Daily Times-Gazette, 14 Aug 1950, p. 2

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i Deaths BLIGHT--In loving memory of our - April 29, 1900, in London, to Cath- ""He was also a member of the Gold- wife, three daughters, Mrs, George ~Lawrence "*and four sons, George, 'PAGE TWO -. THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE MONDAY, AUGUST 14, 1950 '. Births APPLEYARD--Mr. and Mrs, W. K. Appleyard (nee Whalley) are happy to announce the birth of their daughter, Linda Marie, on Sunday, August 13, 1950, at the Oshawa General Hospital. DRYNAN--Born to Margaret Isobel Drynan, wife of George K. Drynan, at Oshawa General Hospital, on Monday, August 14, 1950, a sen, James William. HALL--Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Hall (nee Teresa Leahy) " are happy to announce the arrival «of their son, Willlam Harvey, on * August 10, 1950, at Oshawa General Hospital. Mother and baby doing fine. SMITHERS -- Mr. and Mrs. Roy Smithers (nee Ruth Sugden) are very happy to announce the arrival "of their daughter, at the Oshawa General Hospital, on Saturday, == August 12, 1950. ~"WALKER -- Louise and Johnnie . Walker wish to announce the birth of a son, John William, on Satur- day, August 12, 1950, at the Oshawa *- General Hospital -- a brother for =~ Joan. h "FOWLER--In Oshawa General Hos- pital, Saturday, August 12, 1950, Albert George Fowler, 226 Conant St., beloved husband of Catherine Aldis, father of Mrs. G. Hardsand, Oshawa; Mrs. W. Lawrence, . Nestleton; Mrs. G. Black, of Cour- tice; George, Edward, Walter and Ernest, Toronto; in his 75th year. Funeral from Luke-McIntosh Fu- neral Home, Tuesday, August 15, at 2 p.m. Interment Mount Lawn Ceme- tery. In Memoriam . dear father, Edward Blight, who passed away August 14, 1939. We do not forget you, nor do we intend, We think of you often, and will to the end; Gone and forgotten by some "may be, .But dear to our memory you ever will be. --Always remembered by daugh- # ters, Frances and Elva. ®hituary ALBERT GEORGE FOWLER The death occurred at the Osh- awa General Hospital on Saturday -afternoon, August 12, after one] week's illness, of Albert George -Fowler, 226 Conant Street. Mr. Fow- ler was born in London, England, 74 years ago, and was married on you _erine Aldis. They came to Canada in 1904 and resided in Oshawa for a number of years, then going to ""Toronto to live. They returned to "this city three years ago to make their home here. Mr. Fowler was a _motor mechanic but while he lived in Oshawa previously was employ- _ed by the Ontario Malleable Iron - Company. Mr. Fowler was a member of the * Anglican Church, and a Past Dis- trict Deputy of the Sons of England. en Age Club of Simcoe Hall. ~ The deceased is survived by his Hardsand (Alice), Oshawa; Mrs. w.| (Muriel), Nestleton and (Edith), Mrs. G. Black Courtice Fdward, Port Perry, | Walter and Ernest, all of Toronto. "There are 24 grand-children and four great-grandchildren. A brother, William, Flint, Michigan and a sis- or, Mrs. J. Kenney, of Victoria, The funeral service will be held at the Luke-McIntosh Funeral Home, King Street East, on Tues- day afternoon, at 2 p.m. with Rev. E. H. 'McLellan, of Holy Trinity | Anglican Church, officiating. In-| ferment will be in Mount Lawn "Cemetery. | Oshawa and District ie FINED $50 AND COSTS - - Pleading guilty to his second of- ""fense in the past few months of * being intoxicated, Steven Sweeney, of Oshawa, was fined $50 and costs 'or 30 days in jail when he appeared = before Magistrate R. P. Locke in Police Court here today. POWER INTERRUPTION .2= The interruption in power at .rabout 11.20 this morning was not » caused through a local condition, .