2 THE DATLY TIMES-GAZETTE, Monday, August 28, 1958 BIRTHS. CANNING -- Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Can- ning announce the birth of their son, John Norman, 9 lbs. 15 ozs., born Saturday, August 21, 1954; at Oshawa General Hospital. ENGLISH-Walter and Lorene English (nee Peebles) are happy to announce Osh the arrival of their son at the awa General Hospital, August 20, 1954, A brother for Ricky. THALER--Mr. and Mrs. (neé¢ Dorothy Cainan) are happy to 20, 1954, at Oshawa General Hospi- tal. A brother for Sandra. IN MEMORIAM DRELL--In loving memory of MAUN D. Maundrell who passed away August 23, 1649. A Avi 55 remembered by wife and family. SMITH--In loving memory of grandson, Fred Smith, who was in Italy on the 23rd of August, There's a dear, hallowed spot In the cemetery So green; Where lies our loved one From the human eyes unseen. The winds of Heaven blow softly O'er the dear hallowed spot . For amid the changing Zcengs of life will never be forgot. He TD remembered by mother, brother, and Granny. OBITUARY FUNERAL OF HAROLD JOSEPH WELSH Requiem mass for Harold Jo- sepn welsh, who died at the fa- Seps residence, 339 Drew Street, on Thursday last, was held i Holy Cross Roman Catholic Church at 8.30 am. on Satur day. 'the mass was sung by Rev. P. Coffey and intetment was in St. Gregory's Cemetery. e pallbearers were L. Welsh, P. Broadbent, D. Butler, M. Ma- dill, P. Gould, W, Welsh. FUNERAL OF MRS. JOHN KORNYLO Requiem mass for Mrs. John Kornylo, who died at Whitby on Wednesday was held in St. George's Greek Catholic Church at 10 a.m. on Saturday. Rev. J. C. Pereyma conducted the service. Interment was in St. Gre, 's Cemetery. The pallbearers were Alex Mar- chenick, George Ballan, Bill Ku- cherick and e sons, Donald, Peter and Michael Kornylo. FUNERAL OF GEORGE BENNET The funeral service for George Bennet, 657 Grierson Avenue, who died in the Oshawa General Hos- ital on Thursday, was held at the uke-McIntosh Funeral Home at 2 p.m., on Saturday, August 21. services were conducted by Rev. H. A. Mellow, minister of Northminster United Church. In- terment was in Mount Lawn Ce- metery. A masonic service was conducted by Temple Lodge at the my killed 1944. father, Alan, Jack Thaler | in | Rirlines Reach Partial Settlement WASHINGTON (AP) -- Ameri can Airlines and its striking pilots have reached a partial sethement --but whether pilots will return to work in advance of a full 'agree- ment remains in dispute. American said Sunday night it plans to resume operations Wed- nesday, after a 23-day shutdown. It said the pilots would at that time return to work, manning dis- uted transcontinental monstop ghts. m A spokesman for line Pi- lots Kasariation ra] sald, how- ever, the arrangement worked out Sunday with the help federal | mediators was a truce--not a final | settlement. The union spokesman did not make clear whether the "truce included an agreement to end the strike. Pilots struck in protest against the scheduling of westbound non- stop transcontinental flights of more than eight hours. ey de- manded a crew-change stopover. Eastbound flights, sped by pre- vailing winds, normally take less [es eight hours. Altitude Record Said Set By U.S. world's altitude record has been {set by a United States Air Force | test plane, it was announced Sat- |urday night. While the exact alti- {tude reached was not disclosed, it | was understood to be considerably {higher than the previous record of | 83,285 feet, Harold E. Talbott, air force sec- retary, announced the record in an address prepared for the Air Force Association at this boys' home | near. Omaha, ' {The former record was set by | marine Lt.-Col. Marion E. Carl in | the Douglas Skyrocket D538-2 last { August. Press Council Would Rule NEW DELHI, India (Reuters)-- An 11-man board investigating In- dian newspapers Sunday called for "safeguard the freedom of the press." In a 540-page report based on two years of inquiry the commis- sion 'also asked that the perman- ent board have the power to cen- sure "objectionable types of jour- nalist conduct." More than half the proposed 25- ber council should ist of funeral home on ay g. The pallbearers wére W. Court- ney, C. Tregonning, H. Shields, H. Tresise, A. Callison and S. Mec- Gregor. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SUBJECT The importance of relying whole- heartedly on God, divine Mind, for dance was stressed at Christian Science services on Sun- day August 22, he lden Text was from Daniel (2:20, 21): 'Blessed be the name of God for ever and ever: for wisdom and might are his: veth wisdom unto the we she g wise, and knowledge to them that | know understanding." working newspaper men, the re- port sald. Police Say Man Drew Knife NEWMARKET (CP) -- Police Sunday night said Fred Fogal, 24, of Newmarket drew a knife after |he had been asked to hand over the keys to his car. He was arrested Suvday and charged with driving while im- paired resisting arrest and having {an offensive weapon. ONTARIO NEWS BRIEFS PLAN NEW LODGE HUNTSVILLE (CP)--The Hotel Brittania, hotel resort on the Lake of Bays, has called for tenders on a new 56-room lodge, it was an- nounced Sunday. The present lodge with 50 rooms, is the second larg- est in Ontario, and is situated on a 540-acre site. FIND BODY PORT COLBORNE (CP) -- The body of Mrs. Kathleen Sales, 40 of Port Colborne, was found in tall grass near a near Dr. E. A. MacKenzie said death was due to natural causes. TRUCK-TRAIN CRASH TORONTO (CP)--A train crew worked for 15 minutes Sunday to free Earl Cain, 43, from the cab of his cement-mixing truck after a shunting Canadian National Rail- way engine hit the truck at an east-end crossing. The truck was carried 30 feet by the impact. Cain | FIND MAN DEAD | SIMCOE (CP)--Police said Sun- day the body of Antoine van Mars- zerger, about 65, was found on a | river bank. The coroner said death | was due to natural causes. Police | said they were making a routine check on tobacco harvesting tran- sients in the area. They thought {the man was sleeping until they |tried to rouse him, TWO MEN INJURED | KITCHENER (CP) -- Clifford » railway crossing | Goodwin of 'Moorefield suffered a P 1 h Co 1 her home Saturday. Coroner broken back, crushed pelvis and | 0 1S u e head cuts when he fell from a tree near his home during the week- |end. Another Moorefield man, Wil- | frid Curtis, lost his left arm above the elbow after it was caught in a | combine he was operating on his | farm, i THIEVES CRACK SAFE | ORILLIA (CP)--Thieves work- {ing only about a foot away from | passersby cracked a Dominion BOYS TOWN, NEB. (CP) -- A | a permanent press council to | Leading air cadet John Wine- | garden and air cadet Bill Winter | th of Oshawa, are fascinate | by the complicated but smooth- | running operation of the centre tower at RCAF Station Centralia. On duty is Leading aircraftman Bill Edestrand, of Strathroy, Ont., an assistant flying control operator at Station Centralia. The two boys, both members of 151 (Loyd Chadburn) Squadron are among some 350 air cadets from Ontario and Quebec at- tending annual summer lcamp CONTROL TOWER FASCINATES OSHAWA AIR CADETS | at RCAF Station Clinton. A tour | of Station Centralia is part of the cadets' training program. | { / LAC Winegarden is son of Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Wintgarden of 1050 Simcoe St., South, and AC Winter the son of Mr. and Mrs. Tom Winter of 1008 Simcoe St., South, Oshawa. Times-Gazette Staff Photo i | | | ] | | Posed for the camera, these | youngsters of the 'beef world al- | ready show signs of the mas- siveness which will eventually result in choice quality meat | FINE EXAMPLES OF BEEF CATTLE AT cuts, The Hereford bullocks ex- hibit the low slung heavy body | and straighteness of back so ne- to future champion ey are a sample of the cess bulls. By many superb beef cattle which were on show at the Oshawa Fair on Saturday. E. A. Sum- mers, Agricultural tive for Durham county, who { girl in the picture is Miss Kath- representa- | 1 IR was judge of the beef cattle is seen standing at the right. The erine Merry. Civic Workers For Union FARMERS' MARKETS Aant REGINA (CP)--An independen union for Canadian public and civic workers was organized here dur- ing the week-end. Plans for the union were drawn up at the annual convention of the National Federation of Municipal Employees. The Trades and Labor Congress now in convention here issued charters for the organiza- tion. The new union will af- filiated with the TLC. To Meet Son MONTREAL (CP) -- A happy | Polish couple here are counting | the minutes until Hey meet