2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, April 8, 1960 THREE LEADERS Visiting Premier Barrett of | and Ontario Liberal opposition Quebec (centre) talks with | leader Wintermeyer (right) Premier Frost of Ontario (left) | shortly after addressing the On- IN TORONTO tario Legislature Thursday. | pire Club Ontario and Quebec | Earlier during his one-day | must form a cultural and eco- | . _ | nomic partnership. | goodwill visit he told the Em: --CP Wirephoto Port Manager Tells Of Telephone Threat OTTAWA (CP -- A tipster's, warning of bar-room plotting to protection," said Mr. Beaudet, kill port manager Guy Beaudet of [adding that he'd called thejthe bridge under agreement with Montreal was relayed Thursday RCMP in Montreal and arranged to an intent Commons committee |for a guard at his home, investigating the toll operation of| The man had told Mrs. Beaudet a national harbors board bridge|that he would be in a Montreal undér Mr. Beaudet's authority. |courtroom Tuesday when six for- Quietly but with signs of strain|mer bridge toll collectors appear|chines in 1956, two years after| Liberals 682,590, in his voice, Mr. Beaudet told the on charges of theft and breach of railways committee of a noon- trust. If he recognized the two hour telephone call he had re- plotters, the man had promised, geived from his wife in Montreal. (he would inform the RCMP. He said she'd been phoned the] The Beaudet statement was the night before by an anonymous most dramatic ard sensational man who warned that two men|turn so far in the committee in- pext to him in a Montreal bar| vestigation running parallel with had been "plotting to kill me." |an RCMP inquiry begun late last - - - ------ year. First arrests were made earlier this week. Jacques Cartier bridge toll col- lecting was handled manually un- til September when an automatic | system was installed. Revenues Smoke Calle "He said if I was wise, I'd get Thomas Calls For Revisions In Vote Areas TORONTO (CP) -- Thomas D.| Thomas (CCF -- Oshawa) called Thursday for a revision of On- tario's electoral districts. | Quebec province and Montreal,| Because of the present riding| have agreed that the old manual setup, the Frost government was collecting system was outmoded. able to return to power last June | Mr. Beaudet said Thursday that|With 868,815 votes while the CCF [he recommended automatic ma. |Party polled 313,834 votes and the Witnesses from the National Harbors Board, which operates becoming port manager. He said] "You're a minority government delay by the province in accept-|if there ever was one," he sald ing a new tariff contributed to|during the debate on the speech delay in getting the machines in-/from the throne. stalled, The House is comprised of 71 Purchase of the automatic sys- Progressive Con se rvatives, tem had been approved in prin. Liberals and five CCF. ciple in 1956 by the federal Lib-| He suggested the government eral administration. They were '¢Vise the Waterloo North riding installed last September. 2m the Toronto ridings of York Mr. Beaudet and J, A. Clem oT ast, York Hum- .: a : carborough, Yerlk| ent, bridge superintendent, were South and York West questioned at length on steps g they had taken to check up on toll collections. James Bay Diversion Rejected WASHINGTON (CP)--Republi- can Senator Alexander Wiley of Wisconsin dismissed T h u r sday the idea of asking the United States Senate to study a plan to divert James Bay water into the Great Lakes. "I never promised anyone that I would ask the Senate to study this plan and I'm not doing any- thing about it," Wiley said in an interview. He was commenting on an Ot- tawa dispatch quoting Liberal Hubert Badanai of Fort William as saying the plan to resolve the Canada-U.S. stalemate over Chi- cago water diversion demands had been taken to Wiley and that Wiley had promised to recom- mend the U.S. put up money to launch a study. VAGUE MEMORY "is that some person showed me some papers and said the project would cost more than $1,000,000,000. "You can't reach any decision by looking at maps and papers. I would suggest that if the Cana in it, it can take it up with our government." Badanai suggested fresh water from James Bay be diverted inte Lake Huron by way of the Hurri- canaw, Ottawa and Mattawa rivers, Lake Nipissing and French River. In stages up to 25,000 cubic feet of water a sec- ond would be diverted. 