THE DAILY TIMES.GAZETTE FRIDAY, MAY 11, 1951 pox Two Births BANE-Mr. and Mrs. Colin Kane (nee Gwen Crawford), are happy | $0 annoupce the arrival of their gon, Robprt John, on Thursday, 10, 1951, at the Oshawa Gen- #cDONNELL~--Myr. and Mrs. ¥. B. Hospital. McDonnell are happy to announce the birth of their son, at the Osh- awa General Hospital, on Wednes- day, May 9, 1951. BTEWART--Mr. and Mrs. Cameron Stewart, (nee Ruth Coakwell), are happy to announce the arrival of ghelr daughter, Brenda Jane, § ., 7 oz., on Sat 4 1051, at Campbellford pital. Deaths WERRY--In Newcastle, on Thurs- "day, May 10, 1951, Mary Alice Oke, beloved wife of Arthur B. ' Werry, in her 84th year. Resti at the family residence, ot 32, Con. 1, Darlington, for serv- on Saturday, May 2 at 2:30 nt. oy Aathasd " + 0 "In Memoriam WILLOUGHBY--In loving memory ' of a dear father, Thomas Wil- loughby, who passed away May 11, 1948. the garden of memories, °* e meet every day. : --Ever remembered by sons and faughter. Card of Thanks . . 1 wish to express my deepest Ee" to Dr. Smith during a onth's stay in hospital, also to all e nurses in charge of Bl ward. A special thank you to Mrs. Gulliver who helped to make my stay as asant as possible and other su- rior nurses in charge. Thank you ain. I wish to thank friends and acquaintances for the many cards, n notes and flowers received. Thanks also to Rev. B. A. Bombay and Rev. J. K. Moffat who kindly fered prayers in my behalf.-- ed: 'Mrs. Stella Russell. ®hitnary WRAY FISHER Grimsby, May 11 --(CP)-- Wray Fisher, 51, prominent in Grimsby sports circles, was found dead Wed- nesday at the rear of his home. Coroner Dr. A. F. McIntyre, after conferring, with Orown Abtorney E H. Lancaster, said there would bé no inquest. Surviving, beside his widow, are tive sons, a daughter and three brothers, including Wilmer of Osh- awa, and Wallace of Stratford. FUNERAL OF MRS, FRED V. SKINNER The funeral service for Mrs, Pred V. Skinner, who passed away at the family residence, 177 Ross- land Road West, on Tuesday, May 8, as held in St, George's Anglican urch at 2 p.m. yesterday. Rev. Panon David M. Rose officiated. 'The service was attended by an fnusually large number of friends, ® large group from Gananoque being present. A wealth of beautiful floral tributes indicated the esteem In which the d was held. The pallbearers were Dr. W. J. , Alfred H. Stevens, Dr. W. Harding, Morley Canning, , 8, J. Phillips and Neil Felt. Interment was in the - Oshawa Wnion Cemetery, U.S. Policies (Continued from Page 1) raphrased form, was read by A a Secretary George Marshall $0 Senate committees ihquiring into MacArthur's dismissal as Far East. ern commander. . 'Truman's message read in part: . "Our courses of action at this time should be such as to consolidate the great majority of the United Nations. This majority is not merely part of the organization but is also the nations whom we would despers ately need to count on as allies in the event the Soviet Union fn the Far East is "more acute by "far" than the hazard of Soviet in- 'Servention in Western Europe. This estimate of the comparative 'gisks was given in response to a 'question from Senator Bourke ? r (Rep. IA). * Hickenlooper said he wondered "why "we would accept a calculated " of provoking Russia to war in f pe, and why on the other hand "%we refusdé to accept a similar cal- culated risk" in the Far East. No Choice In Europe Marshall said "it was felt we have no choice on Western Europe but to proceed as we did, unless we ~pllowed that region to go by de- fault to Communist domination." - He said the situation is not com- ble in Korea, "where we are action and the question is whe- ther we can extend that 'action without developing an enlarged war on the Chinese side, or a full war because of the reactions of the So- viet "The situation as to the possible actions of the Soviet gov {terests and co-operative arrange- ment with China at this time, that Would be a very great loss to them of something they now possess." ' ACTIVE OLD-TIMER looks a lot younger than his 101 years. District SPECIAL PREACHER Rev. E. H. McLellan, rector of Holy Trinity Anglican Church, will be the special speaker at the Whit- sunday service in St. John's Angli- can Church, Bowmanville, at 11 am. on Sunday. HEADS PARK BOARD Dr. N. F. Tomlinson was appoint- ed president of the Claremont Community Park Board by Pick- ering Council on Monday. Other officers are: vice-president, Peter Lippert; secretary-treasurer, R. Cooper; board of management, Don Hedges, Milton Pegg, Reeve W. H. Westney and Councillor