a teenage son they have known only | as a babe in arms. lonely separation written during PRODUCE TORONTO (CP) Churning cream and butter print prices were unchanged here today. The egg market was steady with receipts adequate for a steady de- mand. Quotations, provided by the Do- minion department of agriculture: Eggs, in fibre cases, graded: A large 49; A medium 36-37; A small 29; B 31; C 24. Wholesale to re- tail: A large'54; A medium 41-42; A small 34; B 36; C 29. Butter solids: Ontario, 1st grade tendable 58; non-tenderable 55% 57. (nominal) LIVESTOCK TORONTO (CP) -- Early trade was steady today at the Ontario stockyards. Receipts: Cattle 4,035; Leon Januszewski and his wife [calves 500; hogs 70; sheep and |,ominations of $50, saw the last chapter in a tale of [lambs 325; carried over from last §1000 and $5,000, will be dated week 250 cattle. was taken to hospital with a pos- |store safe here Saturday and es- sible fractured skull. His condition | caped with about $6,000. They had is fair. piled up a cracker box seréen to hield themselves from the view MILL DESTROYED $ y OWEN SOUND (CP)--The last of, Probe 1h te JHheti, A, Cute gurvivin steam-operated sawmill {yo 0" ooq to crack the safe. ruce peninsula Jos de | troved by fire Sunday at Colpay | Bay. 24 oy ile north of here. The | FATHER, SON INJURED old boiler room, a 90-foot chimney | SUDBURY (CP)--A father and stack and 75,000 feet of cut tim- | his 11-year-old son were taken to ber at the C. E. Whicher Ltd. saw- | hospital Sunday with undetermined mill were burned before firemen | injuries after an upstairs verandah from nearby Wiarton put out the | broke, dropping them 25 feet. In- plaze. Loss was estimated at $5, | jured were Morgan Wighton, 42, the weekend when they heard from | Prices: Choice weighty steers 21- London their 13-year-old son Zyg- | 2, one load at 22.50; good steers fryd had booked his passage to 20-21; good heifers 18-18.50, a few Canada. : ; | choice to 19; medium down to 17; Since Nazi soldiers dragged | choice to 19; medium down to 17; them off to a labor camp early | cutter cows down to 7; good heavy in the Second World ar the |hologna bulls 12-13; good replace- Januszewskis have not dared to ment cattle 18-19, mediums down hope they would see Zyeriyd Jean. |to 16. e hoy was brought up by an| cg,jyes gteady at 21-28 for good aunt and uncle when his parents |, .ygjce ce A mediums 1420; dairy-type grass {calves down to 8. were believed to have died common light in Canad ince | in nae No prices established on hogs. prison. | The parents, ie s | passage fare almost at once. They Sheep and lambs steady at 23 | 1048, started saving for Zygfi k jobs as domestics in a hotel a hundredweight delivered by rail; {and now own their own rooming 22 a hundredweight delivered by OTTAWA (CP)--The ninth series on sale Oct. 18, but will bear a lower interest rate than the one a year ago. Finance Minister Harris an- nounced today the bonds will pay 3% per cent interest annually. The eighth series floated last year had an interest rate of 3% per cent. Bank of Canada officials ex- plained the drop in rate is in line with current bond market trends. Bond buyers have been bidding up prices and yields have been de- clining. EXPECT GOOD SALE The government raised about $900,000,000 in the savings bonds drive last year and officials ex- pect to raise a like amount this | year. | The new bonds, to be sold in de- $100, $500, | Nov. 1 and will mature in 12 years. | They will' be offered for sale at 100 per cent up to Nov. 15, The maximum that can be held in any one name is $5,000 of this issue. The new bond drive open at a time when the government has to do some heavy refinancing. It has to pay off a $200,000,000 short-term loan floated earlier this year and to pay off Fourth Vietory Loan series called for redemption Oct. 1, three years before maturity. The Fourth Victory Loan in- | volves about $1,111,000,000. Un- doubtedly, besides the Ninth Ca- of Canada Savings Bonds will go | Interest On Canada Bonds Drops Half Of One Percent | nada Savings Bond drive, there | will be other government loans | floated within the next few months | to cover all the refinancing. _ The ninth series of Canada sav- ings bonds will retain some famil- iar features, including the privi- | lege of redemption