THE DAILY TIMENGAZETTE, Monday, October 15, 1956 B Coal Miner Michael McDonald |= = = Leader Of Nova Scotia CCF shooting Son | Shooting Songbirds HALIFAX (CP) -- Leading the "This time," Mr. Mcdonald said] ORILLIA (CP) -- Six Toronto CCF party in Nova Scotia's Oct.|"The CCF will substantially in- men of Italian extraction have 80 general election is bachelor|crease its representation." {been charged with shooting song coal miner Michael McDonald of ) ___| birds, which are considered a del- Reserve Mines, N. S. Theis the oldest of the pre: icacy in their native Italy. The election will be the second |mier Hicks is 41. bro Cog | Conservation officers said the since he took over leadership|servative loser Stores: 4s. |charges are the first ever laid from fellow legislature member -anl gs | here. Russell Cunningham in 1953. He| A Roman Catholic, Mr. McDon-| Officers said they seized a game was elected to the Assembly in ald was born of Scottish parents | bag containing nine robins, four| i le Cape Breton coal town of| blue Jays, three meadowlarks and | ominjon. He's a member of the|two bluebirds. All had been shot Reserve Manes volunteer fire de-| with 12-gauge shotguns. In the legislature he has spoken] often on problems of the coal and] TOKYO (AP)--Traffic accidents steel industries, whose workers! killed seven persons in Tokyo| predbminate in the Cape Breton|Monday. It was the second hign- | | con tit repr ted by thelest day's toll this year. Eight were | | CCF. killed on New Year's Day. | DON'T BE COLOUR BLIND WHEN YOU BUY COAL... it can cost you money! Don't just order coal--insist on 'blue coal'. 'blue coal' is colour-marked for your FOR MISSED PAPERS IN BOWMANVILLE Phone MA 3-5561 If you have not received your Times - Gazette by 7 p.m., coll KING TAXI All calls must be placed before 7:30 p.m. Since then he has been exactly half the party's house strength. The CCF has never elected more! than two members, both from Cape Breton industrial ridings, since 1945. NEWS BRIEFS VALUABLE SCRAP ST. CATHARINES, Ont. (CP)-- Seven years ago the city was of- fered $22 a ton for old streetcar rails. This month the city is sift- ne through bids that range up to ONE-DAY TOLL: SEVEN BIG DOINGS BEAVERLODGE, Alta. (CP)-- The completion of paving ofthe main street was a big event in this northwestern Alberta town. An orchestra played and people danced in the streets to celebrate the new thoroughfare. ORONO COUPLE, TEN CHILDREN CELEBRATE 60TH WEDDING ANNIVERSARY Wedding| children ' welcomed the many | Ross, Annie, Clifford, Eva and | made by Mrs. Fred Couch (Eva friends from the district. They | Alfred. Lunch was prepared by | Hawke) of Newcastle and deco- are, from left to right: Wes- | Rebekahs of ( y and the | rated by the Orono Bakery. dren, who, with their wives | ley, Gertie, Lloyd, Noreen, Wil- | wedding cake, a beautiful | --Courtesy of the Canadian | CLOSE RULING | and children and children's | fred, Mr. and Mrs. Hawke, | three - tiered creation was | i Statesman) CALGARY (CP) -- Philip Pine - ; op : : ; 3 : [Fas 14 minutes too young to get % y o " : into the grade 1 class at Ren- RK AX NEWS frew Public School. A city school [Sltigran who will be six years --- ja, y ee, 31. Philip was born - |a :14 a. m. Jan, 1, 1951. | Gas Mains Approved COYOTE THREAT : : { (CP)-- 'Through Ajax Town | considrann losses of lamb, poul- AJAX (Times-Gazette, Staff/try and calves to coyotes have Reporter)--The Consumer's Gas| been reported by farmers in this Company has been given permis-| area of northwestern Alberta. The board ruling limits entrants to PEACE RIVER, Alta. sion to instal its gas mains in| sudden upswing is blamed on the| bhrate their Diamond Anniversary. 'The happy couple are shown with their 10 chil- ' The home of Mr. and Mrs. #tenest Hawke of Orono was airly well filled with immedi- $ite relatives on Sunday to cele- guarantee of heating satisfaction. Order 'blue coal' the town according to plans sub-| increase in coyote population. mitted to the public works com.