Milt Burk were appointed as council repre- sentatives on the board. WILL BE EXAMINED 'Mrs. May Maracle, 19, of Ajax, who recently pleaded guilty to a vagrancy charge in police court ap- peared today in Whitby for sen- tence, Magistrate Frank 8. Hbbs instead remanded the young woman for a mental examination, Another charge, that of being a person. of of idle and dissolute life, laid under the Female Refugees Act, was read but no ples was taken. CATCHES NICE FISH Bowmanville, May 11 -- BSeven- year-old John Carter, son of Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Carter, bumped into 17 inches of a fighting rainbow trout below the Goodyear dam, Sunday morning. When he landed the fish it was found to weigh one and three-quarter pounds, which is a fair-pized trout in any fishermans creel. Young John landed the beauty on his own. It is presently stored in a freezing unit at The Carter Family Tea Room on King Street. How long it remains there will probably depend upon the appetite of John and his Local Pastor (Continued from Page 1) for three years and prior to the war was minister of Observatory Baptist Church, one of the leading churches in Cape Town, S. Africa. At the outbreak of the last war, Mr. Wighton offered his services as chaplain in the South African army and was accepted and served in North Africa throughout the desert campaign. During the past 20 years he has also visited Nigeria, Palestine and Egypt. He received his public school edu- cation in the village of Overtown, Lanarkshire, Scotland, His earlier advanced studies were in mining and engineering, but after his con- version he was led to study for the ministry and entered the Bible Training Institute, Glasgow, and later the Glasgow University. His first pastorate was at Coat- bridge' Baptist Church, Scotland, and from there he went to Cape Town, South Africa, Arson Case (Continued from Page 1) felt that the fire might have been burning for some time before he saw it. Ernest Clark, 131 Colborne Street, caretaker at the town hall and fire hall, received the call and turned in the alarm which sent the trucks on their way. Fire Chief Bruce Corner sald that four lines of hose were laid at once. He wi to where Martin, his wife and son were standing in front of the office on the north side of the building and warned them not to go inside. When, after about five minutes, he went back to where the original fire seemed to be, on the south side, it was out. He congratulated his men, said the Chief, and as he did so he looked toward the north and there the flames burst out, h Firemen A From then on the fire was almost out of control Chief Corner said, It broke out all over and the four lines 'of hose could mot touch it. A eall was sent to Oshawa for help. After an all-night vigil there were only three buildings left standing in the morning. George Brown is a firemen but also. a line bogs for the Whitby Public Utilities Commission. When he arrived on the first truck he took immediate note of the main line transformer fuses. The fact that they were intact indicated to him, he said, that the fire did not have its origin in defective wiring inside the building. While he was there the three fuses blew, There was an earlier fire at the mill, in December of the previous year, Brown said. At that time the cause was the piling of wet shav- ings on top of secondary wires out- side the transformers. Although he qualified his state ment by saying that he had no chance to make an inspection of the interior, Brown said that he did not think the fire started from de- fective wiring. lated Give Hipper Hormone As Mother Love Aid Vienna, May 11 -- (Reuters) -- Bella, a hippopotamus at the Schoenbrunn Zoo, is being given to induce mother love, When Bella gave birth to a baby last year she promptly killed it. Now she is about to porduce an- other. Preparations have been made to take: it away when it is born. . But a special hormone treatment is being given to make her love her child, BOTTLED GAS + 4 » Now available for cottages . , season. Neo pumping, priming, filling or Low cost weste, het vo Gapenibe © FREE DEMONSTRATION © ONTARIO SHORE GAS CO. LIMITED 15 KING EAST DIAL 3-2201 Sees Hydro Net Linking 2 States To 3 Provinces Montreal, May 11-- (CP) --Richard L. Hearn of Toronto, general mana- ger and chief engineer of the Hy- dro-Electric Power Commission of Ontario, today foresaw a "vast net- work of power lines stretching from Manitoba on the west to Quebec on the east and from James Bay in the north to New York state and Michi- gan in the south." or prepared for delivery before the 65th annual general meeting of F.