44 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Seturday, June 6, 1058 1 Labor Income ' Shows Big Rise Aca "ABOARD MN OTTAWA (CP)--Canada's ex- panding economy took new strides in the first quarter of 1953, boost- ing industrial production, labor in- come and retail trade. While wholesale and retail pri- oes eased from their high 1952 levels, labor income averaged $929,000,000 a month in the first uarter of 1953, a jump of $77, ,000 from $852,000,000 last year, bureau of statistics estimates in its economic review for May. Average weekly earnings rose to $56, up from $5252 & year ago, on the heels of an expansion of industrial production and a bigger turnover in retail trade. The bureau estimated that re- tailers on the average did $834,- 300,000 worth of business a month in the first quarter, up from $771,- 500,000 last year. The index for industrial produc- 222.2 last year and for the first quarter averaged 240.3, compared to 217.7 a year ago. Injunction Refused In Ad. Idea Case OTTAWA (CP)--Mr. Justice J. T. Thorson, president of the Excheq- uer Court of Canada, today re- Joeted a request for an injunction stop the Winnipeg Tribune from publishing a cash-give-away con- tets called '"Telequiz" in the daily newspaper. The request for an injunction was made by Edward C. Sargent, an advertising executive from Owen Sound, who claims the Win- nipeg sales promotion scheme is an infringement of his copyrighted contest called "Jumbo. Jackpot." Hearings by the court on the civil case are to come up later. Mr. . Sargent, 37-year-old former Owen Sound mayor, has asked the court to set damages at a min-| imum of $25,000. Mr. Sargent is charging infringe- ment of copyright against the Southam Co., Tribune publishers; Fred Auger, Tribune editor; and Shop-Easy Stores and Jewel Stores, two Winnipeg retail food concerns. Mr. Justice Thorson, in his com- ment to the court, said he believed that a copyright does not cover an idea, scheme or'arrangement, but only the expression of that idea, scheme or arrangement. He did not agree that a. prima facie case had been made that there had been infringement of that expression. Date for a court hearing on the civil charge will be set later when the defence has had an opportanity to file complete argument, Mr. Jus- tice Thorson said. NEW EDITOR OWEN SOUND (P)--Alderman | R. L. Payne, elected to Owen | Sound city oouncil for the first time last December, is resigning | to go to Belleville where he will become editor of the Belleville Ontario Intelligencer. Leo H. Liddell, the runner-up, is to accept the appointment FALLS DOWN MOUNTAIN HAMILTON (CP)--Isobel Smith 46, fell more than 100 feet down Hamilton mountain Friday night. She was brought to the top by po- {lice and firemen who worked an hour and was admitted to hospital with undetermined injuries. Police said she fell at a dark section of the mountain top in East Hamilton where there is no fence. Glamorgan Up In Second Place In Cricket Race LONDON (Reuters)--Glamorgan climbed up to second place in the county cricket championship Fri- day, scoring a fine victory by an innings and 48 runs over Essex. Champion Surrey moved into a clear lead of eight points in the table after their win in two days Thursday over Derbyshire. Hamp- shire, level with Surrey before the matches! played no county match and dropped into third place. From six games, has tained 52 points, while Glamorgan has 44 from seven and Hampshire 40 from seven. Next comes Middle- sex with 38, Gloucestershire with 36 and Northamptonshire with 30, all for seven matches. Friday's final scores: Somerset 319 and nine for no wicket, Middlesex 119 and Somerset won by 10 wickets. Gloucestershire 231 and 223 for eight declared, Combined Services 116 and 306. Gloucestershire won by 32 runs. Oxford University 325 for five declared and 59, Hampshire 247 and 138 for five. pshire won by five wickets. Worcestershire 70 and 204, Not- tinghamshire 270 and seven for no wicket, Nottinghamshire won by 10 wickets. Glamorgan 413, Essex 159 and 206, Glamorgan won by an innings and 48 runs. Cambridge University 202 for nine declared and 150 for four de- clared, Northamptonshire 16 and 162 for six. Match drawn. Burned Bam Gets 4 Years WOODSTOCK (CP)--Harry Guy | Gould, 64, was sentenced today to four years in jail on a charge of arson in connection with the burn- ing of his brother's barn New Year's Day. The accused surrendered to pro- vincial police officers following the blaze which destroyed Lawrence Gould's barn and killed a number of livestock. ob paired by sewing a piece of un- Skillful Se By ROBERT B. TUCKMAN | 'SEOUL, Korea (AP)--A United States navy surgeon is using a new operation to reduce amputa- tions by two-thirds. Scores of marines are walking again, using arms and hands nor- mally, who might otherwise be experimenting with artificial limbs. Lieut. Frank C. Spencer, 27, of Haskell, Tex., is credited with sav- ing them through use of arterial graft surgery. A severed blood vessel is re- damaged artery to each end of the damaged blood vessel. These {come from "artery banks" {stocked from limbg so badly {mangled amputation was essential. | Spencer performed more than 80. |arterial graft operations with the | 1st marine division, recently with- drawn to the rear after 33 months 208. of front-line duty. In more than 65 | cases the arm or leg of the wounded man has been saved... Some sources estimate that one- third of all amputations in the Second World War resulted from inability to repair blood vessels of wounded men at or near the front. In the last four years, Spencer wing Saving Many Limbs said, the' arterial graft "program was developed in the United States, largely to save so-called blue bab- ies. Spencer worked under Dr. Alfred Blalock at Johns Hopkins University, a pioneer in blue-baby technique. Here, in Spencer's words is a "When an is wounded, the missile destroys a section of it. What is needed is a tube to re- connect the two ends, to bridge the gap resulting from damage to the blood vessel. "The arterial grafts are sewed in place with very small stitches so that the connection will be watertight to let the blood pass through. The operation takes from "Complete recovery is expected in about one month and usually the patient is walking in about three weeks after surgery." Spencer said the operation hag to be performed within six to eight hows after injury to be success- "If 10 hours have gone by," he said, "the chances of saving a leg or an arm decrease rapidly, and in- greasingly so as each hour goes iy." {two to four hours." Scientists OTTAWA (CP)--A fragment of the United States flag that first was planted on the north pole has been found in the far arctic by| two young Canadian sciéntists.