| mittee and subsequently approved | by the town council. , _.. mountain near here has | Mains to the north area will named after Fit. Lt. cross the CNR and Highway 401 MacFarlane, at Roosevelt avenue on the east|when his plane FLIER COMMEMORATED CHILLIWACK, B. C. (P) -- A been Ronald E. who died in 1943 and get clean, safe, low-cost heat. Don't be colour-blind when you buy coal. It pays to order 'blue coal', was shot down| S crew| and the Old Plant road on the over Holland. He and hi ne LANDER COAL C . west were buried at Lemmer | Three regulator sites will be Netherlands, OSHAWA 43 KING ST. Ww. RAndolph 5-3589 | built. One at Second street east of | GOOD HUNTING 'blue & coal' the new High School; one at the| J {west of the Kelvin-Thompson| NELSON, B. C. (CP)--A two- DON'T JUST ORDER COAL--INSIST ON 'blue coal' | Plant on Second street and the day season on elk without antlers third at the west boundary of here resulted in a bag of six ma- Ajax, on Second Street. jiure bulls, four yearlings, 14 cows Crews laying: the mhains. bes) our calves and three unclassed {tween Toronto and Oshawa will Specimens. | be in Ajax in a few days tol N {complete the link between Whitby | VANCOO ERAN ART Van Frenct an' av : " an) Frenciman of Thy 825 | couver art gallery plans a 'Do ih on > west 0 ax 18 al- You Own a Canedian Painting' ready laid. {show and sale here. Paintings dis: {played will be from all over the | country. 'blue coal' AUTOMATIC EQUIPMENT SAVES WORK--SAVES MONEY ON HARD COAL HEAT Perfect comfort at the flick of a finger. 'blue coal' automatie heat is completely automatic-- from bin feed to ash removal. Call us today for a free demonstration. Ajax Sewage Plant Will Open Saturday AJAX (Times-Gazette Staff Re- porter)--Hon. W. K. Warrinder, Minister of Municipal Affairs, {will officially open the new sew-| | age disposal plant in Ajax on Oc- | tober 19, at 2.30 p.m. | The new plant built at a cost of | | nearly $300,000 has been in opera-| | Control Over Private Stations DUFFIN'S CREEK PRESENTS AUTUMN BE "This pretty scene is on Duf- Highway 401, Quiet and serene | spring the creek becomes a | 'Wfin's Creek, Pickering, south of | in all its autumn beauty,in the | raging torrent. The bridge car- | ® busy highway. By JOHN LeBLANC OTTAWA CP )--The CBC needs over private broadr-ast- s to feed its national er. cc tarough them unl its (Bown facilities are to be extended i%to serve all Canada, CBC board hairman A. D. Dunton said to: ay to the royal commission on jy broadcasting. oh i@ He told the commission the | BC is not insisting on continu- ; ance of its regulatory powers but eels they are desirable for prac- ical reasons i In the opening day of the CBC's inal submission in the long in- u id Sjuthori v ung i! Squiry, Mr. Dunton said extension facilities to serve all ct competition with f CBC anada in INprivate operators would be the I ""only possible situation" if a sep- arate regulatory board for broad- mycast were to be set up. * HAS BEEN URGED #28 ers--representing most of the pri- 57 pa «Torontonian Successful As British Businessman ' i %® The Canadian Association of 'Radio and Television Broadcast- ] 0 eg a LONDON (CP)--One year ago a dapper, fast-talking Canadian flew into London for the start of = a continental holiday. Within 48 hours Toronto-born Sidney Levine had cancelled his holiday, rented a flat and started up in business Today Levine is still in London and still waiting to take a holi- day. But in the 12 intervening months, he has built his Master Vending Machine Company, Lim- ited, into an orgamization employ- ing more than 150 people and with branches in Ireland, France, P Holland, Western Germany, South {°F Africa and Sweden. oe ve od © at . S$ "The business opprrtunitie Ie R 4 - < 253%s a <& Ze In an age when more and more business leaders are turning their eyes from the old world to the ] new, Levine is unperturbed by the fact he is moving against the trend. available in Britain and in Europe generally are enormous. You just have to be -ufficiently awake to spot, the openings aad willing to work at developing them " Only 13 at the outbreak of the Second World War, Levine fret ted at the necessity of "wasting time" in school v dustries. offered 0. 