Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 8 Dec 1955, p. 21

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anada's World Relations Wants 30 PC| THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE Hoa 0 Combining The Oshawa Times and, Whitby Gazette and Chronicle Sig ey Much Impr oved This Year Re du ction Ln SECnoY OSHAWA WHITBY, THURSDAY, -- : rest DITAUA chil nterngtional Sinejair, that he believed the out-visit did not produce any concrete [But Mr. Pearson said it was im- relations, the year 1955 for Canada look for peace is| hopeful. [results immediately--he did not|portant that Europeans see the| TORONTO (CP)--Attorney-Gen ended better than it began. pana Mr. Pearson s eturn to Ottawa expect that it would--it was prob- physical evidence of Canadian co-|eral Roberts said AER On Jan. 27, Prime Mmister St [in mid-November coincided with/ably the year's highlight for Can-|operation in NATO--that is, the air 44 persons were killed on Ontario Laurent told the Commons that|collapse of the Big Four foreign ada in the field of international|division and the Canadian infantry highways in November, 19, fewer the international Shuation Fa |inisiors* conference at Geneva.|relations, more in the way of pres-|brigade. than for the same month last year. | "quite grave" because of the For- He said: tige than anything else. After the Formosa scare in the i Fe mosa crisis | "I went off to Russia convinced] Canada continued to be deeply|spring, the situation in the Far| ile Bumber of aceidemts, how- | Sa The previous day, after a some- that one important reason for the| concerned with, the preservation East remained relatively calm. over: Nas more than that of Ell times bitter debate, the Commons relaxation of international tension and strengthening of NATO. This| Canada pulled most of its in- vem! er Jia. Woh TUmher x approved by a vote of 213 to 12 thelis thet NATO is built up andlconcern became even more appar-fantry brigade and its 'three de-|;Juries las 0 was 754, ratification of the Paris agreements strong. 1 believe even more now ont after the Big Four meeting in stroyers out of the, Korean theatre fewer than a year ago. for admittance of a rearmed Westithat nothing shoud oe dou: i)Geneva in July. after two years of armistice. It| Mr. Roberts gave the figures, Germany into the North Atlantic) weaken NATO strength or unity." In -Octobr, Mr. Pi id: | maintained its participation. on the| for the first month of a 12-month! tances i a ol Sov : : n Octobr, Mr. Pearson said: ed its 4 . ; ; eel alliance. All 12 opposed were CCF je, Sate Soviet leaders had "NATO has assumed special re-|threc-nation international truce su-| safely campaign during an address me late August, External Affairs Tos ore OF Rusia imar 4 ob- sponsibilities for the maintenance(PeIVisoty commission for. Indo. work of Ontario radio station i Mister Perr ay was saying in aljectives is to smash NATO. of peace and security. The dis- china. About 160 Canadians, mostly| The text of his speech on % Vancouver speech that "the time| TASK "FOR DIPLOMACY charge of them has never required members of the armed forces, leased to the press ty ls is ecoming--and soon--when we! 'Mr Pearson said before he went that we should brandish our arms. | work on the commnussion. [ He said 91 persons were killed! should have another and searching|to Russia that though the diplo-| hey do require, however. that we; The Formosa crisis had reper ; ". cr." 2ocidents in Ontario last! look at the problem" of Canadian|matic climate was warmer, no Should not now discard them and cussions in the Canadian Commons. | nth "63 on Toads under super-| recognition of Communist China./major agreements had yet been thus give grounds to any potential On March 24, Mr. Pearson said | icion of the provincial police | VISITS TO RUSSIA "|worked out between East and West, (aggressor for believing that it| Canada would not become involved| "ye pif Sticke our problem In October, Mr. Pearson made a| But the negative results of Geneva, Might be safe to take risks within any war between the Chinese tp pu month with renewed de-| doy Sfficial vist '0 Juissia lhe said on bis retu, didnt meanlPRCL . \ pupops ts A chore iulonds. of | termination." he said. "In Decem.| About the same time, Fisheries|that the process of negotiation was CANUCKS IN E % 5 ot if that: I ber, 1954, 88 persons died on high-| # Minister Sinclair visited Sibera|necessarily ended. All resources of With the increased emphasis on Quomoy aud Mats H i that, war| ways in Ontario." and Red Chna. diplomacy should be employed to/North American defence, there was e | ep Jocal. I oh ed or) Mr. Roberts. reiterating his ob- On Nov. 16 Mr. St, Laurent told/work out an accommodation with some talk in the capital of bringingh a nos! car.» iS ma Cr joctive of a 50-per-cent reduction newspaper men, after hearinz re-/Russia, home sore Or all of Hie 12 Bear jis that. evemslinite iS vention in highway fatalities during the| te Mr 5 : son" ian fi S ons base . 5€, DY k i i : ports from Mr. Pearson and M. Though Mr. Pearson's Russian! fighter squa rons [States might have a chain reaction | SAmpaign, Said the December lwith unforeseen consequences| eal} Ta Shou net exceed ! {which would cause the conflict to t x ean be fe ge 1 oy ' Mond spread far beyond the locality) €€Rt, it means that at least there y will be that many more people i R ! S WH R Y 0 U SAVE a began Sig €ven Avross alive and enjoying Christmas than ne i {would otherwise be the case." : gs : E i i ! ACTION NOT AUTOMATIC ; SG bc Kh About the same time, he said | GA ; hay that if the U.S. became involved in NO WONDER | PALACE OF PREMIER On This . . . -------- TE -- -------- ES ------------ a mejor war Canada would be in it fr start. t did not| Lise so : @ 21 4 IR it ftom fhe start Taal dig aol IT WAS COLD This is the palace of the free, | in Saigon. Backed by the west- | ernment members are making | to carry out the Geneva Agree- y: | mira | would automatically spring to the| VANCOUVER (CPwt non-communist premier Diem, | ern powers, Diem and his gov- | valiant, but unsuccessful efforts | ment. 'Fednews' | ol IS in anv N R (CP)--For 19 premhe (@ (0) [\] SO LE | support of the U.S. in any and vears tHe heat Was. pipes {on | every war in which the U.S. might | . ; , wards the coroner's office here, | J ® "TOP FRONT' Tunin £8 |] become involved. | and for 19 years the workers M k N h O oF 9 | At Singapore in October, Mr| jngige shivered during winter d es ew Pearson promised a 'significant months. | ! lincrease in Canada's contribution w i i | New Super Cascode Chassis . . . world's mest lto the Colombo plan for co-opera-| p orkmen installing a new | | t ; in South| eating unit Monday found out | p' ¥ . . powerful} ive econoTie Seyelopment 1 Jawa | why. A main valve controlling f Giant 21" Aluminized Picture Tube with deep: and Southeast Asia. ada has| the 'system was not opened | ian um given $133,000,000 to the plan since| hen the original unit was in- Sick Bed tinted Opfic wi thoy bel ' 1951, the comihution this year| stalled in 1936. N cantrels where they belong . .. vp lop... being She 32,000.00 * Prime Min-| | ; i f By FRASER MacDOUGA calls when, he left a chunk of ore, "Shoot, it's a deal!" said Hirsh- bebidas ti ster St Laurent sltended the Com: |_ SHERBROOKE, Que. (CP)--Don| Canadian Press Staff Wr. the size of a man's fist in the horn, and he put up the $30,000 "Tilt-out" front preference control nf prime ministers' con- . (Kilgour, 7, has made a new career| pIIND RIVER, Ont. (CP)--A mining recorders' office at Sault) for the drilling program. Powerful 6" x 9° speaker. New "off-the-feor" ference in London. He said in the] e S evive for hiusen oliougn he Ras bee persistent geologist and a financier Ste. Marie, Ont., some 90 miles| (Claims Breton and others had cabinet styling. Commons on his return that he | edridden for the past 13 years.|\ho gambled because "uranium's|West of here. It was identified only held in the area had lapsed. In had tcld the prime ministers Ba C ™ C | ecappled by Srtusitis, the Jormer got se} grea uncovered ihe BY fue bi Long. hotell 1052: the 2 Cubiu-}1irshhots intey. 'ana ouldn't take on any addi- | sever am and any hospital or-| billion-dollar uranium field on e One day in , S00 hotelkeeper | ests moved in and sta , mainly Regular 329.95 Ca commitments. zarist lub |dezls but faces undaunted the|doorstep of this century-old lum-| Aime Breton idly passed his geiger|to the east of the old claims. The At the United Nations, Health| vn § | challenge of making a living. bering town. counter over the assortment of ore diamond drills went to work April LOW LOW SPECIAL Minister Martin played a key role MOSCOW (AP)--The Kremlin's, Mr. Kilgour was employed by the| Tenacious Franc R. Joubin! samples in the recorder's office. 6, 1953. By May, drill cores were [] in continuing disarmament discus- Post-Geneva experiment in a re-/Sherbrooke Record when arthritis|solved a metallurgical riddle and|The unknown's sample set the in* on the way to a Vancouver assay sions. But the Russians rejected vival of the name and fame of began its painful attack. In 1951 he brought to light hidden. under-|Strument chattering. office. MODEL STMAS PRICE ONLY President Eisenhower's plan for) Czarist Russia's most lavish night [started 'selling magazine subscrip-| ground riches of the atomic age.| Breton, long an active mine The assay reports offered clinch €2381X CHRI mutual aerial inspection and atspot has come to an abrupt end. tions but found that to represent a Joseph H. Hirshhorn. Latvian-born hunter, and his prospector-partner ing proof of Joubin's theory. Out The Mai fond year's end little new progress was The New Yar" night club and subscription company -he had to| New York and Toronto promoter, Karl Gunterman set out to trace of 56 assays, 50 were good. The e Maitla [restaurant on Leningrad highway, deal by money order. {risked $30,000 on Joubin's theories|the source. But first they tipped grade was low, about two pounds of apparent. m i : bi rat 150 Fitisiened only a few months ypapie to travel to the post! after other financiers refused. He's Joubin, whom they had consulted uranium oxide to the ton, but there j3E0 in Foon of the old Yar ,eice for money orders, he ex-|in line for an estimated $30,000,000! on other properties, that they knew|were indications of a huge ore Many Other U K To L aunch {Rs aur an 0. pre d revolutionary. y1ained his plight to the company,| payoff. { where there was a piece of radio-| body. And it was close to a paved ] wld be a Acrumed the name of which then agreed to deal with] Ontario's mines minister, Hon. active ore. | highway and the railway. " Thsing Philip Kelly, calls the 42-by-26-\ A month or more later, they]! Where would more of the min- TV VALUES him by cheque. . for the establishment has been! . in Imi i i i His most severe attack came in! mile field south and east of here took the geologist to Long town-eral be found? Joubin, the geolo- Now At FOWLER'S Polio Program owed. acked te bf ster | 1946 while he waited for a taxicab the world's greatest single potential ship just east of here. At a spot | gist, had the answer. The mineral- s Di e place after | For 5% years he| source of radioactive mineral. He almost within hailing distance of! ization in the first find, now the hos-| puts its proven worth at a billion| the Trans-Canada highway and the Pronto mine, lay along what is dollars and its indicated worth at Canadian Pacific Railway line to| known geologically as the contact three billions. | the Soo, they showed him a set of| between two rock types--mississagi | LONDON (CPr--Britain is ex- it was labelled the "New Yar." |in cold weather. ; ipected to launch a trial program|But now only a handful, mostly tried treatments at various poliomyeli-/from Western embasies, is at. Pitals--Hotel Dieu here, Toronto iof inoculation against ] \ i ing, using a vac- tracted by the i | Western Hospital and Queen Eliz- He a er iT : . of pre ues of oor show abeth Hospital, 2lso in Toronto, ROMANTIC HISTORY {open pits# which apparently had | quartzite and the basement com- Later, a full-scale immunization| The idea has apparently perco.|and twice in St. Mary's Hospital, Behind the discovery lies ajbeen worked by an earlier pros-|plex. : program 'may be undertaken, de-/lated among Muscovites that it's Montreal, {tangled thread of circumstance, pector. CLUE IN BOOK STORE 8 4 w» pending on the success of the Wests. (smarter not to take part in tnd Aside from magazine subscrip.|climaxed by what was probably| VIGOROUS RESPONSE Jouhin remembered. & . map, i lated. ~of what used "tw tions, Mr. Kilgour now has a|Canada's most fantastic airborne] Joubin's geiger counter ®hattered| drawn in 1922 by Dominion govern- oa The - trial program; if carried outiisol i Bimmple : TELEVISION SPECIALISTS as anticipated, will be under theihe called Western decadence. | selection of Christmas and greet-| mine-staking bee. | vigorously over the pits. He| ment geologist W. H. Collins, which | auspices of the Medical ling cards, pen and pencil sets, An unknown man, probably one ped up samples and shipped traced the course of the contract. |Council. GIRL KILLED {wallets, tool kits, knitting books, of the hundreds of prospectors who them away for assays. {It was long since out of print. But TORONTO (CP) -- Six-year-old note paper and the like. ranged the area for more than a But his hopes were dashed when|a tattered copy was turned up in | Sharon. Joan Gelder was killed] But Don Kilgour admits ruefully| century in search of base and| assays showed only the barest|a second-hand book store in Tor- | Tuesday night when she was struck that he is a salesman with al precious metals, unwittingly pro-itrace of uranium. He and other onto. It indicated the contact took iby a car while crossing the street! difference--people must come to|vided the clue which led to the geologists who followed him to the|/the form of a giant reverse 8S, {near her home. 'him, he cannot go to them. !field. At some time, no one re- spot attributed the geiger counter with a total length of 100 miles. = -- tm - ~~ |reaction to thorium, the regarded| Joubin and Hirshhorn had a | as worthless. ¢mall mining exploration company | Joubin who was born in San called Technical Consultants Lim- | Francisco 44 years ago of French ited. Its staff was far too 'small | parents and grew up in British for the fast, major staking opera- | Columbia, turned back to the busi- tion the map indicated. ness of making a living as a con-| The men made a deal with Pres- sulting geologist. . ton East Dome, a Timmins area | He never forgot Blind River and old mine which Hirshhorn his interest was quickened "when, controlled. It had the men--and it | ¥ 3 rn TY £ I picked up a couple of facts." had money in its treasury to fi h 1 a » They key fact he found in a paper nance the operation. { . ¥ by a French scientist reporting | A force vi 75 men was flown in ' z i \ ; that uranium was soluble in sul-| waves from South Porcupine, 250 v p a ) were phuric acid. Joubin remembered| miles to the north. They sulphide ore in the Blind River pits | landed on the numerous lakes in 54 SIMCOE ST. N. OSHAWA y . Ao and theorized that surface water| float-equipped planes which left had formed sulphuric acid and had | South Porcupine heading in other f leached away the uranium. directions to conceal their destina- "Then I did what I should have tion. The assault was mounted thought of in the first place," he|from the north to preserve secrecy. FOR QUALITY AND LOW PRICES EVERY DAY--Shop at STROUD'S Sri ht na 8 EHS EL p R RR \ | for thorium--and there was none." | tario for recording claims, the ; 3 SURE OF URANIUM | crews had staked 1,400 claims cov- Since thorium is practically in| ering 56,000 acres along the course ! I RAD 3 A 3 : [ soluble, Joubin was sure he'd find|of the reverse S. Lawyers, who @ Jop. Quality Neats ® BUT TER \\ ' ¥ {uranium underground. His theory had accompanied the staking par- bc n : could be proved only by diamond ties to swear out their affidavits | drilling. For that he needed money!on the spot, turned up at mining LB 6 1 [ J ; e --and for three years he had been | recorders' offices all over Ontario | trying unsuccessfully to get finan-|at 8 am. July 11, 1953, to record ROUND A | r ; ; | ciers interested in the field. | the claims. SIRLOIN 3 £ BY THE CARTON ; | He turned to the 55-year-old | The news was out and one of : | Hirshhorn, an associate in develop-| Ontario's greatest staking rushes y AND CIGARET t ES : < ; | ment of the Rix uranium property | followed. In a few weeks another OR = Ca (in Saskatchewan's Beaverlodge 8,000 claims were recorded by new- h . comers. Now virtually the whole WING country. 3.09 ; i : [40 Joubin . his theory. area k solidly held. ROASTS wn ep -r. RCAF Down To Its SHORT CUT -- PRIME ois 9B Br al | TG Say Last Thirty 'Lancs BAG : 3 6TH & |p 3 Bec FIRST 45 J : ; =) . 4 A | By DAVE MCcINTOSH its peak strength, bomber com- R1B 7TH . FOUR Ib. \ LEAN yr § / ) | Canadian Press Staff Writer Ly including No. § RCAF ou i MINCED BEEF Ny Yardley Bil vs #, | OTTAWA (CP -- The RCAF is|had 42 squadrons of them. During q ios? / i s tthe war, the Lancs flew more than , Ladies' Sef $4.25 = down to its last 30 Lancasters. Bu 1156000 operations and dropped 608, | least some of these are likely, , (C, O0E) mbes. Although not the LEAN, BONELESS \ Yo [to be around for a few years yet.6!". X 2 1s 49. YN, [70 thovands or Camacian war 5, fou pains bomber te enter Jb. € > ime difmen, {he busting of {he | dominant in bomber command and SHANKLESS FRESH |{the demolition of an ancient and | 2% one of the most potent factors in the defeat of Nazi Germany. : x A= 5 |favorite landmark. They were the v : LEAN, ROLLED Pork SHOULDER ; ; » = lcarriers of RAF bomber com.:| The Lanc was used in many dif b mand's mortal blows at Germany, ferent roles: vast saturation Fads, | ; precision a low- and highlevel . 7 I 1 7) ! , Some of the Lancs recently re (ks such as the 1943 breachin BRI S RET Ib. 3 3 Ib. 3 ¢ 3 \ Ve NZ tired from the RCAF are meeting of the Mohne and Eder dams oe. fv ' Xi a cruel fate. In air force parlance, | (he 1944 sinking of the Tirpitz. --- 7k y they are being cannibalized--| FRESH ¢ : A . / | broken down for spare parts to be |used for other Eancs still in service. KEAN, MEATY : PORK BUTT h uh Vi vi 7 | The two maritime Tevongjssance Wants Control squadrons at Greenwood, N. S 1h \ g , ; ¢ have recently converted from Lan: RUMP Roast ©» 39: 7 it Nene OR) § Ads $ casters to U. S.built Neptune Y . Lean, Meaty Ih. 4 c ; |bombers and the coastal patrol Nl veawa f in | squadron at Comox, B. C., is ex] NEW YORK (AP) -- Robert 3 o Moses, chairman ofthe New York | pected 'to do the same. That will | [State Power Authority, announced FRESH ' |still leave some Lancs on search C PORK L IN ; land rescue and photography work | Monday that the authority will ask { 3 | | for the next two or three years. |the state legislature for the right (SPARE PARTS SCARCE to control billboards along a 35- | Because production of Lancasters|mile stretch of the St. Lawrence CH RIB END Ih. 39: 1 .. . |ceased in 1945, spare parts now (river. d |are hard to come by. That's why| The chairman said in a report ROASTS Ih. y o those bei tired fi the focal hi ge! Tenderloin End 1b. 45¢c §| DELIVER ; DELIVER ise heins retived form the focal agency aso. piaus to conceal SATA ¢ | The Lancaster was developed by and seaway construction in the In- Centre Chops Ih. 65: 9 SIMCOE ST. RA 3-3431 IA. V. Roe Aircraft Co. ternational rapid$§ section of the | Altogether, 7.366 Lancasters were river. Reforestation and other new built, 430 of them in Canada. At plantings are planned.

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