«. Public Utilities Commission officials --sald. The whole e¢ity was without . power for about ten minutes. Cause . of the cut-off was Hydro Electric Commission high tension wire trouble. CARS IN COLLISION Two cars were extensively dam- =" aged Saturday afternoon but no one = was hurt when they collided at the . Intersection of William Street and '. Ontario Street. ©» According to police, Russell + Snider, of Huitonville, was driving . west on William Street when he » collided with a car southbound on ~ Ontario Street operated by Grant « Allen, 186 Gibbon Street. Radio-Poison in War Inpractical Says U.S. Washington, Aug. 14 (AP). --Use «of radio-active materials to make enemy territory uninhabitable offers + ntriguing military possibilities, but + the United States Government says s the only practical way of waging ~ nuclear war at present. is with : bombs. atomic % .- The first comprebensive official + «discussion of the untried art of + "radiological warfare" -- the tech- "nique of killing or sickening persons + by poisonous nuclear fission pro- ;.ducts--was contained in a govern- 'ment book published during the + week-end. *. QUINTS REPORTED IN INDIA +; Jubulpore, India, Aug. 14 (Reu- 5 ters) --Quintuplets have been born 27at Sanchara, a village in the Rewa widistrict of central India, unconfirm- ied reports reaching here today said. The reports said the mother and were "well." Korea (Continued from Page 1) winding river there has been re- inforced. Early Monday night U.S. eighth Army headquarters in Korea said the attacking Amer- icans at Changnyong had at- tained their pri y objectives. MacArthur's headquarters in Tokyo sald the attack was "pro- ceeding satisfactorily." American Army and Navy planes and the Royal Australian Air Force poured a crushing weight of bombs and rockets on the Communist in- vaders. But for all its ferocity, the Chang- nyong fighting was described by a general officer at MacArthur's head- |- quarters as probably secondary to the "critical area" which extends 20 miles north and south of the town of Waegwan, 32 miles north of Changnyong. The Communists have put four elite divisions on the Waegwan line just 12 air miles northwest of Taegu, the South Korean Republic's emer- gency capital. Two other North Kor- ean divisions were behind them with armor to exploit -the breakthrough' the Reds expect to make against the United States 1st Cavalry Division and South Korean forces. Intelligence officers said the Communist steamroller is ex- pected to strike out momentar- ily from the Waegwan area for Taegu. Both the Changnyong River crossing, to the south, and the attack of Pohang, No. 2 Korean pogt on the east coast, were de- signed to immobilize as much American and South Korean strength as possible, intelligence officers said. The Waegwan central front Com- munists keep threwing out probing arms, hunting for weak spots in the long line, The United States 1st Cavalry Di- vision caught 500 Communists crossing the Naktong near Waegwan early Monday. The cavalry killed or wounded 300 of them and most of the remainder fled back "across the river. Some Reds took refuge in the hills and cavalry patrols were hunt- ing them, A general staff officer said the situation north and west of Pohang, the Korea east coast 'port, was "generally satisfac- tory." He said the North Kor- eans at Pohang had been suc- cessful in forcing U.S. and South Korean troops to fight "a holding action." They also prevented the American air force from using the new and important fighter plane field six miles south of Pohang at Yongil. American tanks and infantry still held the Pohang airstrip. A Red battalion was in possession of Poh- ang Port. North and South Koreans foyght minor battles in the Pohang area. On the south coast front, Ameri- can Marines moved into hige ground overlooking the rubbled city of Chinju. The Marines formed a line from the Nam River, on the outskirts of Chinju, to Purvis Nar- rows to the south. The Chinju heights were the objective of the Marine and Ar- my task force which splintered and dispersed the crack North Korean Sixth Division attempt- ing to mount an offensive against Pusan from there. Pu- san, Korea's No. 1 port on the southeast tip; is 55 miles east of Chinju. United States Army infantry pressed forward against an enemy force now estimated at battalion strength at Tundok, five miles be- hind the hills east of Shinju. It ap- parently was all that remained of a North Korean regiment that was bypassed and encircled by the Am- erican