Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 29 Feb 1956, p. 2

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f THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Wednesday, February 29, 1388 CATHERED TO INAUGURATE TRAFFIC SAFETY CA Above is a group of citizens | Company, Limited, at the Hotel | traffic safety among those who atiended a - Genosha, to mark the inaugur- | » This | The Times - Gazette. Prominent | in the picture are T. R. Me- | | Ewen, school inspector; former campaign. is being featured in campaign dinner given by the Shell Oil | ation of the company's novel | a series of advertisements in | Chief Constable Owen D. Friend, | Cl PRIGN Shakespeare Will Revolve Readers Pick When Jazz Hit STRATFORD (CP)--Brace your- self Shakespeare, jazz is heading fc. Stratford. The cats are cutting into your {festival with some real cool cul- | ture. {for the - Stratford Shakespearean Festival, said today jazz concerts, an opera, piano and song festivals will highlight the 1956 Stratford | Music Festival. | The jazz men will include Dave | Brubeck, Duke Ellington, Willie (The Lion) Smith and Canadian | Cal Jackson, Mr. Appleb also ed a newly-formed festival orchestra of about 40 musicians will play un- der gues: conductors Reginald Stewart and Heinz Unger. Mr. Stewart, formerly of the Toronto | conservatory, now heads the Pea- Lody Institute of Music at Balti- more, Md. Mr. Unger, formerly of {Berlin and now living in Toronto, Louis Applebaum, music director | s Stratford (conducts by engagement through- out the world. The festival chorus, directed by Slmer Iseler, teacher of music at York Memorial collegiate in Tor- onto, will make its second appear- ance at the music festival. Oscar Winners How erprert are you as a movie are listed on the ballot which critic? pears every day in this ne Oshawa theatre managers are paper only. sponsoring a contest to see who, When you check off your gues can predict most closely the win- as to which people and pictu Pr ners of this year's movie Oscars.| will win the Oscars, take y | hat ie, 2 Perhaps. the oirst tne | Your guess could net you alentry to any of the Osha [integrated into a serious music year's supply of movie tickets for|theatres. It is not necessary festival," Mr. Applebaum said. | two persons. g {buy a movie ticket in order "Such highlights as Schubert's| Entry forms are being printed! enter the contest. 'Die Schoene Mullerin', performed [daily in The Times-Gazette and| 'Entries have been received by pianis. Rudolf Serkin and bari- | completed ballots can be dropped|ready, and the contest is & tone Martial Singher, alternating|in the special boxes inside the|over very well," says L. E, Osi | with Duke Ellington concerts, indi-|{doors of local theatres Bilt-| president of the Oshawa Thea |cates the attitude we are applying |more, Marks, Plaza and Regent.| Managers Association. "We exp 10 our programming this year.""| The contest closes at midnight,{a very heavy vote." The musical festival will run five | March 20. There are five films in weeks from July 7 to Aug. 11. A! The winners of the Oscar awards running for the top motion picts to.al of 35 concerts will be pre- will be announced the following|of the year. They are: Mar | sented. | day. The champions in eight cate-| Love Is A Many-Splendored Thi The drama season, from June 18 gories are chosen annually by|Mis'er Roberts, Picnic, The R: to Aug. 18, will present two members of the Academy of Mo-| Tattoo. Siakespeare plays, "The Merry tion Picture Arts and Sciences. | One of the following will rece In the Oshawa contest, entrants the Oscar for best -actor: Ern hose ballots most nearly match! Borgine, James Dean, James C. | Pledge $315,917 Stratford Fund | | STRATFORD (CP)--A total of $315,917 has been pledged to date in the $934,000 campaign for a new Stratford Shakespearean Festival Theatre, M. C. G. Meighen, na- tional chairman of the Stratford T. R. Elliott and other members of the Traffic Advisory Council of Oshawa. ~~Photo by Ireland Scouts Honor permanent theatre fund, announced Tuesday. This includes a $50,000 grant {from the Atkinson charitable foun-| dation, - announced late Monday. | "The results to date are very gratifying when it is remembered Memory 2 | Wives of Windsor" and "Henry IV," directed by Michael Langham. | the official Oscar selections will ney, Frank Sinatra and Spen: . . | be declared winners of the prizes. | Tracy. : First Birthday | FOUR PRIZES Top actress will be 'chosen fr. There are four prizes of equal this quintette: Susan Haywa | In Four Years |:yeurim FR Congratulations are extended to! In event of a tie, correct ans-!| There are also categories the following who are today cele-| wers will be placed in a box and the following: best siory a King street east; Ronald Whit-| To make things easier, the no-| rector and best scoring of music bread, 357 Jarvis Street; Beryl minations in all eight categories' pictures. Umphrey, ' Browning avenue; Al Says Irrigation Pipelines | value--books of tickets good for Katharine Hepburn, Jenni | |a year's movie entertainment for Jones, Anna Magnani and Elea: ' brating their first real birthday for! the first four drawn will be given screenplay, best supporting act four years. Donna Hooper, 1285 the prizes. | best supporting actress, best Mclnroy, 352 Buena Vista Ave- nue; Elwood W. Newman, Taun ton road west; Helen Dyer, Co- lumbus. City Council Briefs o1.4 Baden Powell MOVE BY WINDSOR On Sunday forenoon, the 1st| Troops sprang up quickly and under way in most centres." said = . TORONTO (CP)--Premier Frost|It would cost $900,000 and a pi The board of health is to consider | Oshawa Boy Scout Groups paraded many became very interested Mr. Meighen. "It indicates the Trial Continues i would cost about A 500.000 | roseq extension to London wou | from the Scout Hall to Westmount|in B-P"s ways of Scouting. Soon 2|great pride Canadians have in the [te build three pipelines to irrigate |add several hundred thousand dH commending the board of works the work would be directly charg-|Council seeking an amendment to|United Church for their annual staff was organized to pro- festival." SUDBURY (CP) -- The second southwestern Ontario dry points. [lars to the cost. | for prompt action in alleviatingled to council and that the asso-the Sanatoria for Consumptives Baden - Powell Memorial Serv-imote the organization. In 1910 he| giratford itself has led the way murder trial of Robert Ducharme| Preliminary surveys have been OUTLINE IN REPORT { flooding of Montrave and College ciation is prepared to absorb the|Act. The council wants the act ice. The church was filled to cap- left the army at the age of 53 and the campaign Total to date of Hamilton today moved into its! made for consideration by a water| An over-all provincial plan Jo gl streets. "We did not expect such|cost. The CRA had no intention to|to provide for compulsory institu- acity as Reverend Summers, chap-| devoted his life to Scouting. Shortly here is $84,432. In addition Strat. Minth day with both prosecution resources commission to be set up [tack water shortages and polluti service', said Mrs. Williams," as go beyond its terms of reference|tional care of TB patients whollain of the Group, opened the ser- afterwards, he was made chief ford city council's grant of $30,- and defence wrestling with the by a bill given second reading by as outlined several weeks ago our district was made an eyeore/and is prepared to stand by its/leave a sanatoria without approval| vice. scout of the world and he became 000 is waiting final 'authorization question of the time lapse between [thc Ontario legislature Tuesday. |a report to the Gordon comm bounded by highways, blind streets, | action in terms of cost he said.lof the superintendent, or who be-| In his sermon, Rev. Mr. Sum-| widely known for his great achieve: po the Oniario legislature {eating and death for school teacher | Premier Frost told the legislature sion on Canada's economic pri GM factories, and we must not for- or . have in a manner hazardous to mers spoke of the life of Lord ment, Scouting for boys. He died! : Steve Klapouschak. a survey was made of a 15-mile pects, showed that $2,400,000, get gas stations." She thanked Ald. OFFER TO BUY other patients and public, |Baden-Powell from his boyhood on January 8, 1941 and soldiers and Klapouschak's body was found pipeline from Lake Erie to sup- would have to be spent during t L. Gifford for his action. On the motion of Ald. J. Dyer {days until he died and rested in the|scouts, white and black carried him fier a pile of lumber at Dalton, (ply the towns of Harrow and Essex |next 20 years. if woud Mayor W. John Naylor termed council agreed to offer the First OFFER TO BUY shadow of Mount Kenya. He went|to his last resting place in the ji miles northwest of here, nfald, surrouning farm lands. LF A Httle Jess a a wo it" a very nice letter" and Ald. Baptist Church $57,500 for its City council has agreed fo sclijon to say as a boy, B.P. used to|shadow of Mount Kenya. A mem- { ecember, Lia Ducharme was would cost $1,000,000. 1 esis Ee n Ty al Gifford said that any bouquets be- property on the corner of King for $1,200 a block of land on the ship away from his school classes orial tablet was placed in West- sonvicied of murder last May but 3 10 1nle ane 1 Carey up us |and i yh Sale ge dif ing handed out should go to the and Prospect streets. | west side of Cloverdale Street. An into the woods nearby pretend that minister Abbey, in the Empire's un ropose Tew Orin Appeal Court set the hggs obit, atere o ont Lane Ms er ay of tit city engineer's department and {offer to purchase was received he wag living like an Indian in the capital, where the great are hon- i : ; {Conviction ast and: ordered: aden i cost $450,000 bi setfing up a commission i board of works men, who are NEW TRAFFIC RULE from Mrs. Nance McLeese, 336 Ar-| primitive ways of their life. As he ored and remembered with this in-| The Windsor City Council has The er of Klapouschak's| The third line, 15 'miles long, | administer this program, Oppo! responsible for the efficient man-| Council has agreed to a new by- thur Street. Ald. J. Dyer of the grew older, he became very clever scription. | asked the Oshawa City Council to BLL contents AM sill FL carry wator to St. Thomas. [tion leader Oliver oe the gover, ner with which the work was done. law which changes the traffic regu- property committee moved that in dramatics, writing, and music. "In memory of Robert Baden-, agree with a move to ask the Fed- arce because his body was found a > . ruent is trying to rule by comm! lations for the Bond and Simcoe council accept the offer. |At the age of 18, he joined the Powell Chief Scout of the World eral Government to consider es-i; RS ? RUSSIA TAKES TO PLAYS <ion rather than by the legislatu SEEK IMPROVEMENTS British Army and trained for se- owe es COU 0 he orld, tablishing a fund from which mu- MOSCOW (Reuters) > > s : | : y week after the slaying. Street intersection. Between 12| Ald. Dyer said the offer The prosecution contends, -- British, The Liberal leader said the g that the campaign has hardly got BOARD breakdown of heating and had to paig y g Mrs. M. Williams, 288 College take immediate action. | Avenue, has written to council] 'There was no implication thatiz petition from the Windsor City THANKS Second Murder May Cost About $2,500,000 2 i | Municipalities | was Smith Transport Ltd. has written noon and 6 p.m., Monday to Satur- "very fair". The lot has a 5) foot|veral years for an officer. After his| 1857-1941. to council seeking action on im- rovements to the entrance to their] loor Sreet West property. The company is seeking regrading and gravelling of a ramp for access, a job which would cost about $3,334 The letter was sent to board of vitation from the Oshawa Cham-| attend | ber of Commerce to attend a spe- March 6. Council accepted the in- Boys," Little did he know that his the sounding of {cial meeting for consideration of vitation. works for report. BARBER SHOP John Van Driel of 190 Mill Street has asked council for permission fo establish a barber shop at his home. In a letter to council, Ernest Marks, QC, made the application | for Van Driel. The letter was ac- eompanied by a petition signed by residents in the area waiving ob-| jection to the establishing of a shop nearby. It was stated that the nearest barber shop is a quarter of a mile from this address and there are two grocery stores nearby. The application was sent to planning board for report ACTION EXPLAINED The Oshawa Recreation Com- mittee has explained to council its action In having repairs made to the heating system of the Gibbs Street building. E. R. Higgins, chairman, told council that the CRA was faced with a complete offer and report to council day, there will be no left turn into Simcoe Street from Bond Street. | PARKING MEETING City council has accepted an in- Oshawa's parking problem. The meeting will be held on Thursday night in the library auditorium and Ralph C. Day, Parking Commis- sion Chairman from Toronto, will be the main speaker. BUSINESS SOUGHT Mrs. Mary Wodnisky has re- quested council permission to oper- ate a hairdressing busines at 497 Bloor Street Eat. The application] was sent to planning board for re-| port. SEEK RE-ZONING Stanley Sargant has offered to sell to the city certain lots of land for the extension of Gibb Street, between Park Road and Montrave Avenue. Mr. Sargant offered the land for $1,600 cash, but conditional on the rezoning to commercial of| certain other lands owned by him. | Planning board is to consider the in the graduation, he was sent to South frontage and is located Africa to take over a regiment Southmead sub-division. known as the 13th' Hussars. There Trumpeters under the direction of action on the petition and sent it meal. VON INVITATION 'he learned for himself the ways The Victorian Order of Nurses of Scouting against the enemy. has invited members of council to| After his return to England, he their annual meeiing on wrote the book, 'Scouting for book would create Scouting groups {in many countries of the world. | nicipalities may borrow at a low The Scouts, Cubs and congrega- interest rate. tion stood while the First Oshawa] The Oshawa Council deferred A.S.M. Mr. Askew sounded Last| to the finance committee for |Past while the colours were slowly examination and report. dipped in a salute to Lord Baden-| mye windsor council has suggest- {Powell and were raised again at oo" p.¢ the fund could be used of Reveille. There, tiran0e debentures for urgently jwas a one minute silence during needed public service projects. iwhich the flags were dipped. | Interest rate should not exceed By-LAWS APPROVED City council on Monday approv- ed the following by-laws: To provide for certain exemp- tions from taxation for farm lands. This is a machinery measure pass- ed each year and reduces garbage, |fire protection and other charges |on farmlands, in the city. To authorize the signing of an ent with the Township of 3 fast Whitby for fire eur the Ontario Labor Lepartment's This has been done in previous | vod 1 - "foun: years, : dry inspection to a provincial un- To authorize the execution of an jon-managment board, of which he agreement between the city and| would be chairman Brant Construction Co. Ltd. This, The proposal was contained in a is for the construction of storm | brief presented by the Foundry sewers near the new shopping cen-| Councils of the United Steelwork- tre. {ers and United Auto Workers by To authorize execution of an|M. J. Fenwick, chairman of the agreement between the cily and|Steelworkers' Foundry Council, and members of the Fire Department| Donald Norton, chairman of the lof Oshawa. | Auto Workers Foundry Council ami These councils represent more than 20,000 Ontario ue work- lers in 43 foundries Chief Inspector E. H. Gilbert of Foundry Survey Change Is Asked { OBITUARIES FUNERAL OF DOREEN JEAN ANN FISH | The funeral of Miss Doreen Jean {Ann Fish, formerly of 381 Pine | Avenue, who died in the Oshawa Film Festival Is Scheduled Representatives from Oshawa were William Blaszczak and Syd- ney Burgess, of Local 1817, United Steel Workers Union. Other proposals made to Mr. Gilbert included authorization of weekly union-management check- Program details of the Fifth An- nual Film Festival to be held in Oshawa this week were released today. The film festival will be held in the McLaughlin Library Auditor- jum on Friday and Saturday un- der the auspices of the Oshawa Film Council. The program for Friday night is: To Serve the Mind" a film illustrating the services available for the cure or alleviation of men- tal illnesses. "The Magic Fiddle" -- a color film featuring the Norwegian Bal- let Company "'Singendes Deutchland" a ex- cellent German musical with some fine singing in German. CHINESE FILM "Flight of the Dragon' -- a color fi'm mirroring the culture and character of the Chinese, as seen in the Chinese collection of the Royal Ontario Museum "Stratford Adventure" this fim tells of how the idea of Tom Patterson, Stratford Newspaper- man was realized and how the Stratford Shakespearean Festival came into being. It records behind the scenes glimpses of Alec Gui- ness, Irene Worth John Guthrie. "The Navy Goes North" filme of the journey of HMCS Lab- rador through the Northwest Pas- Sage The program on Saturday night opens with "Farnborough Fly Past', a black and white produc- tion showing the lastest British aircraft. NZ LAKE FILM New Zealand is the scene for a color film '*Wakatipu The Long Lake," a film which features some of the most beautiful lake country in the South Pacific "Unfinished Rainbows' is a tech- n:color story of aluminum and is a Hollywood production. A travelogue from Israel carries the title of "And They Met In Gali- lee". The travelogue is concealed in a love story that finds a young American chasing a dancer he met three years previous. "Sailors of the Queen' comes from the Royal Canadian Navy ond is centred about the Corona- tion trip. Admission to both nights is free, but only a limited number of seats i available. Tickets are available from the Library. A | Ding, | ups at plant level, turning over of General Hospital on Friday eve- | safety regulations to the Work- February 24, was held on Tuesday, February 28, at 3 p.m. Wh : '| approval. The service at fe Melntosh ur "i was alo suggested that penal the Rev. Clinton Cross, rector of ties be stiffened so that "employ- st George's Anglican Church. The ©F® wotild not find it cheaper to pallbearers were Charles Smith ignore Seguiations than to 'make heii p< ©. them effective." Fred Smith, Ken Zyfelt, Harry The Labor Department was Fish, Donald Fish and John Col- . lins. Interment was made in the scored for cancelling a province: | men's Compenszhion Board for! |3% per cent, the council recom- mended. The council said that such a fund is necessary because of the in- creased debenture debt facing | many municipalities. Ald. C. Thomas said that such a fund already existed in Ontario. Ald. J. B, Brady said that the wide union - management confer- Windsor move deserved fuller con- ence on foundry inspection which :ideration. through medical analysis, that! playwrights, classical and modern, ernment is using too many cox death occurred one to two hours| are enjoying a boom in Russia, missions and boards to condu after Klapouschak ate his last| where 263 British plays were pro- provincial affairs. Tuesday defence counsel |duced last year, Tass news agency CCT Leader MacDonald said t Carl Waisberg called Montreal nu- | reported today. Shakespeare was commission plan is sound, b trition expert Dr. I. M. Rabino-| the favorite. Others billed were criticized the government for I€ witch to testify. Dr. Rabinowitch Shaw, Wilde, Fielding, Ben John- ting a water shortage problem d said he believed death occurred six | son and Goldsmith. | velop. fo eight hours after Klapouschak : Say Complaining Provinces Can Attend March 9 Talks By JOHN LeBLANC J behind its Feb. 18. prop A Canadian Press Staff Writer A J OTTAWA (CP)--Provinces com- sals. by an anti-church campaign waged! plaining about the fedegal govern-| A 'this : last year by tho tude holds through the conferencH dent Juan D. Peron. {have been told again they can at-|it would mean rejection of the; TO HONOR POPE BUENOS AIRES (AP)--Argen- tina will pay special homage to Pope Pius next month in connec- tion with his 80th birthday, it was announced today. The program represents another move by the provisional government to better church-state relations embittered i y i : 12 child had heen announced on Dec. 29, 1955, in favor of separate meet- ings with the unions and foundry managements, The department was also criti- cized for reviving "one-sided" in. or s Golden According to the unions, the policy of contacting both manage- ment - and union representatives' TORONTO (CP)--Premier Frost when an' inspection was being said Tuesday Ontario is Canada's made, which had been the case colden-egg goose and warned it| until the death of the late Chief nay be time for some changes in Inspector Joseph Prain, had been the financial farm yard. discontinued, and inspectors now| He commented on an Ottawa re- only contact managements, port that the federal government Among specific requests for will not alter its last proposal on changes in foundry regulations,'a tax-sharing system with the the unions called for: provinces. | Minimum temperature of 68 de-! Said the premier: grees and a maximum temperature, "Ottawa is disregarding our allowance for summer work; lunch| problems, working on the theory room facilities separate from work of giving the least amount to On- space, with lockers and wash- tario and bringing the others up | foome; firepront beams in foundry to us." uildings; safe frames to hold i pouring ladles to overhead tracks. | Ontario recognized the need for | , 1 ad | (equalization payments to aid wider working space (claiming that |; orer provinces but these should! the pouring aisle can be as narrow 15 i 3 rot be made at the expence of as 15 inches at present); proper crippling Ontario's economy. The maintenance of windows and sky- province needed money to earn lights; and one shower for each money. ' five employees instead of one for - Frost Says Ont | stead cin~e-ousted presi-| ment's latest tax-sharing offer ---- Itend a federal-provincial confer-|provincial attitudes: = = J hd ence here March 9 but need not| Ontario: wants tne basis of fey aril look for more treasury money. |eral revenue-equalization paymen: Prime Minister St. Laurent, mak- [to the provinces changed and pro' |ing this clear to the Commons for linces given more leeway in cq a second time Tuesday, appeared | lecting personal and ecorpor, oose to hae tramped on a new proposal |t:on income taxes. of Ontario's Premier Frost to allow | British Columbia: Proposes moi that province a sizeable chunk of scope in imposing income taxe Mr. Frost suggested the federal extra potential taxes. | Alberta: Seeks unspecified *'fu government base its calculations. Several other provinces got an damental" changes in the fisc not on the average of the top two indirect back-of-the-hand from the! setup between the federal and pr provinces but of the top four. He prime minister, including Liberal py governments proposed also recommended that an Ottawa |Nova Scotia, Social Credit British C ; formula for allowing deductions |Columbia and Alberta, CCF Sask- Wants federa) Saskatchewan: |against federal liability for pro-|atchewan and Progressive Conser- provincial discussion of resource vinclal taxpayers be enlarged. The [vative New Brunswick. development and activating of tk deduction for federal personal in-| WANTED CHANGES 1938 federal Municipalities In come tax should be 15 per cent in-| These provinces had asked re-| vrovements Assistance Act callin of 10 and for corporation cently for specific major changes [fcr cheap federal loans to mun income 15 per cent instead of nine. |in the federal government's latest | cipalities, unused for years. Mi "Ottawa is not interested in this [tax-split deal handed them Feb. | St. Laurent told the Commor idea because it would mean too[13 Mr. Frost's new plan involved |specifically Tuesday that amen much would have to be paid out to| an unofficially-estimated shuffle of ments to this act are improbablé the other provinces and not enough |about $35,000,000 a year in federal] New Brunswick and Nova Scotia would be left for themselves. revenues. Ask changes in the federal offe "In Ottawa they have reached| Federal sources said Ontario's to take more account of fiscd the point where giving Ontario an|aid other major proposed changes Yiceds of individual provinces. M extra cent is a crime. Ontario does (in the government's offer will not|St. Laurent earlier rejected 'th! 50 per cent of the earning for the get far at the March 9 conference idea, also proposed by Saskatchg federal government but they won't |behind closed doors. |wan, saying the federal offer g even think of giving us more And Mr, St. Laurent reinforced substant¥l recognition to individ money." {this by telling the Commons that ual need. 10 as at present. Oshawa Union Cemetery. FUNERAL OF MRS. WILLIAM A. CHARLTON TEEN TOWN NEWS Funeral service for Mrs. William Alfred Charlton was held from the This week Teen Town introduces Armstrong Funeral Home on Tues- a mystery whiter. Can you guess day at 2 p.m, Mrs. Charlton, for- who it is? merly Lena May Lowry, died in Hi Gang! Teen First of all, Oshawa General Hospital on Sat-| Town extends deep felt thanks to! urday in her 65th year. | the Jubilee Pavilion and Mr. Owen Memorial service was conducted McCrohan who donated over 300 D by Rev. Clinton Cross, of St. records to the club's collection. George's Anglican Church. Inter-| Our thanks also goes to the Get- ment was in Mount Lawn Ceme- Together Club and president Danny tery: A large number of friends Kocho, who loaned their turntables and relatives were present to pay and records to the club enabling their last respects. | them to carry on the usual Friday Pallbearers were James Howes, night dance, thus showing vandals Ed. Kitchen, Gordon Burnett, Carl or whatever they call themselves James, Isaac Patterson and Lou that it takes more than a few Mosier | broken records, turntables, ete., to {break Teen Town. Just one more | thing, Teen Town will have to buy the record "Working on the Chain FUNERAL OF LESLIE NICHOLLS The funeral of James Leslie Ni-| cholls, who died in Oshawa Gen- eral Hospital after being struck by a car on Saturday, was held from the Armstrong Funeral Home on Tuesday at 3.30 p.m. He was in his 48th year. Rev. S. B. Cole, of Knox Pres- | byterian Church, conducted the they claim is urgently necessary| memorial service, Interment was ¢ A »lin Mount Lawn Cemetery. o their competition, Pallbearers were Gordon Ni- | cholls, Melville Nicholls, Bert Par- ker, Gabriel De Josephs, Merton Coles and Morley Becksted. About 20 lodge members of the oodmen of the World acted as flower bearers and formed a guard f honor at the cemetery. There was a large attendance of friends | and relatives, ge -- Truckers Claim They Can Match Rail Competition OTTAWA (CP)--Canadian truck-' = "We contend that the railways ers maintained Tuesday the rail: pave complete freedom to do what ways have the same freedom as the truckers in designing and pric- ing their services and said they are /n respec. ready to meet the rail carriers he said competitively in trans portation! '""We submit that unless regula- market-places. tions governing the railways' com- John Magee, executive secretary petitive activities are stiffened-- of the Canadian Trucking Associ- and there isgno possibility of that w. ations, told the Gordon economic happening iff6bur analysis of gov-| commission truckers are surprised ernment thfnking is correct--rail- and confused by the demands of way regulfition, as it pertains to! Donald Gordon, CNR president, for competitigh, will have no effect greater freedom to set rates to whatever/ on the future develop- compete more vigorously against ment of either rail or truck com- the truckers. petition." UN CHILDREN'S FUND meeme---- -- -- ET ---- erent UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP)- BEAR UPROOTED BOGEY UNDER KNIFE {The United Nations children's fad TIMMINS, Ont. (CP)--John Gir 108 ARO LES JAP) 3 Film today Fig) 2 Joverumients have : p ar actor Humphrey Boga as en- pledged ,828,155 for its work in ouard killed a hibernating bear tered hospital for an operation to|1956. Seventy - two governments with his tractor near here. The remove a slight obstruction on his! gave $15.606.000 for 1955 The fund twvo-yearold hear. weighing 150 esophagus. Doctors sav he will he provides medical supplie extra pounds. was hibernating under a in hospital from 10 days to two food and other aid to children ana tree stump that was torn out. | weeks, ymothers around the world. Gang" and dedicate it to the guys who broke into the CRA when they get caught, because that is what they may be doing. HELP TEENAGERS After the damage was discover- | ed on Sunday an emergency meet- |ing was held and the board mem- {bers all agreed that they would give the club their all and really pien in and make a go of things. t was a terrific attitude to take | after seeing four years work wrecked in one night. I'm sure these persons will do their most to get things going again but they could use some support as you can plainly see CRA Teen Town was established to provide recreation for Oshawa's | teenagers and I think most of the | members want to do all they can to maintain it. BUILT OF REEDS | KARACHI (CP) -- First of its | kind in Asia, a factory has been | established at Khairpur in west Pakistan to manufacture prefab- ricated houses using hoard made from reeds. The plant will have a (daily output of 75,000 square feet. At the regular Friday night meeting it was decided that a St Patrick's Day dance will be held. I imagine the dance will be held on Friday, March 16th, seeing as it is the day before St. Patrick's ay. Another idea brought out at the meeting was that an annual spring conference be held for the Oshawa district Teen Towns. This of course is only a possibility. New turntables were brought in and installed Saturday. Real speedy work on the part of Bill Howard, Jerry King, Cy Merlin and Mr. Brewster, I must say. The dance Friday night had a fairly good turn out and I'm sure after reading what was in last week's papers about how well the dance is conducted more parents will see that it is not just a hang- jout, but a place were kids can go to have good, clean, well supervis- ed fun. An outstanding point that I just have to mention is at the end of the dance upon finding that the record of the Queen, which is played at the end of every dance, was broken, thirty seconds of sil- ence was called for and believe me, the room was so quiet you could have heard a pin drop. If thati isn't an example of a respectful! bunch of kids, I don't know what 3: Well that just about does it for now and I hope we'll see you all at Teen Town, Friday night from 8 till 12, for dancing at it's best. Till Then, "? 7? ?" bids you farewell TRAIN FOR MALAYA WOLVERHAMPTON, England (CP)--Dato Abdul Razak, educa- tion minister of Malaya, officially opened a new school near here! where teachers will he trained for Malaya There is a similar school near Liverpool. Now news says | It's what's in the the London Zoo 1 see Fifi WHAT'S WRONG WITH THE WORLD TODAY? news, then the fashions and Moscow" Anyway, Fifi obviously Hey what's this, the Russians | doesn't believe some item she { claim Shakespeare was born in | caught sight of. chimp as she settles down for hei afternoon read, First, the serious

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