'Wiley is leading the fight against a Chicago proposal to in- crease its take of Lake Michigan water for sewage disposal by 1,- 000 cubic feet a second. Parks Entry Fee Boosted TORONTO (CP)--The vehicle entry permit for provincial parks iinis year will be $2, good for the entire season, Lands and Forests | Minister Spooner announced Thursday. dian government finds any merit| | "Al I remember about it," said| Wiley, | | This is "Fanny The Flame", | the near-nude 14-foot-high fig- ure to hold the Olympic torch in front of the new Sports Palace at the 1960 Rome games. Created by Italian sculptor Emilio Greco who | stands beside her, the figure is @ (devoted to something more con- ; the lead FANNY THE FLAME long-legged, with curvy hips and a well rounded tummy. Waen asked why she wears a shoestring bra, Greco confides | the bra covers not even a hid- den meaning. It appears Fanny couldn't need one less. --AP Wirephoto A reciprocal agr has been worked out with the St. Lawrence Development Commis- sion so the permits will allow en-| try to all parks under commis-| sion control. The entry permit| also is valid for all other pro- vincial parks. | As an alternative, a special | flat rate of 50 cents a day will| be charged for each vehicle en-| tering a park. This is for the con- | venience of tourists who use the| Peat And Water Canadian Assets OTTAWA (CP) -- Is Capada passing up a multi-million-dollar | industry in therapeautic qualities increased immediately, | The move was accompanied by a series of threats to bridge per- Villain In Cancer Charge fi" eer recs PITTSBURGH (AP) -- Cigaret armed men to Mr. Beaudet last smoking can be linked definitely August to halt the installation or with lung egneet, an etal expect harm to himself and his medicine " and therapeutics spe- family, appeared "wide open" and Constance, seventh - month- eialist testified Thursday. Pierre Sevigny, associate de-|clumsy. old miniature French poodle The fact of heavy demand for $1200 COUGH the jobs must have indicated BY CONSTANCE some weakness, said Douglas HARRISONBURG. Virgini nis] OF 4 g SO? 5, Virginia Fisher (CCF--Port Arthur) who, (AP)--There won't be any finally stated that the whole| operation for Constance. She operation prior to last September| eoughed up the goods. parks only occasionally. of its hot springs and hormone The camping fee is $1 a day or |Peats? $5 a week. Harold Winch, CCF MP for At Quetico Provincial Park; the| Vancouver East, suggested entry fee for boats entering by Thursday to Health Minister water has been set at $5 a sea- Monteith that it is. son, | "We can be the health-giving Ten new parks are to be nation of the world if we take opened this year to bring the advantage of them, he told the fotal to 65. Commons estimates committee. associated with health resorts and the like. Mr. Winch said in an interview after the meeting that he once was cured in six days of torn ligaments suffered in an automo- bile accident when he spent three hours each day packed in hor- mone peat. Authorities in the health de- partment here said later they have never heard of hormone {tures. Mr. Macdonnell, 75, former § /minister without portfolio in the the springs at Rueful Opinions Of Defence Bill By JACK BEST Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP) -- Two of the more elderly members of Parlia- ment looked ruefully at Canada's huge defence bill Thursday and wished that the money could be structive. The high cost of running the country's defence establishment --estimated at more than $1,536, 000,000 in the current fiscal year prime ministers' conference next month in "great steps' of further cconomic aid to underdeveloped lands. WOULD STOP WASTE Mr. Herridge said that "for a slart" Canada could save $300.