advance, For the expected attack at Waeg- wan, 52 miles north of Chinju, the Americans have good defensive posi- tions except for the shallow Nak- tong River. This is the Taejon-Tae- gu corridor through the mountains. Intelligence officers said this corri- dor would be the: logical place for an attempted breakthrough. They pointed out the Communists have massed their heaviest striking force in this area. They added the Reds have moved boldly in daylight despite air attacks by Allied planes. : It all adds up to a determined ef- fort to smash the American centre ol al costs, the intelligence officer sa, Top Chinese Red Off On Mysterious Trip Hong Kong, Aug. 14 '(AP).--A Chinese Nationalist report said today Mao Tze-Tung, top Chinese Communist, left Peiping. Aug. 11 for an Wisin destination. A to the newspaper Wah Kiu Sat Fo from Taipei, Formosa, sald Mao left "after receiving cabled instructions from Stalin." Mao returned to China in Yebru- ary after a visit to Moscow which resulted in a 30-year Russian- Communist China. alliance, Reports received by Nationalists in Formosa sald some Communist leaders in Peiping had revealed "Mao probably was heading for Muden, Manchuria, where he was to hold a conferencce with a group of Soviet military advisers." Menzies Mum on Plan To Re-Arm Japanese Tokyo, Aug. 14 (Reuters) -- Prime Minister Robert G. Menzies of Aus- | tralia said today that until there is | a Japanese peace treaty there could be no discussion of an anti-Com- | munist front in the Pacific that | would include Japan as a member. | He declined to comment on] whether Australia would favor re- | arming Japan. | "There is still strong|anti-Japa- nese feeling in Australia," he told Japanese newspaper men. "I think {it would be foolish fo pretend there |is not. At the same time we pride | ourselves on being pretty sensible | people. We take a. broad view. of any matters." World News In Brit New Delhi, Aug. 14 -- (AP) B. V. Keskar,' deputy foreign min- ister, told Parliament today that Portugal has rejected India's de- mands that the three small Portu- guese colonies in India be turned over to this country. The Hague, Aug. 14 -- (Reuters) -- Modern treatment of criminals will be discussed by criminologists, prison officials and welfare experts from more than 20 countries meet- ing here for the 13th International Penal and Penitentiary Congress. About 450 delegates will hear world methods of criminal detention. London, Aug. 14 -- (Reuters) -- Russian literary critics are critized today by the Communist Party newspaper Pravda, which accuses them of praising "vicious works." Pravda, quoted by Moscow radio, experts read 150 papers on latest | | world war. But he said there is "no | road back from Korea, except a vic- says that the Union of Soviet Writers, the Literary Gazette and the Literary Art Publications are not using enough punch in their criticism of Soviet writing. London, Aug. 14 -- (Reuters) -- Home Secretary Ede today refused a reprieve for Albert Price, 32-year- old confessed slayer of his wife and two baby daughters. Price, sentenced to death for battering his wife to death with an axe, is due to be hanged Wednesday. exchange teaching plan, Left to tawa; Mrs. Doris Clempson from Sydenham to Toronto, and J Ont, The 40 Canadian teachers wil soon leave for Great Britain. U.K. Exchange Teachers Arrive In A year's teaching in Ontario and British Columbia is the program ahead of these nine school teachers. They are a part of a group of 40 British teachers in Oanada to teach during the forthcoming school year under an ht: Mary Lochhead of Cleland, Scotland, whe is going to Victoria; Sylvia Lovett of London going to Midland, Ont.; Mrs. Constance Jones, Walshall, Staffordshire, going to T Margaret Pick, Bristol ,going to Vancouver; Leity Holgate from Burnley, Lanes, to Trenton, Ont.; Jones, husband of Mrs. Jones, also going to Toronte; Margaret Atkin, 44 C Canada Ed Bus' 1ess And Markets The background to current sharp increases in the prices of basic com- modities, especially rubber, tin, sugar, fats and Hils, is reviewed in the current