| the Engineering Institute of Cana- da. "The authorities of Ontario, in conjunction with those of Mani- toba, are continuing studies with a view to an interconnection which would benefit both provinces in the future," he said. "Studies are also being made in connection with fur- ther interconnections with the Uni- ted States which would be beneficial in time of emergencies." Mr. Hearn's paper included a technical description of steam-gen- erating stations under construction by the commission in Toronto and Windsor and a proposed redevelop- ment of Niagara Falls. The proposed new station at Niag- ara Falls "will have a capacity of 450,000 kilowatts and is expected to be in operation in 1954. Until it is in operation, we expect that the Toronto-Windsor steam stations, together with three new plants on the Ottawa River, will be capable of providing the capacity to meet all demands." 3 Minor Accidents Reported to Police Three minor traffic accidents were reported to Oshawa eity police in the last twenty-four hours. Only from the accidents, No injuries were caused by them. The left rear door of a car driven east on King Street East by Ralph E. Hegadorn, 50 Brock Street East, was damaged late yesterday after- noon when a car driven by L. Frey- mond, Kingston Road East, turning from Victoria Street on to King Street East collided with it. Pulling out of the pdrking lot at Duplate, a car driven.by George B. Medlock, 96 Centre Street, collided with the left rear fender of a car being driven east on First Avenue by Alex G. Ogden, 169 Verdun Road, yesterday afternoon. Medlock told investigating officer, Constable Er- nest Barker, that he did not see the other vehicle until the moment of impact. Bouncing as it hit the curb near the driveway, a car driven by Wil- liam Xawala, 539 Ritson Road South, collided with the rear of a transport which was parked ob- structing his driveway. New Metal Controls Slated for Canada Saint John, N.B., May 11 (OP)-- New metal control orders will short- ly be announced at Ottawa, BTN. Beaupre, special assistant to the deputy minister of defence produc- tion, said in an address here Thursday. Mr. Beaupre told the Maritime Division 'of the Canadian Manu- facturers Association meetings have been held by defence production officials with industry representa- tives and the result will be control orders designed to put Canada in a position gradually to reduce or increase month by month the amount of metal allowed for less essential products. He said orders controlling copper and aluminum will be announced within a few days and others will probably be issued within the net two months, Say Radio-Telephone Must On Lake Ships Ottawa, May 11 (OP) -- Radio-~ telephone equipment will be com- pulsory for many Great Lakes ves- sels as a result of an agreement reached at a four-day conference here of representatives from the United States and Canadian gov- ernments. 'The closed conference will be re- convened at a later date. A spokesman said the officials agreed on the need for making compulsory the carrying of radio- telephone equipment on ships of 500 gross tons or better and on pas- senger-carrying vessels more than 65 feet long, The decision covers vessels on the Great Lakes and their connec ting and tributary waters as far east as Montreal, but will exclude the Niagara River. Date when the ruling will become effective was not announced. The agreement will extend to the Great Lakes some of the provisions of the international .convention for the safety of life at sea. TULIPS JOIN BLOSSOMS Niagara Falls, Ont. (CP) -- More than tulip plants will burst in nbow shades of bloom this w highlighting Blossom Sunday in the Niagara Valley. The colorful flow- ers are grouped in Queen Victoria Park here opposite the falls and throughout the 35 miles of parks and boulevards paralleling the frontier, The forecast was made in a pa-|. minor property damage resulted 000,000 May 11 -- |q Rubber Market Depressed With Embargo On Chinese Singapore, May 11 (AP) -- The governments of Singapore and Malaya today were expected to duplicate shortly Britain's ban on rubber shipments to Communist China, Economic officials in Singapore would not comment, but indicated a high-level decision will be made soon. Britain's move, announced in London yesterday, knocked the bottom out of the Malayan rub- ber market, In a widely-flue- trusting market today, rubber sold as low as 1.45 Straits dol- lars a pound, far under the United States ceiling price of 66 cents a pound ($1.71 Straits). It