- 000,000 by eliminating wasteful defence expenditures, as pro. posed by the CCF in a non-con- fidence motion now before the House. --drew the attention of H. W. Herridge (CCF--Kootenay West) and Hon. J. M. Macdonnell (PC-- Toronto Greenwood). Both are veterans of the First World War. Mr. Herridge, 66, reiterated his panty's call for planned elimina. tion of wasteful defence expendi- Conservative g ov er nment, be- moaned the expenditure of mil- lions of billions on weapons that "are already obsolete." Both members, speaking in a budget debate that ranged far but |seldom dealt with the 1960-61 budget, advocated increased eco- nemic assistance to underde- veloped countries. Mr. Macdonnell said he did not know how the West could let down its guard. However, he la. mented: | "We watch new weapons being manufactured become obsole ¢ before they are even ready for) use. . . . Meanwhile, another de-| terrent (to war) is not being! adequately used." f He sald he was referring to the | deterrent value of a "working economy in the world," which would permit the emergence of | political and social conditions| under which free institutions can exist, Mr, Macdonnell suggested that| Prime Minister Diefenbaker take at the Commonwealth FOUR SEASONS TRAVEL | Rg <I ALWAYS GOOD FOOD BREAKFAST, LUNCH, DINNER HOTEL LANCASTER GET THE BEST For Less At MODERN UPHOLSTERING 9262 SIMCOE ST. N. OSHAWA RA 8-6451 or RA 3-4131 SCHOFIELD Do You Really INSURANCE ASSOCIATES LTD. Want Service? ® We are available LJ We have it BECAUSE: 24 hours a day. We work hard to service our clients and new accounts. have a personal i by name and not We represent the the best rates. We follow through on every claim. We nterest in each client by number. best companies with You may budget your premiums over 3, 6 or 9 months if desired. FOR SERVICE DAY OR NIGHT, CALL 'Heavy smoking of .cigarets sence minister, said a series of, Both officials agreed they had| Who likes to eat rocks, got in i i t bogs peat. But they said certain peats was the one thing in common Iiieienioned threats halted after he been suspicious. Mr. Clement| trouble last month when she The hot springs and pea gs are mostly found in the mountain might contain hormones derived Schofield Insurance Associates Lid. found in all the epidermoid lung swallowed and eancer cases with which I was af-| filiated," stated Dr. William F.| Kremer, medical director of the Denver Chemical Corporation, Hinsdale, N.Y. Dr. Kremer was a key witness fn a cabinet maker's civil dam- age suit against the Liggett and| Myers Tobacco Company. Otto| Pirtchard, 61, claims he con- tracted lung cancer by smoking the firm's brand of Chesterfield eigarels for 23 years. . Kremer told the eourt that he has 'never known or read| about a case of confirmed epider-| moid lung cancer" that was no accompanied by a history of heavy smoking. Dr. Kremer told the court that fn his opinion the cause of Pirtch-| was named to the cabinet. said no police inspection had] Committee members have been been requested for the toll super-| digging for signs of administra- visor or assistants but he had| tive negligence and political pa- been "building a case" against| tronage. {supervisor Alfred Poole, 63, a 30- THE LIBRARY WORLD | Australian Bush | engagement wedding rings valued at $1,- 200. | Grape Imports 'Alarm Growers ST. CATHARINES (CP)--Cana- dian grape growers are alarmed at the steady increase in imports of grapes and juice for home wine-making, says Keith Matthie, secretary of the Ontario Grape Growers' Marketing Board. Mr. 'Matthie's annual report X-rays ascertained the lo- eation of the loot. A five-week waiting period prescribed by the American Veterinarian Association was drawing to a close, and owner Mrs. George D. Conrad had just about decided Constance would have to undergo an operation Then Constance coughed. Pict Vividly | | ictured Vividly | The following reviews were made by a member of the staff of McLaughlin Public Library. house. Thus begins a life filled with new and extraordinary ex- periences. He comes to know the| {limitless pleasure of hunting | shows more than 8,500,000 gallons of home-made wine was produced in Canada last year. Nearly 2. 