monthly letter of the Bank of Nova Scotia. Says the let- ter in part: Basic commodity prices prior to the Communist attack in Korea were showing moderate strength. The high level of business activity in the United States and the gradual in- crease in industrial production overseas meant a stron, demand for industrial raw materials, the pro- duction of a number of which was barely sufficient to meet require- ments. Farmers' Market PRODUCE -- Toronto, Aug. 14 (CP) --Produce prices quoted on the spot market this morning: Churning cream: No. 1, truck price, 54 cents; delivered, 57 cents. Creamery prints: First grade, 55 cents GRAIN :- Chicago Chicago, Aug. 1--(AP) -- Grains opened a little lower in quiet deal- ings on the Beard of Trade today. Wheat started 's-7% cent lower, September $2.24':; corn was 5% more question. A: the same time, however, world | lower to % higher, September $1.52, food supplies were increasing and |and oats were 's-% higher, Septem- the outlook for the prices of some| ber 77. Soybeans werg 1% to two agricultural commodities such as | cents lower, November $2.41%3-%. grains and even sugar was open to SRR -- ! Winnipeg That was the immediate picture. | Winnipeg, Aug. 14 -- (CP) The medium-term outlook sug-| prices moved narrowly in early Watkin Rutherglen, Scotland, going to Ot- land, Glasgow, to Campbelliford, ~--Central Press Canadian. London ,Aug. 14 (Reuters) Barge-building, lip-reading and pigeon-keeping are among 500 sub- jects which Londoners may study at day or evening classes run by the London County Council, its few prospectus said today. In addition to art, music, lan- guages, trades and handicrafts, there are such unusual subjects as bee-keeping, histology (study of tis- sues), puppetry (art of manipulat- ing puppet dolls) and sewage. Oslo, Aug. 14 (CP) -- Secretary- General Trygve Lie of the United Nations said today he believes it is possible to keep the Korean war from spreading. Back in his native Oslo for a vacation, Lie told re- porters he is confident that no re- sponsible statesman in any country will take steps leading to a third tory for the principle of justice over the principle of power politics." | Belfast, Aug. 14 (CP)--Sir Basil Brooke, prime minister of Northern | Ireland, today handed over to the Belfast Rotary Club a plaque pre- sented to him by the Rotary Club of London, Ont. The plaque, which has | Sir Basil's name on it, was present- | ed during hi§ recent North Ameri- can tour. y' Leak Canadian Visitors Invade Chicago People swimming at the Chicago lakefront that Canadian geese like the Windy City as a vacation resort. A the conclusion A flight have come to '| low Acres, G. E. Osborne. London, Aug. 14 (CP)--The Trea- of 30 birds from Canada landed on the lake and immediately "took over." sury announced today that Cana- dian citizens living in the United Kingdom may contribute to govern- ment social insurance schemes in destination. The group of geese shown here waddle along the shore, much to the delight of a youngster. The geese refused to comment on their eventual --Central Press Canadian. Canada. The only restriction is that persons with sterling bank accounts are expected to pay any such pre- | miums out of their foreign-currency | assets rather than by remitting | them in sterling from the United | Kingdom. Tehran, Iran, Aug. 14--(AP)--A high Soviet official arrived Sunday | to open negotiations for a commer- | | The Lebarion and Yemen. cial barter deal with Iran. The ne- | gotiations are regarded by western | diplomatic circles as a continuation of recent Soviet overtures for friend- ship with Iran. Wellington, N.Z., Aug. 14--(Reu- ters)--Aircraft orders placed with Britain as part of New Zealand's military rearmament plan include jet fighter bombers, transport and communications aicraft and train- ers. The fighter-bombers are De Havilland Jet Vampires, to be used for Army support, Battle Creek, Mich., Aug. 14-- (CP) --For two hours yesterday Mrs. Ar- chie Dillon sat helpless in a row- boat on a nearby lake and watched her husband die. Dillon suffered a heart attack, and for