale WROC-TV Channel 5--Rochester| : e Oancia of the London | De Gaulle has promised that/made a wrenching motion, much oro oo whether heavy SMOK-{ 0 ocenting Lizget aid Myers " | ve? 3 i i NGR-TV Channel 2--Buffalo WBEN-TV Channel 4--Buffale| "50% S500 © ihn Press step toward the achievement of a pressive! PITTSBURGH (AP) -- Is the'was caused by smoking cigarets. | Algerians will be able to choose|like that used by Canadian In- ing can cause lung cancer? 7--American Bandstand 6--Our Miss Brooks TUESDAY EVE, 4--News Roundup amining the situation posed by 5:00 P.A. 8:15 AM. 5-2--Comedy The. atre Moslem demands for indepe- [freely what they are to be after|dians in decapitating wild fowl. That was the question raised Family Theatre 6--Sportstime S--Playhouse é--~Learn About Things To Do 3-~Three Stooges 5:15 P.M. 6--Children's Newsreel 4---Big Mac Show 4--Captain Kangaroo 8:30 AM 7--Devotions 2-Today 9:00 AM. 11--Romper Room {omedy Korner 5--Ding Dong School 4--Popeye's Playho se 4--The Brighter Day 4:30 P.M. y Giant of Night | 5-2--Adventure Theatre WEDNESDAY EVE, 5:00 P.M. 11--Family Theatre dence and the campaign by French settlers to keep the North African nation tied to France. In this story he tells of the uneasy peace imposed by the Trench army on troubled Algiers. |the rebellion has ended and aftr |a long cooling-off period. | His policy statements indicate |that he does not believe the Al-| gerians will want to be considered land ruled the same as are| Frenchmen in Brittany or Nor-| | who "They do that to anybody doesn't do what the army says, he said, repeating the motion. "One day one of my workmen disappeared." CHARGES TORTURE The man, he added, had been Monday at the opening of a civil trial in U.S. district court on a Pittsburgh cabinet maker's dam- age suit claiming a lung cancer |] overlooking lower Algiers and the harbor. His infant son toddled 5:30 P.M. 1--~News 7--Roeky and His Friends 6-Sky King 2--African 9:30 11---Movie 7-R of | 2--Helen Neville 10.00 d Rowe Show D igh 6:15 P.M, 6--Lawrence Welk 6:30 P.M, 1--Family Theatre 3-4-2--News: Weathe 6:45 P.M. 6-4-2 News 5--Huntley Report 7:00 P.M, 6--Tabloid 5--The Rifleman 4--~Burns and Allen 2-Sergeant Bilko 7:15 P.M. 7--News; Weather 11:00 Jane G 5:2 4-1 Love 11:3 Bob Mel Brinkley and ay Show Price Is Right Lucey tration er Bride Patrol AM. By DAVE OANCIA Canadian Press Staff Writer ALGIERS (CP) -- The French army has imposed an eerie calm on cosmopolitan Algiers, a city | 6--~Art In Action 5--Playhouse | 4--Learn About Storybook Land 2-The Big Rascals 5:15 P.M. | &-Big Mac Show Alle Riley AM. pression of peaceful prosperity. Patrols of five and six men, automatic rifles and sub-ma- chine-guns ready, march with the . |crowds, keeping a watchful eye {on Moslems and Europeans alike. | Persons trying to enter big de- | partment stores or public build- ings are searched at the door for | weapons or bombs. Streets are |emptied long before the 1 a.m. curfew These are the symptoms of an unhappy nation. Conversations quickly show how really deep are the wound$ caused by the stub- Re Mi 2---Gene Autry 6:00 P.M, AM. 6---Sea Hunt 6:30 P.M. 11--Family Theatre Weather 6:45 P.M. S--Huntley- Brinkley Report 11:6-4-2--News 7:00 P.M. AM «an Show NOON mandy. But he is gambling that| his more liberal policy will in-|arrested by the army and 1tor-| around the living room. His wife, duce the Moslem majority to vote tured because they thought he f,rmerly a social worker among for permanent and close political, | had helped the rebels. |the crowded Moslems living in social, economic and cultural ties] 'They tied him to a tree in/the casbah, mixed and | choose a greater degree of in-| They threw salty watey os his| water. ternal self-government, | naked body, They forced him to| at Right-wing Europeans in Al drink salty water. It burned his| ARMY SUPPORT geria fear an inevitable result of insides out. Now he is bad in the| 'The army supported us when de Gaulle's policy will be disaster head and no good for work." we were behind the barricades, in the form of another North| In reply to correspondents' he said. "At night they gave us African Moslem state in which! questions, government officials uniforms, guns and ammunition non-Moslems will be a harassed denied the torture allegations, In.