Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 10 Aug 1957, p. 12

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U.S. Football Game On Royal Schedule WASHINGTON (AP) -- Queen can sports event, fi Elizabeth and Prince Philip will ARRIVE EROM OTTAWA : take in a football game on their! The Queen and Prince Philip visit to the United States Oct. will arrive in the U.S. from Ot- 16 to 21. They will see the Mary- tawa Oct. 16. The itinerary: land-North Carolina game at Col-' Oct. 16, afternoon: Visit the lege Park, Md., Oct. 19. Jamestown settlement. Visit Wil- The visit to the Maryland cam- liamehurg. : pus was a surprise addition to the Oct. 17, morning: Fly to Wash- list of formal engagements for ington National airport and be the royal couple, announced to- met by President and Mrs. Eisen- day by the White House press hower, The Queen will place a secretary, James C. Hagerty, and | wreath at the tomb of the U.S. G. d'Arcy Edmondson, director- unknown soldier and at the Cana- general of British information dian cross at 4 p.m. services in the U.S, A STATE DINNER J Otherwise, the schedule in- Evening: Reception given by cludes the usual state events and the joint committee of press, ra- Pope Unlikely To Heed Plea VATICAN CITY (AP) -- Pope Pius is "most unlikely" to heed stay at the White House during 2 plea by a group of New Orleans | Tosh, i 50 all, of their stay at Roman Catholic 'laymen that e capital. i § Oct. 18: Vice - President and heir Shurch halt vacial integra. Mrs. Nixon give a luncheon at tion, Vatican sources said today. 2 p.m. Garden party at British These sources noted that the, Embassy at 6 p.m. State dinner Pope has frequently referred to| g iven by Secretary of State and the equality of men. regardless! Mrs. Dulles at 9:15 p.m. of color, However, there is no Oct. 19, morning: Receive available information that he has members of the C wealth ever directly upon the missions at British Embassy. subject of segregation, Give a dinner in honor of the The sharpest criticism ever ex- President and Mrs. Eisenhower pressed here against segregation at the embassy. was that of I'Osservatore Ro- CHURCH SERVICES mano Oct. 17, 1955. when it de- . clared that "racial exclusion is a RE A; Devoted to Shuch aid sin against the nature of Cathol- previously announced visits to dio and television correspondents Williamsburg and Jamestown, |and photographers in Washing- Va, Hagerty said the Queen ex- ton. State dinner at White House pressed a wish to see an Afneri- at 9 a.m. The Royal Couple will a 9 p.m. dinner given by the sen- 1¢1S™- : ior Commonwealth ambassador, , Vatican sources said the Vat- Australia's Sir Percy Spender, at ican newspaper's words doubt- the Australian Embassy, Leave less reflected, in genera, the at- | little | sup! mirable®" The archbishop has suspended masses at the mission. Vatican sources, there ore, see chance that Pope Pius will rt the group's request that Archbishop Rumme! be asked to "take no further steps" toward integration and that the papacy decree that secregation is not morally wrong and sinful, as it hes been defined by the arch- Bears Killing Farm Animals . NORTH BAY (CP)--Farmers in the Astorville, Rutherglen and Chisholm areas have reported bears raiding their livestock. Albert Buckner a farmer fin Chisholm, six miles east of Alder- (dale. said 17 sheep have been killed by bears within a three- day period, X Mr. Buckner shot one of the ! bears. |at night, probably by train, for New York. titude of the pontiff L'Osserva- Farmers using 25 per tore, at the time, was comment cent of their land for agriculture 9 ing upon the impeding of a Negro are eligible for a $10 bounty on Ll - | . | Poison Found |Urges Meeting | : - - {toria: visit to the United Nations, @ mission near New Orleans. Mr. Buckner said he heard an 3 For Wood Bug To Discuss Flu { Evening: Dinner at Waldorf As-| L'Osservatore described the ac- other farmer in his area had lost toria_given by the pilgrims and |tion as a "sacrilege and Jaised Wy sheep. . (CP)-- fec-| NIAGARA FALLS, Ont. (CP)--|the English-Speaking Union. At- the intervention of Archbishop nds and forests officials VANCOUVER CF) thn ef i! William L. Houck, Liberal mem- tend ball given by Common-| Joseph Francis Rummel of New here have had reports of cows % {type of wood-boring. worm has ber of Parliament for Niagara wealth societies. Leave by air for Orleans in the Negro priest's be- and calves lost in the Astorville canary and four pigeons, are been discovered by British Col. Falls, Friday asked Prime Min- London. half as being "pAompt and ad- and Rutherglen area. one their way to Texas for fur- {umbia research scientists. i T i ister' Diefenbaker to call a con- 39 ther schooling for children and | saan IN BRIEF Oct. 21: Ticker tape