the next two hours his wife struggled to raise two anchors at each end of the boat. She was unable to lift them, and her husband died before her cries for help were heard. Berkeley, Calif, Aug. 14--(AP)-- Janitors and other custodial em- ployees today went on strike at the University of California. Wages are the issue. Halifax, Aug. 14 -- (CP) -- Peter Bradbury is going to consider well before offering help in future, He helped push a motor-car out of deep sand. The car owner's dog leaned out the front window and bit him on the lip. Ottawa, Aug, 14--CP)--The CBC Board of governors will hold its next meeting at Vancouver Sept. 19 and 20, it was announced today. Toronto, Aug. 14--(CP)--Provin- cial Police Constable Ed Whitehead braked his car sharply to a scheech- ing stop early Sunday as an object with a blazing 100-foot tail swoosh- ed by and landed in a field 30 yards away. The object that interrupted his post-midnight patrol near Lang- staff, 10 miles north of here, turned out to be a basebali-sized meteorite. Niagara Falls, Ont., Aug. 14--(CP) --Major Hill, 31-year-old riverman, today was fined $36 after he pleaded guilty to careless driving and oper- ating a truck without a licence. Hill said he was speeding to escape re- porters early Aug. 6 after he placed a steel barrel in the Niagara River and made ready for a trip in it through the Rapids. Quebec, Aug. 14--(CP)-- Millions of moths swept into Quebec City last night, swarming around street lights as thick as snowflakes in a winter storm, and pouring in open windows, Provincial Entomolokist Lionel Davilault said the moths per- haps 'were driven into the city by the wind. . The Arab League, formed by pact in 1945, consists of Egypt, Iraq, Transjordan, Saudi-Arabia, Syria, inches thick by, the roadside. It Looks Like Snow It looks like snow, it feels like snow, and you can make snowballs with it--but to the weatherman, it's not snow. patches of the stuff caused travellers to rub their eyes and investigate. Weather experts say it was hail, and not at all uncommon on hot days. Sandy Staples, left, gives Eleanor Gibb a "hall facial" from a pile two North of Orillia, Ont., white ~--Central Press Canadian. New York, Aug. 14--(AP) -- The hydrogen bomb is running a faster schedule than its predecessor A- bomb, Calling in the Dupont Company to do much the same job for H- bombs as for A-bombs shows the difference. For H-bombs the Du- ponts were called in six months after President Truman's starting order last January. For A-bombs the company was noi called for several years, For A-bomibs the Duponts made plutonium, a new metal. For H- bombs . they evidently will make tritium, a new hydrogen gas, triple ordinary weight. It took about 2%: years to manu- facture plutonium. Tritum may come faster because the process is similar. Tritium probably is the most ex- pensive substance ever made in quantity. The only published es- timate of cost in nearly $450,000,000 a pound, Why use tritium There are two other forms of hydrogen, Deuterium, which is double weight. Deuterium, known as heavy water, is not ex- pensive. Ordinary hydrogen can't be used because it fuses too slowly. Bomb fusion must take place within a few millionths of a second. Deu- terium is fast, perhaps fast enough. But tritium is faster. THe margin of success is so nar- H-Bomb Nearer Completion After A-Bomb Leads Way row, a matter possibly of billionths o fa second, that tritium may be even more of a Must for the H- bomb than plutonium was for A- bombs. Tritium is made in the same atomic reactors that make pluton- ium. Present reactors can make 80 pounds of plutonium for one pound of tritium, and the prospects of speeding up the new hydrogen are poor. A good guess is that H-bombs will not be made entirely of this pre- cious stuff. A little tritium may be the catalyst that will enable the use of cheaper forms of hydrogen. Tritium was discovered shortly before the Second World War. Small amounts have been made in Amer- ican plutonium plants. Tritium can be made from at least six different elements. These are deuterium, hel- lium, lithium, beryllium, born and nitrogen. There are at least seven processes, most of them using the neutrons that are made only ia atomic reactors. 