000.000 gallons was made in On- tario, mostly in the Toronto area The Ontario home wine had a market value of about $10,000,000, and would have given the gov- Board Delays Judgment On Premier Called ard's lung cancer "was his con-| BOOMER by Dennis Clark. This tinued and heavy smoking over|is a fascinating book, for not only many years." does Denis Clark bring vividly Defnece counsel Frederick|alive a picture of the Australian Haas asked: bush, but he also gives his read- "Do you think that no case of ers little known facts about the jung cancer can occur unless the oddest and most interesting crea- subject is a cigaret smoker?" [tures of the wild, the Kangaroos. Dr. Kremer shot back: "You OLD ONE-TOE by Michel- want to put on me the judgment|Aime Baudoy. Translated from of a god? No one can state what|the French by Marie Ponsot. Piet ean or cannot occur. I say thatis one of several city children heavy smoking and lung cancer|who have come to live with are related." Auntie Tatie in her old mill INTERPRETING THE NEWS Arms Delegates Agree To Delay |buoys at a few areas of agree By ED SIMON Canadian Press Staff Writer | The current difficulty facing the 10-power disarmament conference in Geneva arises from the fact that the delegates have done their| job too well. East 18 armed with conflicting sets of proposals, couched in general terms and containing no essential departures from policies espoused by their leaders in the past. On paper, each appeared to con- sain the rudiments of a reason- able program for disarming the world, assuming that both sides eould agree on the multiplicity of | detail required before it could be- eome a practicable working ar- rangement, At the same time, it was tacitly understood that disarma- ment will be high on the agenda of the summit conference in Paris mext month and that the crucial| differences of principle between East and West are unlikely to be altered before then. CAUTIOUS PROBING The general idea appears to have been that the Geneva dele- gates would spend the intervening two months cautiously probing each other's proposals, searching for minor areas of agreement and attempting to bypass the major difficulties for possible settle ment at the summit, Today, with the summit still five weeks away, the delegates bave dutifully dropped marker the first delegate takes the floor. | and West arrived March) ment. But the course of their dis- cussions is dotted with so many points of disagreement that fur-| ther progress is almost impos- sible. When Soviet delegate Valerian Zorin suggested that the confer- ence abandon debate on the two rival proposals and go back to talking about the United Nations assembly resolution that brought it into being, he was clearly casting about for something to keep the talks going until the chiefs of state 'are ready to take| over. LITTLE LEEWAY The trouble with Zorin's solu- tion is that it offers scope for little fresh subject matter. The assembly resolution has already {been given a thorough going-over {in the last three weeks. Russia and her allies maintain that the resolution instructs the delegates to see to it that the world gets rid of its arms as quickly as possible. The Western powers insist that it tells the con- ference to work out a carefully controlled and enforceable plan under which disarmament could |be carried out, It is the disarmament versus controls disagreement that has stood between East and West at every turn of the discussion to date, If Zorin's suggestion is fol- lowed, it should confront them |again within five minutes when {without a gun. When he realizes that the fox, Old One-Toe recog- nizes him without fear, Piet' is complete. | <r Contract Plea | TORONTO (CP)--A plumbers' One-Toe is a cunning and wary strike at a building project at |russet flame scouring the nearby| Peterborough Civic Hospital fol- |farms and the hunters dream of lowed a plumbing contractor's |tracking him down. The long|refusal to have "a cozy. little ar- awaited, desperate moment in/rangment rammed down his which Piet's two friends, fox and |throat by the union," Ontario La- man, match wits is the compell- bor Relations Board was told Ing climax to a suspenseful story | Thursday. set i i -| " alk Rg beautiful French eoun-| ne girike halted work om a {$2,300,000 extension to the hospi-|! ernment a $2,650,000 profit if sold through the liquor control board. In Toronto last year more than 1,000 freight-car loads of Cali- fornia wine-type grapes were sold during the fall. The report reveals that the value of Niagara Peninsula grapes sold last year for process- ing dropped by about $200,000 from the previous year to $2,682,- 000. The total 1959 crop was 34,- 800 tons, 33 per cent less than fanges of Western Canada. Health authorities disagree on| the merits of hot springs and peat treatments. Some say they induce no organic changes that can't be obtained in a plain hot bath. They say the organic improve- ments usually attributed