was the lowest price since last Sept. 30. Rubbér had gone as high as $2.38 (Straits) on Feb. 9. Traders Feel Loss Pessimism hit all sections of the Singapore market, Traders felt that the U.S. now .can buy all the Malayan rubber she wants at al- most any price she names. They regarded as certain that the Singa- pore and Malayan governments would follow Britain's embargo against Communist China," which would mean loss of a big buyer, Britain's action also stirred up fresh anti-American feeling among rubber producers and traders, who attribute tire ban to U.S. pressure. Even before Britain's embargo action, rubber traders had been shaken by the inability of the Sin- gapore market to withstand priee- repressing manoeuvres from the us. Overseas support had been lacking in the market for sev- eral days, and U.S. buyers got large quantities of rubber at prices even lower than those set by the general services ad- ministration, The British ban does not mean that Communist China will get no more rubber. : Indonesia is a major producer who might supply Peiping, and the Chinese have been trying to get rubber and other strategic goods from her. But no trade pact has been made Because Peiping appar- ently is unable to supply Indonesia with consumer articles in return. Canberra, May 11 (Reuters) -- Australia will soon place drastic restrictions on exports which could reach China and be used for war purposes,-it was 'learned authorita- tively today. An official announcement is ex- pected within a few days, Cheese Men to Gain Extra $5,000,000 Toronto, May 11 (CP)--Ontario cheese producers will gain an extra $5,000,000 next year as a result of the mew contract between the Ontario Cheese Producers' Market- ing Board and the British govern- ment, Agriculture Minister Kennedy through the agency to supply 50,- pounds of cheese to the British market at 33 vents a pound. Last year's price was 33 cents a pound, plus a federal subsidy of five cents a pound. Mr, Kennedy said the new prices for cheese on the Canadian market will be 36 cents a pound for first grade, 35 cents for second and 32 cents for third. Arthritis Study Awards Decided Toronto, May 11 (CP)--Award of fellowships and grants for research was announced today by the Can- adian Arthritis and Rheumatism Society. Dr. Almon Fletcher, chairman of the research committee, said grants to six men in Eastern Canadian universities and institutions will help them in work on research pro- jects connected with the cause and treatment of arthritis and kindred rheumatic diseases. The grants go to: Dr. John D. Keith, Dr. James A, Dauphinee and Dr. Allan G. Gor- nall, all of University of Toronto; Dr. Louis-Paul Dugal, Laval Un- iversity; Dr. Hans Selye, director of the Institute of Experimental Medicine and Surgery, Montreal, and Dr. Howard G, Kelly, Queen's University. Dr, J. 8. L, Browne, professor of medicine at McGill, announced award of the fellowships to brilliant young Canadian doctors to aid them in continuing study of arthritis, Sees Hydro Lack Without Seaway Markdale, May 11 (CP)--Mines Minister Gemmell said Thursday night Ontario will face another hy- dro power crisis unless the St. Law- rence seaway project is started spon. He told the South Grey Progres- sive Conservative Association here that there appears to be no end to demands for new power, He repeated recent suggestions that Canada go on with the project alone if necessary. "I believe that Canada is big enough and strong enough to tackle the job single- handed if it is found impossible to overcome the opposition that seems to be entrenched in Wash- ington," he said. Allies Advance (Continued from Page 1) ed at least 15 Red planes on the ground, air officera reported. U.N. bombers began blasting the mew Chinese concentration near Kapyong on the central front Thursday night and Fri. day. They reported unusually- heavy anti-aircraft fire. Red strength in the centre indi- cated the Chinese had been able to shift from the western front des. pite. Allied air cover. Action in the west tended to confirm this, AP Correspondent George A. McArthur re ported. AP Correspondent Robert Eunson reported from Eighth Army Head- uarters: "The build-ups by the Reds north of Seoul and east of Kapyong con- Himed field commanders' beliefs at the Reds' next drive would come in two moves--(1) A head- on smash on the capital and (2) an encircling move east of the elty." Want to buy, sell or trade? -- A classified ad and the deal is made. 59 CHURCH ST. Just Arrived! CAR OF 34" CRUSHED STONE Immediate Delivery ARMSTRONG FUELS DIAL 5-5864 or 