'The simplest process uses deu- terium as a starting material: But what process will be used, or whe- ther it is even one of the seven known, is a secret. . Making a hydrogen bomb may be difficult but it is not mysterious. H- bombs are the oldest nuclear bombs, All the scientists in the world knew the principles of hydrogen bombs Flower Show (Continued from Page 3) E. W. Sissons, Willow Acres. Section 4 -- E. A. Summers, Wil- low Acres, Willow Acres. Section 5 -- E. W. Sissons, E. A. Summers, Sidney Mode. Section 6 -- E. W. Sissons, Willow Acres, E. W. Sissons. Section 7 -- E. A. Summers, Wil- Section 8 -- Willow Acres, E. A. Summers, E .W. Sissons. Section 9 -- Willow Acres, E. W. Sissons, E. A. Sissons. Section 10--E. 8S. Sissons, Brooks, Sidney Mode. Section 11--E. W. Sissons, E. W. Sissons, Willow Acres. Section 12--E. A, Summers, G. E. Osborne, E. W. Sissons. Section 13--Willow Acres, Wil- low Acres, E. W. Sisson. Section 14--E. W. Sissons, E. W. Sissons, Willow Acres. Section 15--Willow Acres, low Acres, E. W. Sissons. Section 16--E. A. Summers. Section 17--E, A. Summers, 'W. Sissons. Section 18--Willow Acres, low Acres, Willow Acres. Section 19--E. S. Sissons, Willow Acres, Willow Acres. Section 20--D. H. MacMillan, A. Deeming, G. Osborne. | Section 21--A. Deeming, E. W.| Sissons, G. Osborne. | Section 22--Willow Acres, Willow | Acres, D. H. MacMillan. Section 23--D. H. MacMillan, | Willow Acres, G. Osborne. | Class D--Seedling Class | Section 1--E. W. Sissons, E. A.| Summers. | Section 2--E. W. Sissons, S. Mode, | 8S. Mode. [ | J. Wil- E Wwil- Section 3--Willow Acres, E. W. Sissons. ! Section 4--E, W. Sissons, E. A. | Summers, E. A. Summers. | Class NI--New Introduction Class Section 1--Willow Acres, Willow Acres, E, W. Sissons. Section 2--Sidney Mode. Section 3--S. Mode, Willow Acres, Willow Acres. Section 4--E. W. Sissons, Acres, Section 5--E. W. Sissons, Willow Acres, Willow Acres, Section 6--Sidney Mode, Acres. Willow | Willow Acres. | Willow d the possibility of a resump-| trading today on Winnipeg Grain tion of the downward movement in| Exchange. basic corrodity prices. In addi- | Hedging sales were reported in tion to the prospect of somewhat | oats and barley and to minor ex- better distributed food supplies | tent in rye. there remained the likelihood of A few shipping orders were regis- some slackening in United States| tered in oats and barley and there business activity when the demand | yas some American demand for for automobiles and housing waned | deferred oats contracts. | dustrialization in India and further '| assist economy recovery . . . In general, it appeared that the board trend might be down- | ward possibly over the next couple | Trading was dull. 10 A.M. prices: higher at Oats: Oct. 4% 84%; of years, through the supply of some | pec. unch at 79'2A; May % higher commodities would remain tight. The long-term outlook appeared | more boyant . . . | at 79%. Barley: Oct. 1 higher at 1.23%; Dec. 'i higher at 1.17 % May unch The trend of consumption in the | at 1.17%B. US. and Eur De was upward, Rye: Oct. 4 higher at 1.46B; Dec. especially as Germany recoverec , .| i; higher at 1.45B; May % lower There were the evident growth and | at 147%B. further industrialization in such | countries as Canada, Australia, and | Flax: Not open. Inspections: Wheat this year 207; some of the Latin-American repub- | last year 558; cars of contract 225; lics, and the prospects of more in- recovery in Japan. . . ,Now superimposed on this pic- ture, are the grave developments of | the past weeks. The stepping-up of | U.S. defence expenditures on the proposed scale is a development of Major significance. . Morever, the fighting in Asia raises questions about supplies of commodities from that part of the world. Furthermore, the Communist pressure in Asia is clearly not con- fined to Korea, and the need to in such countries as India was never more apparent. The impact of these new develop- ments