- | With the historic piece of blue | silk, the explorers found records | of one of Admiral Robert E.| Peary's polar expeditions on Am-| erica's northernmost mountain 400 miles south of the pole. Canada's defence research board | announced Wednesday word of the | discovery from its two scientists, | who have been investigating the ice shelf borgering the northern coast- Peary jumped off for the pole. The cache was found on Cape Columbia mountain by Geoffrey {Hattersley-Smith, 30, of Ottawa, a Find North Pole Flag glaciologist, and Robert Blackadar, 23, 'of Ottawa, a geologist. In a letter written May 22 and just received by the board, Hat- tersley-Smith wrote: "From the summit of Cape Columbia peak we recovered Peary's 1906 records and a piece of the silk ensign which ' three years later he flew at the north pole. The record looks as if writ- ten yesterday." ODENSE, Denmark (AP)--A parson . circled his vicarage for nearly half an hour Thursday as he returned home after having pas- sed a driving test. He said he had forgotten how to stop his car. {versity in Kingston, Officials Puzzled Over Outbreak SUDBURY (CP)--The Ontario department of health Thursday continued to seek the source of the latest puzzling outbreak of tri- Shirlosis to strike the Sudbury dis- ct. The 22 cases reported here so far this year bring to 63 the num- ber of cases of the rare disease re- ported in this area since 1947. Trichinosis is caused by a tiny parasitic worm living in the muscles of infected hogs. If in- adequately-cooked pork from infec- ted hogs is eaten by humans, the parasite enters the human blood stream and muscle tissue, giving to fever, muscular pains, swelling around the eyes and a general infection. The disease does not harm hogs, except to reduce their efficiency. Only scientific tests show the pres- ence of the disease. The parasite is easily killed by heat in cooking. Human cases can be blamed on consumption of raw or improperly-cooked pork. Although the disease is common in some temperature zone coun- tries it is rare in Canada--except at Sudbury. First indications of human infec- tion at Sudbury were noted in 1948 when one case of trichinosis was reported. The next year eight per- sons were stricken and in 1950, some 20 cases were reported. There were four cases in 1951 and another eight last year. This year's cases have all been reported since May 25. Dr. J. B. Cook, Sudbury's medi- cal officer of health, has blamed lack of an abattoir where animals could be killed under supervision for the spread of trichinosis here. In other years outbreaks have been traced to district pork pro- ducers. Last year, 100 hogs were destroyed on one district farm. CHECKMATE ? OWEN SOUND (P)---Mrs. Es- ther Roberts of Owen Sound doesn't know if she's lucky or unlucky. Mrs. Roberts found a number of four-leafed clovers in her garden. She picked them all, fully aware | of their good luck charm. How- ever, when she counted the clovers there were 13. The first classes at Queen's Uni- Ont., were | opened in 1842, U.S.A.Is Not Warlike Declares Marshall LONDON (AP)--Gen. George . Marshall appealed today to British leaders to foster a generous under- standing on United States aims and problems in Korea. He said at a luncheon of the English Speaking Union it was im- portant that the British public re- sists Soviet propaganda that United States is engaged on some warlike course. He also said the U. S. public "is intent on seeing that be permitted to lend aid to the Chinese communist forces." Marshall told the luncheon gath- ering of 2,000 he thought the Brit- ish public '"'only partially realizes" the size of U. 8S. casualties in Korea. For some reason probably a result of clever Soviet propaganda and subtle suggestion--there seems to be a belief that America is in a warlike Hood, fraught ith the POSS! y of bringing about a gen- eral conflagration. 5 "Nothing, I know, could be fur- ther from the desires of the Amer- ican people and their leaders." Marshal also referred to charges occasionally made here that -the United States government ignores the advice of its allies. He said that in his own exper- the|jence as state secretary and de- fence secre "I think a max- imum of attention was paid to the view of our associates, particularly those of the British government." "LET BRIDGE CONTRACTS FLORENCE, Ont. (CP)--Con- tracts for a new $70,000 bridge over the Sydenham river here have been let by Lambton county council, Contract for construction work went to Arnott Construction Co., of Arthur, for $25,575. A $10,000 fill contract, for approaches to the span, went to R. E. Bliss Construe- tion Co., of Woodstock. ROOM AND BOARD AND EXPECT TO BE AS WILD AS A MOOSE!....SO WILL YOU GIVE ME A BOTTLE OF YOUR SMOKE CHEMICAL TO SEE IF ITLL KEEP ME FROM LOSING GOLF BALLS? © complete Payne's two year term. Don't. Miss DOMINION STORES BIG 7... COOKING SCHOOL... June 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, Mon. Thru Fri. --1:30 t03:30 p.m MASONIC HALL, 91 CENTRE ST. 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