| You know that many of us were and weak minority. | dependent observers, however, earilg French uniforms then | say as co! an-| We are patriots. FEARS ALGERIAN RULE Say ha ee macs "But we failed. France rallied "De Gaulle's policy is bad," {actics to get prisoners to talk to de Gaulle. The army had to said Jules. "It just means that about rebel positions and move- cut us off. If they hadn't done eventually we will have to give nants {that it would have meant civil up everything we have known. | war and none of us wanted that." We will be ruled by the same REBEL BRUTALITY What end did he see to the re- 149 Voi? served {that gives the erroneous first im-| with France even though they do| August, when the sun is hottest. | 'long' drinks of cognac and 2008 | coniann for $1.250,000 in 1954. 7:30 P.M. 7--Bronco 8--Donna Reed $-2---Laramie ces nd Weather 15 P.M. ee 6--Tabloid of R Open House 5-U born rebellion and démonstrate that the January uprising by a few thousand Europeans is far | more than just an ugly memory. people who killed us and our sold- iers and slashed the bodies of our women. "Do you think we will stand for What about the charges of rebel brutality, terrorism and tor- ture, Ahmed was asked. He shrugged his shoulders. {less de Gaulle changes his policy and makes a clear statement that "Disaster is bound to come un. 4~Whirlybirds 8:00 P.M. 116--Chevy Show ws that? For almost six years the "C'est 1a guerre! We have to Algeria is and always will be | DESPERATE ACT | '""The 'barricades in January rebels have been doing that. Now| use whatever means we have to French. There is no other way. de Gaulle wants to give them the! get the French to give us our| 'Look at this child," he said, Tobacco Company, contended in his opening remarks that the medical profession cannot say that cigarets cause lung cancer. But, lawyer James P. Mec- Ardle, representing plaintiff Otto Pritchard, 61, claimed medical scientists could determine if cig- aret smoking causes cancer of |the lung. STARTED SUIT IN 1954 Pritchard sued the tobacco He said he had a lung removed in December, 1953, because of 'Story of 77, apt "og 0SA YOUNG \ RTA © HAYWORTH FRA 2 On 2 rion NCI cancer. This cancer, he charged, was caused by his smoking the] firm's Chesterfield cigarets regularly for 23 years. | Extensive research by lawyers delayed the trial, | McArdle asserted that tarry! compounds in the smoke of Ches-| te! d cigarets caused Prit- chard's cancerous lung. He prom- ised the court to bring experts to the stand to back up his state-| ments. | The cigaret firm used '"'deceit- ful advertising even after it be- came medically known that eig-| arets contained harmful ingredi- ents," McArdle charged. | He contended that this type of 7004 Feature Shown et , . o 2:05 - 4:25 - 6:40 - 8:53 OPEN ALL DAY WEDNESDAY . Southe Sho ™ h 1} tad M ARE SOWtier Show That Bon power to rule us." |freedom, The French have hun- picking up the boy. "I was born advertising lulled Pritchard and 8:30 P.M, 7--Wyatt Ear 5-2-Ford § 4--Doble Gi 9:00 P.M, 116--Front Page Challenge 7--Rifleman Tightrope Coul 12:45 7--Alcoa Presents &~Garry Moore 5-2--M Squad 10:30 P.M. 11.6-Press Conference 7--Coronado 9 5--Black Sacdd F-Johnny Midnight -- News ther; Sports 15 P.M. 7~Playhouse 8--Viewpaint 11:30 P.M, O-Late Show 8--Sports Views 52--Jack Parr 4~Theatre | 11-6--School $~Boxing WEDNESDAY 8:00 AM, ¥--Buffalo AM, 