parade; o $ | p.m. luncheon at Waldorf As. Priest from celebrating mass in be , 4 SIT IRL IY og ' OFF TO WOR TO MASTERS' DEGREES IN U.S. Not satisfied with setting a | formance there immigrants | economics. While all this was unique record at the Ontario | from Ireland, Mr. Courtenay going on they were raising Agriculture college at Guelph, | worked while studying for his { Henry, Jr., now 15; Ivy, 12; Ont.,, Mr. and Mrs. Harry | degree in agriculture; and Mrs, | twins Ruth and Naomi, seven, Courtenay are on their way to | Courtenay was a waitress while and Luke, six. All seven of the Texas to duplicate their per- | acquiring her degree in home | family, together with a cat, 9 THEIR WAY ESE Be It has been estimated the tere- jerence Of provincial ministers of § to discu | parents alike. The parents are |dos cause about $1,000,000 dam- ge rhe flu pong og rains fon ehama? age annually to log booms in this aiming for masters' degrees. | ; io. ada, -- |province, and they are especially Mr. Houck, in a letter to the {hard on plywood. prime minister, urged Mr. Dief- Director Gordon Shrum told the ci haver to take immediate pre- annual meeting of the research cay tionary measures against any council that one of his co-work-|possible outbreak of the flu in ers stumbled across a method of Canada. 'He recommended estab- Upholds Right NEW ZEALAND ALARMED Soviet Builds Up | Embassy Strength | By J. C. GRAHAM (with Australia and the closing of Tanadian Press Correspondent the Canberra embassy. WELLINGTON, N.Z. (CP) -- GRADUAL SWITCH Growing attention is being paid| Since then the Russians have in New Zealand to the build-up had to rely on the much smaller in strength of the Soviet embassy mission in Wellington. It has, in Wellington. however, been progressiveely in Although New Zealand has for|crased in strength until now the vears had no diplomatic post in number of Russians associated Russia, not even a consul, the|with it rivals the size of the for Russians continue to add to their mer Canberra establishment staff in Wellington When the C#nberra embassy Yet there are only 171 Russian was closed there were about 40 pationals in New Zealand and Russians there, including wives there is little trade between the and children. About 23 were dip two countries except in wool, /lomats or employees which is all bought by private] Continued increa in woolbuyers as agents for Russian have brought the number of interests. sians at the embassy in Welling- es Rus-| TIN ton to at least 34. Of these about G SPANNING are diplomats or er it is well known tk v of Russian diplomats frequently also hold staff posts. The staff includes a chauffeur and a schoolteacher who instructs chil dren of the employees (The: New Zealand establish ment is small in comparison witk the Soviet mission in Ottawa, to which are attached 151 diplomats other personnel and dependents.) HOUSING PROBLEM Repeated additions to the staff have caused the embassy in New SOUTH PACIFIC Suggestions are being made but that the Soviet embassy is being built up to act for Russian operations through- out the South Pacific. Until 1954 Australia the main centre of Soviet diplomatic activity in the South Pacific A major explosion occurred in 1954, however, when the diplomat Vladimir Petrov defected from the embassy in Canberra. Later his wife also sought asylum while being taken back to Russia by Soviet couriers. The Petrov case caused was ENNISKILLEN MRS. RUSSELL GRIFFIN Correspondent ENNISKILLEN Mr. and Mrs, Arthur Jackson and Stanley, Toronto, spent a few days with Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Ormiston Stanley has remained for an- other week's holiday. Mrs. C. R. Walton, Kingston, spent a few days with her par- ents and brother, Mr. and Mrs H. Stevens and Gordon Mr. and Mrs. R. J Thornhill, spent the with her parents, Mr W. H. Moore Mr. .and Mrs. O. Bueamont and Jimmy, Toronto, were with Mr. and Mrs. A. Leadbeater. Miss Sharon Scott, Kedron, holidaying with her cousin, Don- na Gail Irwin Mrs. H. Gibson, Caesarea, visited Mr. Clifford Pethick. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Trewin, Do- reen and Donald, visited Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Horn, William's Point. Mr. and Mrs. Grant Rice, Gail and Bobby, London, visited Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Moore. Mr. and Mrs. Taylor, St. Thom- as, were weekend guests at Mr and Mrs. Ed. Cox's. Miss Clara Page, Mr. and Mrs E. Coombs and Charlene, Toron- to, visited Mrs. E. Page. Mrs. E. Strutt, and Miss Pethick, accompanied Mr H. Bowin, Oshawa, motor trip to Caesarea on day Flmer Herring, Oshawa, apd Leonard Bradley visited Mr. and Mrs. Sam Webber, Clifford Mrs. C. R. Walton, Mrs. H Stevens, and Gordon, spent a Wearing, weekend and Mrs and family, and Mrs