3-2712 Courtice Church Choir Honored Frank Walter and friend Miss die Fallis of Oshawa; president, Mrs. Carl Adams and guest. ering to order and explained the of the dinner; the appre- ciation which the W.A. as the church mother organization, and the church congregation felt to- ward the choir. Mrs. Hall was then called upon to perform a very pleasant duty, that of presenting choir leader, Mr. Frank Walter with a Sheaffer foun- tain pen, a gift from the W.A, in appreciation of his untiring efforts and faithfulness to the choir. Mr. Walter responded, showing his sur- prise 'and delight in receiving the t. At this time, President Mrs. Carl Adams thanked the W.A. for the grand dinner and assured the con- gregation that it was a delight for the choir to sing the hymns, sung as praises unto God. While the waitresses ate, the choir and guests entertained to an old fashioned sing-song, Mrs. Harold Muir leading with Miss Phyllis Adams at the piano. . A very pleasant evening closed with the choir having their usual Tuesday night practice. Skinner Case (Continued from Page 1) assaulting watchman Percy Taylor with intent to rob. Dramatic Episode Yesterday's hearing was drama- tically enlivened during a 10-min- ute recess at noon when Constable Ted Ferguson, one of the police officers who figured in the original investigation which followed the attempted robbery, arrested a sixth man, Max Mornstein, Police have been seeking Mornstein for about a month. The arrest was made in the corridor just outside the court room, Mornstein will face all three gharges, sald Crown Attorney Alex Hall, Mornstein, who was in custody since his arrest yesterday, was re- this morning on bail of $10,~ 000. Bail was provided by Joseph and Rosie Swartz, father and mother of Harry Swarts, another of the accused. Marnstein, who was also known as Ben OCuflowitz, was said to be a stepson of Mr, Swartz. The charge against Morn- stein was that he assaulted Percy Taylor, watchman, with intent to rob the Skinner Co. Ltd, \ The preliminary hearing which hay » far occupled two days was held into only one of the charges --that of conspiring to receive stolen goods. After the charge was read all five of the accused elected trial by a higher court. It was ne- cpssary, therefore, for Magistrate Ebbs to hold a preliminary hearing into the charge in order to ascor- tain whether or not it should be dismissed or sent on. Evidence Very Involved Hvidence presented in the hearing has been very involved. Many deal- | ers in nickel and other metal have been called to the stand and their testimony indicated that the scar- city of nickel has given rise to a very active dealers' market in the city. The price of the metal--which is becoming almost semi-precious, rises each time it is handled until the final charge for a pound of nickel, which is sold by Interna- Hens! Nickel Company for 55 cents, Defence argument endeavored to show that this trading did not constitute a "grey market" but that it was quite above board and legal--comman prac- tice as a matter of fact. » Yai luan Testi jes ercy Taylor, Skinner Compan watchman, said that about o'clock on the morning of April 1, while he was making his rounds, three men, all of them wearing dark overcoats and fedora hats and with white handkerchiefs tied over their faces, stepped out of the shadows. One of them, who_was holding a pistol, told him to "put them up." "I complied with his request," the watchman said. The men then bound his eyes with adhesive tape and his arms and legs with cord, They laid him on a mattress. Later, he said, he heard them loading nickel on a truck. Then there was silence and later he managed to untie his bonds and call police. L. Wayland, an employee with the General Electric Company pur- chasing department, said that he had negotiated with Baker, who is a partner with Fruitman in the company known as Monarch Met- als, to purchase 30,000 pounds of nickel at $3 a pound. Deal Fell h : The deal fell through, Wayland sald, when Baker told him that no invoices or other proper papers would be available, Baker said that he knew G.E. would not be inter- ested in a deal such as that. Henry Shapiro, a lamp manufac- turer, said that he bought -nickel from Baker, as did David Funston, Manager of Canada Nameplate, Ltd. All these deals were quite le. gitimate, the. witness said. Inspector W. Franks, who has been assisting Oshawa police in the investigation, occupied the stand for over an hour. He told of the arrest of Fruitman, Bak- er and Stern and how he and other police officers painstak- ingly gathered invoices