1955, Levine had $5,000 tucked away earned from tackling ia the selling and trimmed some vate stations--has been urging the formation of such a board, to con- trol both the CBC and the private operators. The control now is ex- ercised by the CBC board of gov- ernors . Mr. Dunton said the CBC thinks these two courses are open: 1. If there is to be a new over- riding board, separation of the CBC and private stations into two compartments, with she CBC con- tinuing its national service on its own. 2. Continuation of the "inte- grated service" now in existence, with the CBC having some control over private stations. It was not essentiat that the CBC have its present powers, but it would be desirable for practical reasons. WOULD NOT OBJECT However, Mr. Dunton indicated he and the other governors would not object to some other body making general regulations, though the CBC felt it should have authority over network operations and decided he could afford a European holiday. "The very first day in London I noticed the lack of vending ma- chines for things like gum and peanuts. I knew they were big business in Canada and United States, so I decided to gamble." How well the gamble paul ofi is shown by the fact his com- pany's turnover now tops the £10,000-a-week mak "We work on the basis concep of individual ownership and oper- ation of the vending machines We sell the machines then sup- ply the merchandise that gces into them." Levine estimates there is a to get across the Canadian-angle programs of its national service. The CBC chairman hit back sharply at the broadcasters' asso- ciation for what he called "propa- ganda," "distortion'"' and "mud- slinging' against the CBC in a campaign to have a separate reg- ulatory board established. Mr. Dunton said he thinks the CBC, if it were to provide a na- tiora! service on its own, could manage things so there would be no additional net cost of owning extra transmitters--the added rev. enue would offset the extra capital outlays Chairman R. M. Powler sug- gested that would mean the CBC acquiring present private TV sta- tions which exist 'under the pres- ent single-channel policy. Mr. Dunton agreed, but added there would be quite a few places where competing private stations would be justified on commercial grounds. Chairman Fowler asked for the potential market for 100,000 of his machines in Britain alone. About 25,000 now are in use in the Neth- erlands and they are going into Sweden at the rate of 200 a week The machines, which cost from £34 up, range from a penny gum machine to a perfume mack that for 6d supplies a spray any one of four chosen scents at the press of a plunger. He credits much of the success of his company to the fact it is "run on Canadian lines." "We pay high wages, as much as £2 a week above the average But there are no long tea breaks. Everybody full day and works hard." Women Barbers Declare Men More Conceited Than Women HAMILTON (CP) -- When it comes to hair, ren are more con- ceited and finicky than women, two sisters here Mrs, Marjorie Letwin Maureen Ramsey speak wit authority--they"re b have cut some 60,000 say and Mrs n some 24.000 bear: They have come to the on that the male t exe while men "We have realized that women don't know as well as T peacocks - when we just what they want, they are not as pompous and conceited, nor half as finicky as men," Mis Ramsey said. But in defence of the men, Mrs Ramsey adds that 'men have a perfect right to come into a bar ber shop and act like parading After all, you should what we women go through go to a beauy shop." a shop in dowr see The sisters own own Hamilton. TI work, and they say man loves a female bar ber, ries thousands of cars daily on Photo by John Mills CBC view on such factors as con- trolling the character of programs use of Can: nt and "a balanced prograr "I think it mor tice for one niz making - these - decisions, but 1 think another body could make general regulations," Mr. Dunton replied "Can fare asked The CBC ch thinks this would cult. "We feel that just written reg- ulations can't go very far in get- ting people to put on good pro- grams." he added Mr. Fowler asked whether there chance "producing n in. the public mind" 1 to provide a e in prac- m to be you balanced regu provide a by M diffi- of "nati "1 chance, to suggest," 'I thir : the but I don't know wh Mr. Dunton said. some BACK TO CAESAR TORONTO (CP) --- A house styled after the homes of ancient Rome has been huilt here by Architect John C. Parkin. From