Ruth and on a Sun- irs as headquarters is the| Zealand to spill over from them uch propaganda rupture of diplomatic relations'large embassy building on Mes-lfrom other diplomatic posts >| were other To Park Seat LONDON (Reuters) -- A judge here has upheld a man's right to isit on a park bench whether he's to kill The case Corbett, sitting on -a bench in Hyde Park, refused to obey a po- liceman's order to get up and get out of the park.' Bill was accused of assaulting policeman James Dunk in the ex- ecution of his duty and contra- veni park regulations sines Road. The Russians have |leased three other houses in the leity. Since the Petrov affair the Rus sians have adopted a policy of rapid turnover of staff in Welling ton. No member of the staff has been there longer than four Duk said Cocbe va years and three-quarters of those ° ne Said Corbett was in "gen- classed as diplomats or employ erally filthy condition asleep on ees have been a year or less in the bench and that other people New Zealand y would have used the seats if he By comparison with the size of hadn't been: there : the Russian emt F : Judge Geoffrey Raphael raised a diplomatic staf LS eyebrows after being told by deal with contacts the ion that a police of- times as gr the power at any time Zealand a on he thinks to ask Other diplomatic missions ir \ k." Zealand are on a proportionate scale A few months ago made in Austr lood of propaganda materia pouring across the Tasman from the Soviet embassy in Wel lington The Soviet charge d'affaires in emp] Wellington, G. M. Rodionov, in pot reply denied that there an thing improper in the inform tion bulletins distributed fron Wellington to newspapers and organizations in Austra and New Zealand. He s the material was less offensive tha distributed e par at if regula- 1 'you 11 come to a position where po- will .permit only gentlemen with morning coats and grey top- pers in. Hyde Park." He dismissed all the charges t Corbett. But Bill, an un- homeless laborer, was to taste the fruits He had been earlier released on bail, and didn't show up nd th f enforced lice ved ed in victory court as of Bill returned home with the jetty Wright holidayed Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Sander- Columbus with -- EWR dei s son, day at the cottage with Mr. and Mrs. John E. Griffin, and fam- ily, Cameron Lake Dr. and Mrs. John Dalton, David and Sarah, New York City, spent a few days with Mr. and Mrs. O. C. Ashton enroute to visit their former home, at Vie- toria, B.C. Messrs. Jack Sloan and Wal- lace Stainton, Toronto, visited Mr. and Mrs. W, H. Moore Mr. and Mrs. Maberly, gary, called on Mrs. T Slemon, on Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Ashton, Ronald and Ray, Mr. and Mrs. Ross Ashton, and family, Hay don, 'and Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Sharp were Sunday guests of Mr and Mrs. R. J. Ormiston Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Griffin Heather and Dale, spent the weekend at Oak Lake Allan Cole, Bowmanville, was a recent overnight guest with Mr. and Mrs. Allan Werry. Mrs. Fred Toms attended a shower for Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Graham, Blackstock. Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Ashton, and family, Purple Hill, and Mr and Mrs. Walter Oke enjoyed a drive through Eastern points on Sunday. Miss Betty Jane Werry is hol idaying at Camp Pretoria, The Rev. and Mrs. Tom Beverage, John Beverage and Mrs. Beatrice Henders, Saskat- chewan, visited Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Werry Mr. and Mrs tlwyn Dickey, Bowmanville, visited Mr. and Mrs. M. Stainton Miss Reva McGill spent a few days at Stoney Lake. Miss Marguerite Wright, St Catharines, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Wright, Barrie, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Wright, and girls, To- OiL Cal- M Mr. and Mis. W. Howells and amily spent their holidays at 'rystal Beach, Madoc. M Elsie Oke, Toronto, visit- ed with relatives here Mr Fred Toms attended the on Saturday 'of her Mr. and Mrs. Keith Tay- Oshawa United Church. ronto, visited Mr. and Mrs. N. E Wright. ( Bill Begley, Bowmanville, Mr H. Mills, Bruce and Miss Shir Mills, are on a motor trip through W.S.A. weddi Wm. Reiley, Belfast, Ireland, neph Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Reiley, and Jor, son Jackson, Toronto, visited, Mr. and Mrs. Ross Lee, Kéd- with Mr, and Mrs. H. Stevens ron, were Sunday, dinner guests Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Wer Mr. and Mrs. Allan Werry. and Betty Jane, visited Mr. and, Mr, and Mrs. E. Wright and Mrs. Harold Werry, and Mrs. Lawrence have returned home Fletcher Werry, and Wilma, Ked- from visiting with the Spry's at ron, and called on Mr. and Mrs. Rochester, N.Y. Bow Starr, Kedron. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Toms were Jim Kinsman, Courtice, in Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. company with Mr. and Mrs. Roy W. Weatherilt at Caesarea McGill and Reva, Mr. and Mrs Miss Lyle Stainton, Oshawa, Keith McGill and Dale, were with and Mrs. Ross Lee, Kedron, were Mr. and Mrs. Fred Billett, at recent visitors with Mrs. Allan Chandos Lake. Master Douglas Werry at NOTICE TO DISPLAY ADVERTISERS In Order to further Improve the Quality of Display Advertising in The Daily Times-Gazette, it has been found necessary to establish the following Deadline mixing silicon with a glue used in lishment of a special committee making plywood, and it is bring- ing encouraging results. Scientists have been experi- {menting for some years in 0 ef- ragged as a tramp or dressed fit! fort to combat the teredo prob- p lem, and now are using sodium arose because Bill arsonate which the worms ap- Mr. Houck said parently cannot detect. Poisons previously used were ineffective because the worms evidently sensed them, and protected them- selves by sealing up the holes they had bored in the wood. PRINCE ALBERT PRINCE ALBERT -- Mr. and Mrs. S. Foster of Oakville were recent guests of, Mrs. C. Luke Mrs. Luke also entertained her sisters and brothers at a birhday dinner in honor of her brother's wife, "Mrs. W. Bond of Toronto. Mr. and Mrs, J, Bradburn and family, Blackstock, visited with Mr. and Mrs. L. Beacock "BE of doctors to prepare for any pos-| |sibie outbreak. "The rapid onset of this epi- demic makes it necessary to have lans prepared well in advance . . « before the epidemic strikes," Brothers Gain Carving Fame ST. JEAN PORT JOLI, Que (CP)--This town 100 miles east of Quebec sometimes is called "the wood - carving capital of Canada' because of the activities of the three Bourgault brothers and their families Medard Bourgault, father of 15 children employed carpenter in the de-| pression He turned to wood-carvin a means of sup porting his large family. | 60-year-old | , was an un-| years ST BEEK" A thousand words couldn't tell you how wonderful the Roast Prime Ribs of Beef, Filet Mignon and Southern Fried Chicken at the Genosha Hotel are, not nearly so well as one de- lighted customer could. Fortunately, we have thousands of patrons who are quite capable or doing just that. May we suggest that you just inquire of someone their reaction to GEN- OSHA HOTEL dinners. Odds are they'll say Hotel. Genosha Eat in good taste in the Main Dining Room "n THE FT SERVED ANYWHERE" Mr. and Mrs. C. Love and chil: Now, with the help of five sons dren are holidaying in Huntsville, and a daucht r, Medard specia- following a time spent at Lake- lizes in r. us statues, statu- side Beach on Scugog Island. ettes and bas-reliefs for churches Mr. and Mrs. St. Martin, Ham- His brother Andre, who also ilton were recent guests of Mrs. has three sons engaged in wood- J. Davidson carving, specializes in French- Mrs. Couch Sr., of Seagrave, Canadian peasantry art. Jean has moved into part of Mrs. Julien produces artistic pieces in Orosler's house as companion for church cabinet-making er. was at home with her family. have difficulty completing orders Miss Fay Bonnell has recovered They often work late into the rom her serious illness and is at night, finding compensation is be- home again. § ing together and developing ideas Mrs. E. Leslie, Mr. and Mrs. with simple tools J. Perry and children of Milton -------- = -------- visited Mr. and Mrs. Don Leslie| COLOR CHANGER on Tuesday. John Perry Jr. isl Many frogs can change the staying for a few days with his color of their. bodies to blend incle and aunt with their surroundings. OSHAWA AND DISTRICT 51st ANNUAL The demand is so great, says| Miss Mabel Bonnell, Toronto, Medard, that he and his family | COMPLETELY AIR CONDITIO 4.30 p.m. to 8 p.m. For Reservations Phone RAndolph 3 NED SPECIAL SUNDAY DINNER -4641 Enquire about aur excellent banquet facilities. Fun. For All The Family" « THURSDAY ~ FRIDAY ~ SATURDA AUGU ST15-16 - 17 ® GIGANTIC MIDWAY @® STOCK JUDGING ® TWILIGHT RACING FRIDAY NIGHT and SATURDAY AFTERNOON ® FLORICULTURE @ EXHIBITS | : FESS BURNERS Canada's Finest, Completely Installed with 200 Gallon Tank. | YEAR GUARANTEE Oil Burner can be financed through for Display Advertising copy All Advertising Display Copy must be in the composing room by 5 p.m. 2 days previous to publication Example: Before 5 P.M. Tues. for Thurs. paper. your HOME IMPROVEMENT PLAN ART BOUKLEY THORNTON RD. §. Y NIGHT 109 RA 5.9567 PAY ONLY 213 OIL BURNER CLEAN-OUT SERVICE DA RA 5-1 Oshawa and I istrict -ANnJvAL FAIR Under Auspices South Ontario Agricultural Society Advertising Department n--_-- The Daily Times-Gazette

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