at full face value plus interest. The bonds can be cashed at 100 per cent plug earned interest at any time at any bank in Canada. The bonds are registered in the buyer's name. Interest is to be paid annually, with each bond car- rying 12 annual interest coupons Those who buy the bonds in denominations of $500 to $5,000 and have them fully registered will re- ceive their -annual interest pay- ments by cheque. Bonds which are coupon-regis- tered and those which are fully registered, can be interchanged at any time. Athol Gow Hurt In Vicious Attack BALA (CP)--Athol Gow, 62, was slugged into ic on a street in this Georgian bay resort town Saturday night and suffered four head wounds that took 41 stitches to close. Gow was attacked by a man who apparently wanted to rob him. The assailant fled when Gow screamed and attracted passersby. Child Suffers Broken Wrist Eight-year-old Richard Zoroda, 152% Olive Ave., Oshawa, was in- ured and removed to the general ospital on Sunday, when he ran into the side of a moving car on Olive Ave. The accident was witnessed by his younger brother who told po- lice that they were playing in Cowan Park when Richard sud- denly ran across the street with- out looking to see if the road was clear. He received a broken right and a deep cut over his right eye. Driver of the car, Benincasa Gio- vanni, 178 Olive 'Ave., sald he was driving east on Olive when, in front of house number 130, the boy ran from the north side of the street into the path of his vehicle. He immediately applied his brak- es and pulled over to the left, but the boy did not see his car, and ran headlong into the side of it. Oshawa Driver Has Close Call ORILLIA -- Damage totalled al- most $5,000 in a collision last Fri- day night on Highway 11 between an auto and a large transport, but the car driver, though thrown through the windshield, received no more serious injury than acut eye and concussion. He was treat- ed at the Soldiers' Memorial Hospi- tal by Dr, W.D. Smith. Raymond Misztak, 19, of 355 St. Julien St., Oshawa, was diivug south down a steep curving hill just south of the Ontario Hospital School on the outskirts of Orillia. As he rounded the curve his car left the road and slid sideways on the shoulder. It struck a large boulder and was thrown back on the road and across the centre line where it collided with a Clarke Transport truck coming up the hill and driven by Mack Emms of 189 McKinnell $t. The front of the car struck the tractor near the gas tank, then hit the dual wheels and also the side of the trailer and was thrown back to its own side of the road. Misztak was given emergency medical aid by Miss Edna Hew- son of North Park, Toronto, a De- THE WEATHER TORONTO (CP)--Official fore lic weather office in Toronto at 9:30 a. m. ers spread across northern Ontario during the night in advance of warm, humid air that has reached the southern end of Lake Michigan this morning. This warm air will cover most of the Great Lakes area Tuesday. i Regional foecasts valid until midnight Tuesday: Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Lake Ontario, Niagara, southern Georg- ian Bay, Haliburton regions; Wind- sor, London, Toronto, Hamilton: Sunny with a few cloudy intervals today and Tuesday; a few isolated thunderstorms Tuesday al n and evening; warmer; winds south 15; low tonight and high Tuesday' t St. Thomas, Wingham, St. Cath- aines, Hamilton. } indsor, London oronto 70 and 90, Trenton and Muskoka 65 and 5 Rillaion 60 and. {85. Summary for Tuesday: Sunny and warm, Goo ; Northern rgian Bay, Kirk- land Lake gheEionst Forth Bay, ury: Sunny this morning, cloudy this afternoon and tonight: a few scattered showers tonight; sunny with a few cloudy intervals Tuesday; risk of a thunderstorm Tuesday evening; warmer: winds south 15; low tonight and high Tuesday at Earlton, North Bay and Sudbury 65 and 85. White River, Timmins - Kapus- kasing: Cloudy with scattered showers today; cloudy with a few sunny intervals Tuesday; not much Shane in tempeature; = winds ; low toni Tuesday 65 and in ang bigh TEMPERATURES TORONTO (CP)--Observed tem- peratures bulletin issued at the Toronto public weather office at 9. am. Min. Max, Dawson . EH: | J 64 Victoria 52 58 Edmonton 51 Regina 4 74 Winnipeg 5 73 White River White River Kapuskasing ... S. S. Marie ... North Bay Sudbury Muskoka Airport Windsor Toronto . Ottawa . Quebec City . partment of Public Health nurse | who was in a car just behind the % | transport. He was then taken by Orillia Ambulance to the hospital. The driver of the truck was un- hurt. Damage to the tractor is esti mated at over $3,000 from a bent frame and other breakage. The car, valued at about $2,000, is a total loss, OPP Constable Ian Hutcheon and John Andrews investigated and charges of dangerous and careless driving are being laid a- gainst Misztak. Highway Crash Kills One, | Injures Three WINDSOR (CP)--Edward Hry- cyk, 18, was killed instantly in a head-on collision that demolished | two cars on No. 2 highway early today. Three other men were ser- iously injured. Police said they believed Hrycyk was the driver of one of the cars. The three others, in 'fair' con- dition in hospital, are: Cecil Mackenzie, 23, Chatham, shock, possible concussion, pos- sible broken hip and numerous ser- ious head injuries. Ray Williams, 31, Chatham, se- vere head injuries, severe shock, two broken thighs, fractured femur of the arm. Ray Labadie, 19, Riverside, shock, multiple lacerations about the face and body, internal injur- ies. Ontario provincial police con- stable George Williams, of the Es- sex detachment, said Hrycyk and Labadie were in a westbound car and the two Chatham men were driving east. Pioneer Trail Followed By Boys MONTREAL (CP) -- Eight Mon- treal boys will follow the trail of the pioneers Tuesday when they set out for New York City. They intend to make the trip by canoe, carrying enough provisions for two weeks. The group--all members of the YMCA--will paddle down the St. Lawrence river and up the Rich- elieu river to Lake Champlain. They will haul their equipment overland to Lake George, paddle down the New York state canal and the Hudson river to their des- tination. Rhee Voices 'His Reaction SEOUL, Korea (Reuters)--Pres- ident Syngman Rhee said today Koreans should not be worried even if all United States and. United Nations troops are pulled out of South Korea. Rublie v 8 He was giving his first reaction to news that four divisions are being withdrawn from Korea and that the British Commonwealth division is being scaled down by about two-thirds. "When the Communists attacked us in 1950, we stood up to them not only because we expected for- eign help, but also because our ic 21 was" 'give us freedom or give us death.' : "If we only upnold this deter. | mination, there will eventually | come some conclusion. God is not callous, after all," he said. | Rhee said the United States does {not want war now because it be- |lieves an atomic and hydrogen war will mean the destruction of {all mankind. | "If we make concessions to the | Communists now in order to avoid | war, the United States itself event- | ually will be isolated and we will come under totalitarian Commune ist rule. "If we fight the Chinese Com- munists now, communism will be | defeated without the United States {peng engaged in war." 'Thurlow Man's Body Found | BELLEVILLE (CP)--A 60-man | search party Supaay found the body of Carman A. Clapp, 44, miss- ing from his Thurlow township home since last Monday in woods near his home. Police said Clapp had a shotgun wound in his side. The gun was found beside the body. Coroner Dr. Russell Scott said no inquest would eld. Clapp was charged with careless driving following an accident three months ago-in which his wife and a daughter were killed. Note Our New Address Sharp Electric Co. 140 Simcoe St. S. Dial 3-8214 TROUD ) casts issued by the Dominion pub. 4 Synopsis: A few scattered show- * - - ' FOOD MARKETS OX TAILS . . house. : "We saved penny by penny and dredweight; heavy lambs dis- when we had enough for the fare counted as much as 2 a hundred- we started pleading for our son's weight; common to medium lambs release through the British consul 15-20, good light sheep 8-10, com- in Gydnia--our old home," the mon sheep down to 4. father said. | truck; bucks discounted 1 a hun-| | ELP WANTEDsssuas ngress Cong PART OR FULL TIME WORK Supports President .y JOE HALL WASHINGTON (AP) -- Congress h.. given President Eisenhower a farewell bouquet in the form of a bill liberalizing and extending the social security system just about he wanted. Both the House