outside, only one window can be seen. The others are on inside walls overlooking a courtyard. Board of education here decided it shouldn't be as low as $5, yas the only bid for Mr. Fowler! tion since early summer. Fenc-| ing, landscaping and road ing is now completed. hE Opening day will be an oppor- tunity for many to see the plant which is up-to-date in all its fune-| tions and will serve a town of] 12,000 and can be expanded as| the town grows. nton Claims CBC Must Have Jing TAMPA, Fla. (AP)--When firemen from station No. 6 dashed off to fight a brush fire someone left the shower running. It caused more ex citement than the fire. In response to calls police sloshed through water at the flooded station to turn off th shower. WISH TO SELL BEER WINDSOR, Ont. (CP) -- Wind sor's food merchants have decided to support a provincial organiza tion set up to promote the sale of beer in grocery stores. S. J. Daly of Toronto, an executive of the National Grocers' Association of Ontario said the association is collecting names on a petition to the Ontario government for which it hopes to gain 500,000 signatures. | FOR MISSED PAPERS IN AJAX Phone AJAX 333 If you have not received your Times-Gazette by 7 P.M., Call AJAX TAXI All calls must be placed before 7:30 P.M. The Future "School's Out!" -- and you'll find the IN A FEW SHORT MONTHS PAY CHECKS. There American School. Est. 1897 desperately needed by industry. HERE'S YOUR CHANCE TO PREPARE FOR STEADY PAY AND A GOOD FUTURE AS A DRAFTSMAN. Write today for free information, AMERICAN SCHOOL, Dept. 0-TG, 165 Colborne Kingston, Street, Ontario ng Draftmen MEN WANTED DRAFTSMEN I is a demand for droftsmen. We will ||| train you at home in your spare time to be a draftsman. No || drafting background or previous training needed. Tests are specially prepared for home study, and are not the same as those used by the Nuva Scotia Department of Education. All books and instructions for as little as $1.50 a week or $6.00 a month, Graduates will receive the Diploma of the | future rushing at you in any Hometown {| Ontario community. Such bright, happy ||| youngsters promise a glowing future -- |||| "and best of all, it's a future that is right Hi! here in Hometown Ontario. Nowadays, |||! local industry, business and the profes- ||| sions offer just as rewarding opportuni- i|!| ties as those of the Metropolitan centres, along with all the priceless advantages of Hometown living. Year after year, Ontario's 27 local daily newspapers have believed in and fought for the future of their communities. To- day, with Hometown Ontario booming, they have won a special place in com- YOU CAN BE CASHING GOOD not for profit. Draftsmen are | BELLEVILLE ONTARIO INTELLIGENCER | NEWS MERCURY @ KINGSTON on and 156 page book poge b PETERBOROUGH EXAMINER © ® CORNWALL STANDARD-FREEHOLDER @ FORT WILLIAM TIMES-JOURNAL WHIG-STANDARD @ KIRKLAND LAKE FALLS REVIEW @ NORTH BAY NUGGET @ BARNIA OBSERVER @ SAULT STE. MARIE ST. WELLAND-PORT COLBORNE That's Here munity affections. Neighbour, leader and guide at one and the same time. The Hometown Ontario paper retails the most saleable produet in the world -- local news. It adds up to the fact that no other me- dium is so right for reaching the '*billion- dollar,plus'" provincial market than the well-read pages of the local daily. In this friendly setting your advertisement is not only read, it gets action! Place your ad- vertising where your dealers spend ale most their entire advertising budget -- get into the Hometown Ontario dailies! See your advertising agency. | During 1955 local retailers purchased far in excess of 100,000,000 lines of advertising in Hometown Ontario daily Newspapers. ONTARIO PROVINCIAL DAILIES ASSOCIATION BROCKVILLE RECORDER AND TIMES ® GALT EVENING i ® KITCHENER - WATE2LO0 RECORD ORILLIA PACKET AND TIMES @ OSHAWA TIMES-GAZETTE OWEN SOUND bs PORT ARTHUR NEWS-CHRONICLE ST. : ov ayes BRANTFORD EXPOSITOR © NORTHERN NEWS CATHARINE DN - HERALD (J STRATFORD BEA TRIBUNE AR STANDARD @ 57. IDBURY ® WOODSTOCK SENTINEL-REVIEW That vest market outside Ontario's Metropolitan areas -- soid effectively only by 27 Local Daily' Newspapers. CHATHAM DAILY ® GUELPH DAILY ® NIAGARA REPORTER THOMAS TIMES-JOURNAL Rei STAR © MINS DAILY PRESS