1i--Popeye ig Search for Tomorrow The Malone were an act of desperation," said | Jules, a young professional man [ho was among the French in- | surgents who held out for days in the heart of Algiers in a protest |revolt against President Charles |de Gaulle's policies. | "It was the only way we knew d Be You 5.2--Wagon Train 4--Musical Hour 8:00 P.M. 1 R.CMP, -Take A Good Look 8:30 P.M. 11-6--Live A Borrowed > and Harriet a Is Right 9:00 P.M. Perry Como he H Cy |are French and always want to | be part of France failed. De Gaulle betrayed us." Ahmed is a prosperous Moslem | businessman. His prosperity does [not seem to have lessened his | sympathy for the Algerian reb- els. When he found out the re- porter was Canadian, Ahmed led him aside to talk about the na- | tionalist cause. : | "There are 9,000,000 of us and 11,000,000 Europeans," he said |"We want to be friends with {France and with the Europeans |here. But we want our indepen- | dence. We don't want to be under | the heel of the French army and {th Europeans any more." | FIRST STEP He talked of de Gaulle's offer |of self-determination for Alger- |lans as though it were a first erry ( 9:30 P.M. | 41 Got a Secret 10:00 P.M. 11-6--One Step Beyond Sea Hunt This Is Your Life 6--F 5-2---Wichita Towr 11:00 P.M. Telecay Clock 6 5-2Ja 4p Theatre Jules traced the history of Al- dreds of thousands of soldiers here and my parents were born others into a false sense of se- geria. When the French captured here. We have only a few. We here. We were not rich, but we curity, leading them to believe Algiers in 1830, there were 1,500,- have to do what we can with had a good life. Now that is all {000 Arabs, Berbers and nomadic tribes. There was no unified Al-| gerian nation. "If we had done what you and lof showing de Gaulle and the the Americans did with your In-|out people supporting him that we|dians we would not now have this 'Others who work for wages give problem. You herded them into curiosity like antiquities in museums. "We helped the native people and the rebellion is the thanks we get." MOSLEM VIEW But Ahmed sang praises of the French president's policy. "We trust de Gaulle," he said. "We don't trust anybody else in France. If de Gaulle goes tomor- row, then there will be grave trouble in Algeria. "The rebellion will get worse. ! We have been living in misery fighting this battle for five years, | We can go on living in misery for two . . . three . .'. five years more i necessary. And we will . | win." | Were the French in Algeria op-| what we have." fi What did he do to help the, rebels? "I give money," he said with- a moment's hesitation money too. The poor people give . But we parks and they became a kind of what they can. Some give food, | others work. Practically every Moslem helps the rebellion." FRENCH CLAIMS This statement conflicted with French claims that roughly 60 per cent of the Moslems support France in the fight. One high- ranking officer estimated that of the balance 30 per cent was un- committed--waiting to see which side would win before jumping-- and that only 10 per cent actively backed the rebels. But 10 per cent of the Moslem population is roughly 900,000--in numbers twice the size of the French army in Algeria and al- most as great as the entire Eur- opean population in the country.) Jules vented his bitterness in his small, sixth-floor apartment there was nothing harmful in| Chesterfield cigarets. FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE Don't Miss This Gigantic MILLION DOLLARS BROADLOOM SALE Liquidating this week at . . . NU-WAY 174 MARY ST., OSHAWA Rug and arpet Sales RA 5-0433 LADIES' EZE-ON SLIPPERETTES Soft cushion sole, sizes S, M, L. 8 shades to choose from. Each pair with gold brocaded trim, 2X Pair 2 Stores To Serve You Better DOWNTOWN OSHAWA OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy