£ THE DAILY TIVES-GAZETTE, Wednesday, March 28, 1958 RADIO AUCTION ANNOUNCED BY K CF or w ArT A%4 3S CLUB $ 3 ELE t Es RE a larger and greater variety | of goods and services offered tian ever before. Top picture shows the Kiwanis members as accepted telephone bids at SCENES LIKE THE ABOVE whl be re-enacted on Wednesday i next week when the Kiwanis Club will hold ual radio auction, with bottom picture, Reg. Garrett of board, while Verna Walker. a sists. weataER Milnikov Says Russ To Aid atory in Egypt, to build the laboratory. TORONTO (CP) -- Official fore- casts issued by the Dominion pub- lic weather office at 5:15 a.m.: Synopsis: A complex area of low you the laboratory, we will a give you the uranium." "i | OTTAWA (CP)--Trade last vear's radio auction. In the marking bids on the big auction and added four to make an announcement shortly. Russian experts will come to Egypt | - - Asked where the uranium would me from, he replied *If we give 'GM Pa Valuable Grand Prize Offered In Radio Auction Hundreds of donations of goods | tion, a special grand prize will be and services have been received made the subject of a draw confin- by the Oshawa Kiwanis Cub for ed to the actual buyers of articles : . : sold on the radio auction his its annual radio auction, to be held on Wednesday of next week, April 4, over radio station CKLB. The classification and listing of these items, many of them of consider- able value, is a tremendous task for the Kiwanians in charge of the auction. It will, however, be com- (i; be made when the time pleted in time to have the com- for claiming goods and 1 plete lists of goods and services has expired. Only the succe dnnounced in The Times-Gazette bidders will be eligible . on Tuesday evening of next week. grand prize draw, so that the num- Two full pages of the newspaper ber participating th it will be striet- will be required to list ali the ly limited : items to be sold to the highest bid- ~ window "displays of many of ders at the moment of closing articles being offered in the r: each of the groups. Full announce- auction can now be seen ® the ment of the arrangements will be following places: Public Utilities made along with the publication Commission building Burns Shi of the lists, including the special gore King and Simcoe streets telephone numbers to be called to Far 'Goode's hardware, 245 make bids. street east: Meagher's As a special inducement to citi- Store, 92 Simcoe street north zens to take part in the radio auc CPR office, King street Howe Denies Truckers Say $2.05 Asked $1.66 An Hour For Wheat Not Enough | TORONTO (CP) i modern matic Dryer of the most Eac claimin type. Each person, on articles on which his or has been successful, will rec a ticket for the draw for valuable prize, the draw for w io he I'he negotia ting committee of the Ir na- ticnal Brotherhood of Teamster (AFL-TLC) said Tuesday Minister meet representatives of Toront Howe Tuesday denied Canada is/|Windsor and Hamilton locals holding out for a ceiling price of/discuss the rejection of new cc $2.05 a bushel as one of the terms/tract terms by the union's 6,000 of a new International Wheat Ontario members Agreement being discussed at! The union membership Monday ¢ | Geneva. rejected an 18-cent-an-hour p | { He was asked in the Commons age increase over three {by Opposition leader Drew about agreed to by the union neg a New York Times dispatch which committee and the Au {said the only chance for negotia- Transport Association. The ting a new agreement was for ation represents 70 Ontario # Canada to back down on its de- panies. Union officials said ever: mand for a $2.05 maximum price. thing possible would be done to | "I read the report," Mr. Howe avoid a strike. said- "It's not accurate." | The basic wage for tr r Hazen Argue (CCF--Assiniboia) ranges from $1.48 an hour in the |asked whether Mr. Howe was re. Windsor area to $1.43 in Toronto, ferring to the dispatch's reference th¢ union said. to Canada holding out for $2.05 It- was believed membership op- The minister said the story was|position to the new contract was inaccurate in that and "in other directed at the establishment of a | directions as well." 48-hour work week and the date He declined, however, to elabor-'set for the retroactive pa {ate on Canada's position at the crease. Union members were talks. The Geneva discussions were to feel the shorter week would ¢ {in their final stages and he hoped wages because employers would be reluctant to pay premium rates -|for overtime. te 0 1S50c¢i ker is 5- control.' hit did has old Golf Begins At 40 May Be New Theme at 25. And Lloyd Mangrum NEW YORK (AP)--The man/shown he has refound his who turned the professional golf touch." has discovered 'nerve Sam Snead is. overweight but ting the ball as well as he Iso » pressure centred over Illinois Wed- nesday morning was the cause of yIld, gyp snow, sleet, freezing rain and thunderstorms across Wisconsin| A id 7 {niko Michigan. This unpleasant! CAIRO (AP) r N. I. Miiniko mix re of weather has invaded/head of the Soviet technical mis-| southwestern Ontario, and today,|zion now visiting Arab states, said | y OSHAWA AND DISTRICT most an was who however, with Hogan, tour into a gold mine came home| Corcoran, {from Florida Tuesday with the impressed | report that the 'beat | chant is back. |Jack Fleck in the 1955 U.S. Open "The Forty-and-Over Club is' in that he would never again work [the saddle again," said Fred Cor-|ser ously for a championship. coran, former tournament director] Corcoran predicted Hogan will snow with freezing rain mixed will| Tuesday Russia has concluded into London this rporning and agreements with Syria to build the Toronto vicinity around grain stores, petroleum reservoirs Although the ow centre is and a cement factory : to move eastward south Milnikov also said he signed the » lower lakes, an elongated agreement with Egypt in Moscow BIRTHDAYS TODAY extended to Ruth Ryan, y road 1, who is ce g her birthday today. Congratulations and best wishes Ben Hogan of ihe Professional Goifers' Asso- he the man to beat in the Masters jciation and still an advisor, "and tournament at Augusta, Ga., be- is the keenest and ginning April 5 38 sharpest of the lot "They say Ben is "Jimmy Demaret is playing eight hours a day; ju some of his finest golf. He says he 'used to do. The golfers practising t as sle- now ill trail back recently to build a nuclear labor- bra ag on Thurs-i = wasional. snow and skies over most of the ce valid until forecasts Thursday nal /estern Freezing rain or sleet mixed, c SNOW or ith a Not Lake Erie, Windsor with occasional snov hanging to occ sleet this evening few snowfl much cl ional C Thursdas temperature, winds east noriheast 15 Thursday. High 3 and low tonight at Windsor 35 and Summary lor Thursday--Occas- nowflurries y, not m Wind t x . High today St I'nomas, es and Ham- | or Occas- Thursday e Huron, Western Toronto: Cloudy, aho 100n becom- zing rain or changing to it in toda High to- mgnam uch change rast 20 and low tonigh nd 30, Toronto 35 and 30 Summary for Thursday--Occas- now flurries y Lake Ontario, Southern Bay: Clouding over this snow beginning this af mixed with this evening vith occas- continuing Meaty SPARERIBS Ib. 29¢ BACON SQUARES 2 ws. 30 y ternoon, northeast 20 Thursd High today and low tonight at Trenton 35 and 30, Muskoka 32 and 25 Summary for Thursday --Snow- thern Georgian Bay, Halibur- Southern Kirkland Lake, Sud- h Bay: Sunny clouding afternoon, occasional and Thursday; con Winds northeast 15 , east 20 Thursday. High to- and low tonight at Killaloe 32 North Bay and Sudbury 30 ton ern Kirkland Lake: Mostly today, mostly cloudy with Thursday, contin- Winds east 15. High to- tonight at Earlton 30 1al snow nd d low Mostly today t today, igh today skasing 30 - Kapuskasing 1 contin cold Thursday. Winds 15 Thursday I ow tonight at Kapu SAVE § § § ON YOUR EASTER FEAST! RA. 3-3633 "Oshawa's Lowest Meat Prices' t BONELESS Sirloin Tip Roas TENDER CUBED STEAK LEAN, PEAMEAL COTTAGE ROASTING CHICKENS (5 to 7 Ib.) v 839: | #8 prize will consist of an Inglis Auto-| p, | 4 ' i Every province in the country For Goods And S General Motors of Canada paid Canadian business firms a total tof $291,870,713 for goods and serv- ices in 1955, GM President W. A, Wecker announced today. as well as the Yukon and North- west Territories shared in the "i heavy spending. More than 1,500 { firms sold either goods or servic- es to GM Despite a loss of more than three months of operation due to a | strike, 1955 purchases were just |$6,593,198 or 2.2 per cent, below the 1954 record spending of $298,- 463,911, The largest portion of the purch- # , ases were made in the industrial ; centres of Ontario. In Oshawa, 'home of the company's manufac- #2 turing and assembly operations and head offices, GM spent $92,- 584,421 for goods and services. Purchases from Toronto business firms amounted to $63,041,297. | Mr. Wecker saw General Motors {drawing even more heavily on | Canadian sources of supply in the {future in releasing the purchase figures. LD AS SLAYER Brown, 26, of Sy- near Owen W. A. WECKER | "Confirming a pattern establish-| Optimistic about the 1956 sale of |ed in previous years, an increas-| GM vehicles, which he expects will {ing number of business firms in| surpass the 1955 figure, Mr. Weck- |towns and cities throughout the er as well looks forward to great- {country made substantial contribu-| er purchases of goods and services tions to the production of cars and from Canadian business and indus- iowey Township, , Ont., charged with mur- he shotgun slaying of his brother Milton, has nded to March 28 for caring. He is shown ys $291,870,713 $92,584,421 Spent Here ervices its growth and diversification, Mr. Wecker said the expanding al Motors operation will continue to seek out Canadian suppliers and channel its purchasing to Canadian firms. In 1955 alone more than 12,000 - salesmen, representing business firms from all parts of the co n- try, called on GM purchasing of- ficers. With 22,000 different parts going into the various GM car and truck makes, purchases range through such items as transmis- sions, power equipment, taping screws, fenders, heaters, chrome fittings and others, As well this department purchases such non- production items as drip sheets for covering cars in transport, coal for the power house, mainten- ance equipment, and flopd-lighting for company parking lots. Following company policy, it is their duty to find as many Cana- dian suppliers for goods and serv. ices as possible. The money that these more than 1,500 firms receive from General Motors generally goes back into the Canadian economy for every conceivable kind of goods and ser- vice, Part of the $291 million goes to every section of Canada--to the Maritime fisherman, to the Prairie armer, loggers, factory workers in - Bi audoin Tuesday night reiterated |p at aging com- fore Hofan" | nounced after a playoff loss to - he ¢ ( by General Motors ~ | trucks he said. | year," last | try. As Canadian industry continues almost. every industry, merchants and the public generally. Beaudoin Rules | To Be Halted | OTTAWA (CP)--Speaker Rene| WASHINGTON (AP)--Evidence|us is past appeals to Commonscline mentally as fast as we used|pl members not to read their|{, think they did," was reported s and served notice he soon|Tyesday by an industrial psy-chol- t to tighten up on en- ogist. t of the no-reading rule. aker of the House made : i 3 ' i 1 iis comment at the close of the considerable practical importance 0 N ' f day's sitting in which three f'n today's labor supply. : ht members who had spoken in| George K. Bennett, president budget debate had obviously|of the Psychological Corporation, | from prenared texts. {New York, a testing and counsel-| He referred to no. individual ing service, told the National Vo-| - eis the read In what lower than young people, pecially on tests where there was He said this "is likely to be of Some premium on speed." persons. He told a reporter {used to think that a person reached his peak of mental attainment in' his 20s, then coasted off on a pretty straight line until he was in his ually employed tests which had eople "may not de-|been developed for younger peo- e. . . Older persons scored some- es. Bennett's organization ha amed tests designed tor or s 17. 'Speech-Reading Bennett Says Mental Aging Harry Camelon Slower Than Once Supposed Dies In Fire | CLAYTON, Ont. (CP)--The body of 73-year-old Harry Camelon was found Tuesday in the burned ruins of hie cabin near this hamlet about : miles west of Ottawa. A bach- clor, Camelon lived alone. It was the 4list fire fatality in = Ottawa district since last Nov, S. "Now we find that the peak may ot ne into his 0s. be reached until some time in a person's 30s and that he then i [may continue on a rather level | Lh Ont.) cational Guidance Association: | m The person who had been "Ip the past, studies on the in- g just before the adjourn- igene AB Wesetlek Cm Shrn. telligence of older persons have had read rapidly from a tten text and several mem- ymmented on the fact. OBITUARIES W. Hodgson (PC--Victoria, at one point interrupted to FUNERAL OF | acetiously that Mr. Weselak MRS, FRED G. PARSONS | 1 little slower--it's hard to] The funeral service for Mrs. | ' And another time when Fred G. Parsons was held at the) Weselak paused, Opposition McIntosh Funeral Chapel at 2 Drew commented: 'He's p.m. on Tuesday, March 27. lost the page." large number of friends and rela-| Two other members who ap-|/tives attended while the many peared to read their speeches! floral tributes indicated the high/¥$ uesday were Michael Starr (PC--| esteem in which On ) and William L. Houck was held. L--Niagara Falls). | Rev. D. Summers, minister of con- ---- Westmount United Church, BIGGEST PORTION manufactures are india's| important foreign exchange) Jute most ter of Northminster United arnér, followed by tea and coi- fon plece goods, -- |Douglas Campbell, Frank Young, | Jack Germond, Jack Goulding and getting a little nervous George Parker. 1. They figure Hogan is going e around for the big ones." | Cemetery. tour fo son," WANTS SPRING PAY NEW YORK 1,000. the deceased | In an interview with Dick Young! | of The News in Clearwater, Fla,, | Snider complained that 'This isn't| ducted the services. He was as-| SPring training, it's the spring sisted by Rev. H. A. Mellow, minis-| Season. "This is a league down here and | Church. | they want you to play 35 games in| The pallbearers were Bud Owen, it before you even start the sea-| Young quoted him as say- ing. '""We finished training in the first 10 days at St. Petersburg. I Interment was in Mount Lawn|don't need 35 games to get ready r the season." (AP)--The Daily News Tuesday quoted Brooklyn | outfielder Duke Snider as suggest- A ing that each player on the win- ning citrus circuit team be paid HEROIC NURSE Genevieve de Galard-Terraube, | who won the French Military Medal two years ago for her work in the battered Indo-china fortress of Dien Bien Phu. sad she doesn't know why she is treated like a celebrity wherever she goes. The nurse toiled amon, French Union soldiers for 74 days, first under fire of Commun- ist rebel guns and later under Red captivity. 00D BUY, STORE HOURS: Store Open Thursday Night Until 9 p.m. Closed On Good Friday -- Open All Day Saturday Veal Shoulder Chops ib. 39¢ Shoulder Steak ib. 49¢ Boneless STEW Ib. 49c¢ PATTIES Ib. 49¢ STEW CUTS 5 Ibs. $1.00 We Have A Large Selection of . .. © SMOKED HAMS ® SMOKED PICNIC STYLE PORK SHOULDERS ® BUFFET PICNICS ® B AND R HAMS e EVISCERATED TURKEYS. AND DUCKS For Your Easter Feast! S FRESH GROUND MEATY COUNTRY STYLE SAUSAGE Bus 1] MEATY CHUCK ROAST BONELESS POT Tasty HEADCHEESE + 25. 79¢ ROAST 3-LB. TIN Shankless Portion . .. Butt Portion Semi-Boneless Portion Boneless Portion lices Sliced BOLOGNA