and other evidence of the many deals -- evidence which, the Crown thought, supported charges. At the conclusion of the hear- ing A. G. Martin, K.C,,. who was representing Fruitman and Baker, asked that the charge against Fruitman be summarily dismissed for lack of evidence. The Magistrate declined to do this. Stern is represented by J. J. Rob- inette, K.C,, and Levy and Swarta by I. C. Dubin, K.C, and A, W. 8. Green, K.C. Find Missing Boy In Theatre Line Peterborough, May 11--- (CP) -- David King, 14, missing 13 days from his home at Coldsprings, three miles southeast of here was found Thursday in a theatre line-up. The boy said his father, Lloyd King, told him a week ago Saturday not to leave the house, But the youngster wandered off and played. When it came time for him to re- turn in the evening he was afraid of what his father might do to him and wandered into. Peterborough, He spent most of his nights in one of the barns in the exhibition grounds, Other nights he just wan- dered about the ;'reets. EXTEND RETIRING AGE London, Ont, May 11--(CP) ~-- The Board of Education Thursday night opened the door for women teachers who might want to cone tinue teaching past their retire- ment age of 60. In future, subject to the approval of Dr. G. A. Whea- ble, superintendent of schools, wo- men teachers can. remain at thelr jobs until the August 31 following their 63rd birthday. 72 HOMELESS Gatineau Point, Que., May 11 -- (CP)--Seventy-two persons were made homeless Thursday night when fire blamed on faulty wiring gutted an apartment block. The owner, Mrs, J. M. Galipeault, said when firemen arrived on the scene they brought no pump. They return- ed 46 minutes later with a pump, she said, but found it lacked fuel and more time was lost, DULMAGE CAN'T GEJ BAIL Kingston, May 11--(CP) --Owen Dulmage of Ottawa, awaiting trial on a charge of abducting 13-year old Teddy Wainwright, remained in custody Thursday when he was unable to raise $1,000 cash bail, Dulmage was committed to stand trial before a higher court and will be tried at jury sittings of the Su- preme Court of Ontario in June un- less he elects in the meantime to be tried by judge alone. WHITE ROSE QUIZ... How many phone calls does the average person make in a year? Telephone company statisti- cians say 251. And if you are a car-owner, here is a "person- to-person" tip for you: heavy duty WHITE ROSE MOTOR OIL "KEEPS MOTORS CLEAN!" Business And Markets Farmers' | Market. | PRODUCE :- Toronto, May 11--(CP)--Produce ices quoted on the spot market ere today: Churning cream, No. 1 truck price, 61 cents; delivered, 65 cents, Creamery prints, first grade, 63- 65 cents. The egg market was steady with light receipts. Country shippers quoted graded eggs, cases free: Grade A large, 59-60; A medium, 57-58; A pullet 55-56; Grade B. 52; Grade C, 41-42. Wholesale to retail; Grade A large, 63-64; A medium, 62-63; A pullet, 60-61; Grade B, 7- 59; Grade C, 48-50. Butter solids: First grade, 63 cents (nominal); second grade not estab- lished. FRUIT :- 'Toronto, May 11--(CP)--Whole- sale fruit and vegetable prices were unchanged here today with the ex- ception of: Canadian asparagus, 11 qt. baskets, $3.50-$4. Potato prices were unchanged. LIVESTOCK :- Buffalo Buffalo, N.Y., May 11 -- (AP) -- Cattle, 100: Receipts very light, early trading moderate, market about steady; good dairy type cows $23.50-$24.50; cutters $22.00-$24.50; canners $16.50-$17.50; good weighty sausage bulls, $20.00-$31.50; light- weight cutters, $25.00-8$27.00. Calves, 150: Good and choice han- dyweight calves, $40.00-$41.00; culls and strongweight bobbs, $35.00- $37.00. Hogs, 150: Good and choice near- by hogs, $21.50-$22.00; good sows, $18.00-$19.00. . Sheep and lambs: Market not es- tablished. GRAIN ;- Chicago Chicago, May 1 -- (AP) -- Grains opened mixed today with wheat showing more firmness than local traders had expected. Wheat started 5% lower to % higher May $2.40%, corn was 's to one cent higher, May $1.77':-7%, oats were 4 lower to '4 higher, May 87%-%, soybeans were unchanged to % lower, September $3.15!5. HOGS:- Toronto, May 11 -- (CP) -- Hog prices were unchanged at $35 at Stratford, Ont., today. Other markets were not reported. NEW YORK STOCKS | New York, May 11 -- (AP)--8tock | prices sagged slightly in a narrow | and quiet market today. Few changes of as much as $1 a share were recorded. Scattered demand for a few favorites failed to stir any buying enthusiasm. E. R. Squibp showed a gain of more than 2 points at one time, after directors boosted the dividend to 50 cents. Canadian issues