to hot springs derive instead from the rest and special attention usually 'Unruly Member' TORONTO (CP)--A CCF mem- ber of the legislature Thursday called Premier Frost the most unruly member of the House. During the budget debate, Thomas D. Thomas (CCF--Osh- awa), a member since 1948, said the premier was guilty of inter- fering with parliamentary proce- dure. "The other day I tried to count the number of times he was out of order and I lost count," said Mr. Thomas. He blamed all three parties for "offending" the rules. "If I was sitting up in the public gallery 1 would think I was watching a bunch of clowns in a third-rate vaudeville show." KPO, THE LEPARD by Rene tal. from plant remains which con- ceivably could help certain all- ments. EARNEST PUPILS CLYDEBANK, Scotiand (CP)-- | Thirty angry schoolboys marched to the education offices of this town and demanded more les- sons. They say they spend four 6 Simcoe North DON ELLISON hours a week doing nothing. JACK MOORE RA 3-2265 REG AKER Guillot. Translated by Gwen| The board reserved its decision Marsh, With Kpo we share the on an application by the con- | terror of a forest fire and tic re- tractor, B.S. Fox Plumbing and sulting flight with her mother to Heating Limited, for leave to new hunting grounds in the bar- prosecute the United Plumbers' ren lands of the African desert.|and Pipefitters' Union and the There follows her Mother's death |business agent of the union's rig He Yous pepaics adoption | Local 813. y a cheetah family, until one ' : : day she is captiired by a youthful Tn Jhusssbers Jie which | chieftain. Though devoted to her| Sen Ie bth 26 been. de- young master, the jungle calls | "87 gal by the board. her and eventually she returns| The board was told by Fox to the forest and her proud heri-|COmpany representative George tage as queen of the forest. {Ferguson that the union had not The April meeting of Albert applied for certification and could Street Home and School Associa. NOt legally represent Fox em.| tion was held in the Children's Ployees in collective bargaining. | Library on Monday evening April Engene B. Canby, consultant] 5th, with Miss Enid Wallace as|engineer, said company policy| guest speaker. Her subject was was to pay wages equal to those! Oshawa Suburban | | | | County of Ontario and TENDER FOR EQUIPMENT Road Commission Sealed tenders, clear! until 4:30 p.m. Mond for the supply of the "Your library and Canadian Li- paid by local competitors. brary Week". E. B. Jolliffe, the union's legal| Films for the children to be representative, noted that the em- shown Saturday, : April 16, "An-|ployees were paid the differential | gotee", "How Animals Help Us",|during one week. He argued that "Ostrich Trouble". |the company, by not continuing Be sure to see the exhibition with the differential, were in ar- of Mr. Damosdy's paintings in|rears with wages and the walk- "2. Truck--1; ton panel 3 3 inch diaphragm the Library Auditorium. off was not illegal. FOOD CHAMBERS © 65 UNDERWRITERS RD. oO) SE ARET FREEZERS FROM . . . $239 For Information call RA 8-5358 THE FOOD PLAN THAT HAS PROVEN ITSELF -and post hole digger 6. Tenders must be submitted on forms which together with additional information, may be secured from the signed. Lowest or accepted. R. E. SIMS, P. Eng. Engineer, County B Whitby, Ont. tents, will be received by the undersigned 1. Truck Cab and Chassis--22000 G.V.W. min. Portable Water Pumps--3 inch centrifugal and Portable Steam Generator--approx. 20 H.P. Diesel Farm Type Tractor with loader, mower Three Automatic Hopper Type Sand Spreaders any tender y marked as to con- ay, April 18th, 1960, following equipment: office of the under- not necessarily County of Ontario uildings, rem ANNUAL SPRING SUNDAY, APRIL [Oth 1-6P.M. At Our Greenhouses - Bloor Street West Oshawa A Cordial invitat ion is extended to every- one to see this outstanding display. See thousands of EASTER LILY BLOOMS, hundreds of POTTED MUMS, CINERAR- IAS, POTTED HYDRANGEA PLANTS in Pink and Blue and White. DAFFODILS, TULIPS, SNAPDRAGONS, arrangements of CARNATIONS, STOCKS and beautiful ROSES. On gre ® CAMERA ENTH e hour has been set aside from amateur photographers who may wish to toke shots in our enhouses on Sunday. USIASTS eo 11.30 to 12.30 for all R. B. REED & SONS Florists 163 BLOOR STREET WEST, OSHAWA