of Representa- tives and the Senate shouted ap- proval of 'a compromise version late Friday and the bill, final ma- jor legislation of the 83rd Con- gress. went to Eisenhower for his expected signature. It will increase present and fu- ture benefits to retired person: ard survivors, boost taxes to fi- nance the higher payments a bi an additional 10,000,000 under the 20-year-old system. This was one of the key bills in the Eisenhower legislative pro- gram and one from which the Re- ublicans expect to reap a pol fica harvest. ] Particularly is this true since payments to 4.500, s Policy 000 persons mow on the rolls will go out about the first of Oct when the fall campaign for econ- trol of Congress will begin to reac ith height STARTED BY DEMOCRATS Pemocrats, however, insist the voters will not forget that the sys- tem originated under a Democratic administration and Congress and that the Democratic party has has fought to expand it. The bill will extend social sec- urity coverage to nearly all work- ing people in the U. 8., whether they are employed by others or nd | are self-employed. Farm cov.rage aioused a last- minute controversy in the Senate ov r the bill as finally worked up by a Senate-House conference. The senate had excluded farm opera tors, but House conferees stooc firm on this point and finally won over to their side the three Sen- ate Republican sonferees. Recently the Communist rulers gave their consent, Zygfryd ar-| rived in Britain a week ago. Uranium May Go 'To Russia's Use BONN, Germany (Reuters)--So- viet authorities in East Germany are nearing completion of an eight- year-old plan to ship Europe's rich- est uranium deposits to Russia, a | West German government report | said. | the report said hundreds of tons. | of top-grade uranium ore have | been shipped to Russia. Russian authorities now . are emptying the remaining mines in an attempt to give Soviet atomic stockpiling a lead over the West, the report said. t said total output was "prc digions" In ope district alone, 40 | tons of top quality ore are to be | | mined 5 ls FRUIT TORONTO (CP) Wholesale {fruit and vegetable price changes | quoted here today: Peaches, bskt., .80-.70; beets, hamper $1, doz. .40; squash, hamper $1.25; onions green doz. bunch .40; vegetable marrow, hamper $1, bskt., .50: cel- ery, case $1.50; tomatoes, 6-quart bskt., .60-.75, $1 for 1ls; cabbage, case $1; cucumbers; bskt. .50-.75; beans, bskt., $1; blueberries, bskt., $2.75-3; peppers, bskt., $1; turnips, hamper. $1.25. Potato prices: Off trucks $2.25 | 2.35; to trade $2.50-2.65. SUPERTES (A 1 UR pp (Canadian Co. | being sold throughout the U.S, ! now makes available:) NO SELLING now handling Nationally Accepted Product currently through Department Stores, Chains, Super Markets, etc.; and having National Advertising support, choice territories are now being d Drug this area and will A few be i d parties * . * $945.00! "ew of $s in area Permanent resident in the area to Definite evidence of reliability Capable of making an immediate cash outlay Definitely able to devote opened in the qualifications: be assigned! and dependability! of about 8-10 hours per week to handling a! selected! in duties involved. Available at once and able to take immediate action NO SELLING OR SOLICITING will be involved for Company Personnel will arrange for all retail accounts and thoroughly train selected parties Duties will consist of issuing merch a d by Company, maintainng proper records, and Age or education is not important as long as applicants are honest, reliable, and possessing a sincere desire for financial security. Earnings should approximate $100 per week on Part Time Basis, with to collection of money due. much higher time or that of company Gazette. territory is being established at once by our Canadian company and we prefer that any parties not possessing the above qualifications and having the necessary funds on hand now, do not wasté either your own personnel. number and background information about yourself to Box 622 . Times e as b develops. This Write, giving name, telephone BEEF KIDNEYS PORK LIVER . LEAN BRISKET LEAN FEATURE VALUE! Tuesday and Wednesday | MINCED BEEF CLUB STEAKS mn. Above Specials Available in WHITBY and OSHAWA STORES | 6. "9 4 9 9 9 9 All Day -- Please Note! SSE Ae BIL.