were mixed but with a downward inclination. Dome Mines and Hiram Walker 'gained 1», International Nickel dropped 3%, Distillers Seagrams %. Canadian Pacific eased %. McIntyre was un- quoted, On the curb Lake Shore eased 's. | Giant Yellow Knife and Royalite | Oil were both unchanged. | Sir Oliver, Leigh | Open Festival Plays London, May 11--(Reuters)--S8ir Laurence Olivier and his wife Vivien Leigh made a triumphal return to London Thursday night in George Bernhard Shaw's "Caesar and Cleo- patra" which opened their festival season at the St. James Theatre. It was the most exciting first TigRY London had seen for many a ay. Today Britain's favorite theatrical pair will be seen again in Shake- speare's "Anthony and Cleopatra," the tragedy against which Shaw's satirical version of history was a kind of protest. The two plays will be Sven alternately during the fes- tival, : Business Montreal, May 11 (CP) ~~ Cana- dian Industries Limited announced today that it will erect a new plant at Copper Cliff, Cat, to produce liquid sulphur dioxide from by=- product gases of the oxygen flashe smelting process recently develop- ed by the International Nickel Company. Announcement was made follow= ing extensive research and explor= ation by CIL. and International Nickel, It is expected that when the new plant is in operation it will produce some 90, tons of liquid sulphur dioxide a year. For many years C.IL. has been producing sulphuric acid from Ine ternational Nickel's waste gases; this production will also undergo major expansion this year. Liquid sulphur dioxide is not made in Canada at present although C.LL. produced it in relatively= small quantities from 1932 to 1045. Supplies now are obtained from the United States but consumption is small due to high cost. The new development, however, will place liquid sulphur dioxide in the cate- gory of a tonngge chemical avail- able to large potential consumers at a fraction of its present cost. The potential] large consumers are sulphite pulp, newsprint and sulphuric-acid manufacturers who now depend mainly on elemental sulphur. This sulphur, currently in short supply and expected to be increasingly so, is imported from Texas and Louisiana and paid for in United States funds. In 1950, imports were more than 385,000 tons valued at about $7,500, 000 The output of the Copper Cliff plant will help overcome the exist ing deficiency of elgmental sulphur and assist the Canadian sulphite pulp and newsprint industry, major earner of U.S. dollars, to maine tain its exports to the United States. Sulphur as such has few direct uses in manufacturing processes and usually is burned in air to ob- tain the desired material, sulphur | dioxide gas. Liquid sulphur dioxide, on the other hand, yields the sul phur dioxide was directly and when given mill-scale tests at the Abitibi Power and Paper Company at its Mission Mill at Fort William, Ont., in 1047, it was found to have de- cided advantages for this purpose over elemental sulphur. TORONTO STOCKS Toronto, May 11 -- (CP)--Prices slipped lower in dull early trading on the stock market today. In industrial, papers, steels, utilis ties, refining oils, 'manufacturin; companies, foods, constructions ani liquors showed a majority of losses. Banks and agricultures bucked the | trend for moderate advances. Great Lakes paper was a stande out in papers with a $1 jump. Can= ada cement was down $1 and Ford a lost $1.25. Pacing -the base metal group downward were Falconbridge, Gol= den Manitou, Quemont, Sherritt Gordon, Steep Rock and East Sulli- van. Consolidated Smelters and Waite Amulet added fractions. Western oils were mixed after a firm opening. Gridoil, a featére Thursday, climbed briskly to a new high at 10% before settling with a 25-cent gain at $10. Senior golds eased fractions with Bralorne, Giant Yellowknife, Mal= artic and Teck-Hughes lower. Sec ondary golds showed mild support, however, and Cochenour Willans, San Antonio, Sullivan and Campbell 'ere up pennies, TO GUARD BRIDGES Victoria, B.C., May 11--(CP) = Works Minister E, C, Carson warne { ed Thursday that hundreds of Brite ish Columbia bridges are likely te collapse and that it may become necessary to post guards to keep heavy traffic off the spindly struc- tures. The bridge problem was spot= lighted by the collapse Wednesday of the condemned Riverside Bridge at Lake Cowichan, 60 miles north of here. An hour before the collapse 150 school children in buses crossed the structure. For Beautiful Walls ARKER TILE IN ALL COLORS Sold and Installed by PROVINGIAL TILE GO. 179- OLIVE AVE. DIAL 5-1853