is highly uneven and t = possibility of over-buying must not be riscounted. There still are sur- oats 98-165; barley 6789; flax 0-6; | rye 13-25; 481-844. other grains 4-1; total LIVESTOCK :- Torento Toronto, 'Aug. 14 (CP)--Plain to medium quality cattle made up the bulk of | stockyards this morning. reported by the Dominion Market- inl | calves 640; | lambs 350. Left from last week were | 800 cattle. at the Ontario Receipts supplies were: cattle, ' 3,200; hogs 200; sheep and Service A few early sales of stockers were about steady at $25.50-$27 with short | keeps at $28.75-$29. | sales were too few to establish prices. Other cattle Calves were steady at $29-$31 for | choice vealers. | Lambs were $29-$29.50 for good |ewes and wethers. Off car lambs | brought $29.50. Bucks were at $1 | Siscount. There were no early sheep sales. pluses of some commodities, and in others higher prices might quickly bring demand into line with supply. Thus, though the Korean war has radically altered the present position and near-term prospects, the extent of its inflatior.ary influ- | ence depends on the fture course of international political developments. | 14 (AP)-- | Cattle 600; good Holstein cows | mostly 19.00-20.00; good dairy type LONDON STOCKS | heifers for slaughter 22.00-24.00; London, Aug. 14 -- (Reuters) __| good weighty sausage bulls 23.50- Despite an undertone of caution | while awaiting developments in | Buffalo Buffalo, N.Y. Aug. 24.50 célves 300; good. and choice calves 34.00-36.00; culls and strong- | better class industrials. recorded a quiet firmness in many domestic issues today. British government funds re- sponded with fractional gains to small buying and there were im- | provements of a new pence in the Dealings in two new industrial shares cap- tured most of the attention and interest, however, In the foreign section, Japanese Section 7--Willow Acres, Sidney Mod e. | Section 8--Willow Acres, S. Mode, | Willow Acres. Section 9--Willow Acres, S. Mode. | Section 10--Willow Acres, Wil- | low Acres, Sidney Mode. { Section 11--Willow Acres, E. W. | Sissons, S. Mode. Section 12--S. Mode, S. Mode, S. ode, Section 13--Willow Acres, S. Mode, | Willow Acres. Section 14--E. S. Sissons, Willow Acres, Willow Acres, Section 15--Willow Acres, Acres, E. W. Sissons. Section 16--Willow Acres. Class B.G.--Backyard Growers w. Section 1--John Allan, G. F. An- nis, Walter Meens, Section 2--John Allan, Hoplins, Walter Meens. Section 3--F. Samis, F. Samis, J. Brooks. Section 4--@G. F. Annis, F. Samis, W. Fernley. Section 5--John Allan, Hopkins, F. Samis, Section 6--Walter Hopkins, F. Samis. Class SD--Small Decorative Class | Section 1--Fred Ing, Dr. Sissons, Willow Acres. A Section 2--E. W. Sissons, Willow Acres, G. Osborne. Section 3--E. W. Sissons, Willow Acres. Children's Class . Section 1--Linda Osborne. Section 2--Linda Osborne. Thos. Thos. Meens, Thos. SIXTH SENSE Paris--(CP)--An Indian magician, P. C. Sorcar, created a sensation recently when he bicycled blind- folded through the heavy traffic on the boulevard Des Capucines. Sor- car later said he did it with his "X-ray eyes, proving the trans- lucency of sight through a highly- developed sixth sense." Want to buy or sell or trade - a Classified Ad and the deal is made. long before such a thing as an H- Bomb was even dreamed of. This hydrogen possibility was first men- tioned in 1915, not then as a bomb, but as the process by which the sun and stars make their heat. Hydrogen was not considered practical because the fusion won't start until temperatures are 1,000,- 000 or more degrees. The A-bomb unexpectedly furnished the starting heat. Immediately scientists of every country, Russia included, knew how to make H-bombs. | change. bonds eased and there was some hesitancy in Europeans. The rail {and utility markets were without notable alteration. TORONTO STOCKS Toronto, Aug. 14 (CP) -- Prices moved slowly upwards in forenoon trading on the Toronto Stock Ex- Activity was at a slow pace and industrials were the only issues to show a wide list of gains. Other groups were mostly mixed. Industrials were the brightest spot on the board as a handful of key stocks chalked up fractional gains, Steels, construction, agri- culture and refining oils all bright- ened. Ford A added % at 48% and Imperial Oil gained % at 26%. Papers were a little easier. Abitibi slipped % at 331%, Base metals, which slipped Fri- day after setting a 13-year high in the three previous sessions, were mostly mixed with gains and losses sprinkled about evenly along the board. Noranda, United Keno Hill and Steep Rock dipped, while base metals, Ancon Lead, East Sullivan and Cobalt Lode were among those ahead. Golds traded narrowly. Kerr Addison dipped % at 16! in the seniors. A few juniors were traded heavily for fractional gains. Western oils eased slightly. At- lantic Oil and Federal Pete were down in early dealings while Cen- tral Leduc, International Pete and Reef Pete moved higher. Volume for the first hour was 267,000 shares, about 156,000 shares less than Friday's first hour. Magistrate Orders Support of Child Kenneth Roy Brown, King Street East, father of a three-year-old baby girl, was ordered by Magistrate R. P. Locke to pay $50 to his wife for support of the child before Sat- urday, August 26, or he would be jailed for 30 days, when he appeared in Police Court here today. Brown, who appeared several weeks ago on a charge of not con- tributing to the support of the child was ordered to pay $10 a week by Magistrate Frank S. Ebbs. It was disclosed today that only one pay- ment -has been made since that time. Upon questioning by the bench, Brown said he earned over $60 per week as an employee of the General Motors Company of Can- ada. He said he has been working yor the auto firm since the first of July. ' « Korea, the London Stock Exchange | | weight bobs 29.00-30.00. | Hogs 1500; good and choige hogs | 20.00-24.50; good sows 16.00-20.00. Lambs and sheep 650; good and | choice lambs 29.00; same grade Randyweight ewes quoted 10.00- | HOGS :- | Toronto, Aug. 14--(CP)--Hog pri- | ces were not established at Strat- ford, Ont. this morning, Other markets were not reported. FRUIT :- Toronto, Aug. 14 (CP).--Whole- sale fruit and vegetable prices here today: Apples, Duchess, 6 qt., 35-40; bu., $1.50-$2; beans, 11 qt. round, 60-75, flat, 35-40; beets, new, doz. 25-30; bu., 75-§1; blueberries, 11 qt., $2.50- $3.50; 6 wt. $1.25-81.75; cauliflower, Ont., crate, $1-$2; corn, Ont., 6 doz. bags, $1.25-$1.50; celery, Ont., crate, green, $1-$1.25; white, $1.25-$1.50; cherries, 6 qt., sour, $1.15-$1.25; cu- cumbers, field, 11 qt., $1-$1.25; cur- rants, red, 6 qt., 75-81; black, $2.25- $2.75; egg plant, 20 qt., $1.25-$1.50; gooseberries, 6 qt. $1.50; lettuce, Ont, 3 doz. crate, $1.50-$2; onions, local, green, doz. 30-35; es, white flesh, 6 qt., No. 1, 75-90; No. 2 60-65; peppers, green, 11 gt., 75; radishes, field, doz. 35-50; raspber- ries, 36 pts., $7-$8.50; spinach, Ont., bu. 75-$1; tomatoes, Leamington, field, 11 qt., 85-90; vegetable mar- pM 50-75; cantaloupes, 20 qt., , 8-10 crate, $1-81.25; é qt., 75-$1.25. Ham, Potato prices: Leamington, new, 75 1bs., carlot, $1.35, to retail, $1.50- $1.60; local, off truck, $1.25. Red Chinese Group Storms High School Singapore, Aug. 14 (Reuters). -- Expelled Communist students stormed the assembly hall of Singa- pore's Chinese high school just before the "school re-opening ceres mohy today: J They kept the principal and teachers in the corridor while they harangued the pupils. Sixty students were expelled from the school and six teachers black- listed after the recent of Communist literature there. Police retained two of the teachers, but have since released one. BUILD-UP RESISTANCE TO 24-D Research work being done in the United States indicates that weeds may develop resistance to 2, 4-D. Tests with Johnson grass howed that if seed was saved from plants that survived 2, 4-D treatments, the resulting plants were twice as ree sistant as were those of the pree vious generation. Lead has been produced in Canada since 1887, and is obtained largely from the ores of British Columbia, ~ "«

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