Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 11 Jan 1958, p. 10

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THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Seturdey, Jenuery. 17, 1958 HONEYMO Actress Natalie Wood Is car- ried from train at Pennsylvania Ci Station by bridegroom, Robert Wagner, They were wed © | s--what's it STOLEN LIQUOR TELEVISION LOG CHCH-TV Channel 11--Hamilton CBI'T-TV Channel 6----Tcronto WROC-IV Channel 5--Rochester WGR-TV Channel 2--Buffalo WBEN-TV Channel $--Buffalo SATURDAY EVE. 5.00 P.M. 11,6~Zorro 8--Maverick 2--Where Were You 5.50 P. (1,6--Wild Bill Hickok 4--Film Featurette 6.00 P. 11--The Lone Wolf 6--Here and There S--Lawrence Welk 4--News; Sports 6.30 P.M. 11--Federal Men 6--Mr, Fix-It; News 4--Death : Valley Days 2--Yesterday's Newsreel 7.00 P.M, 11--Jamboree 6--Radisson 5--Real McCoys 2---Ranch Party 7.30 P.M. 6--Hoiday Ranch 5--People Are Funny 4--Perry Mason 2--Keep It In The Family 00 P.M. 11, 6, 5H -Perry Como 2--Country Music 8.30 P.M. 4--Dick and the Duchess 9.00 P.M. 11, 6---NHL Hockey 5--Club Oasis 4--Oh' Susannah 2--Lawrence Welk .30 P.M. 5--Gisele McKenzie | 4--Have Gun, Will | © Trave: 10.00 P.M. For 4--Gunsmoke "4 | 2--Mike Wallace 10.15 P.M, ON SMILES actor | in west Dec: 28 and are in New | | York to continue honeymoon. | I --AP Wirephoto Uranium Boom Tow Normal Community By MARTIN TAYLOR Canadian Press Staff Writer KITIMAT, B.C. (CP) -- This planned by Alcan set. at $550,- five-year-old smelter town of 14,-1000,000 000, born in boom times and weaned on prosperity, finally has become what -its reeve calls a normal community. Carved out of a wilderness, the Aluminum Company of Canada smelter came into production here in 1954 with plans for a city| of 50,000 population, the dream of the pioneers. The dream remains, but there has been a change from the pros- peru days and the winter will hard for many. 1,700 LAID OFF The e¢hange came with the lay- off of 1,700 workers when the Saguenay - Kitimat Construction Company, a subsidiary of Alcan, announced it would gradually close down operations by April 1958. The company had decided pot to proceed with expansion to seven five in the number of its "'potlines"--series of vats in which aluminum ore is refined. "No layoff is good news--it is a saiastiophe for the family man who is left without a job," says Reeve Wilburn Hallman, "But this levelling-off will be healthy for our economy in the long run. town." All the land in Kitimat originally was owned by Alcan private business concerns and some to individuals for homes. Most families affected by the layoffs live in homes rented from Alcan. An employee building his own home is granted a second mortgage by Alcan, which pro- vides for repurchase of the prop- erty by Alcan if the employee leaves before the mortgage is paid off. | ,000. {$30 a week unemployment insur-| 4&--News; It is not strictly a "company| but some has since been sold to| oped at a cost of more than $380,- meet on $1,800 worth of furniture 000,000, with the ultimate goal which he bought when he moved | his family here in April and only ance benefits to look forward to. | "We can't go anywhere else--| the as bad everywhere now. This is our home now," he says. SEE BLEAK FUTURE The future looks bleak, too, for Mr. and Mrs. Steve Nagy who moved here from Niagara Falls, The 57- year -old Hungarian- Ont., in July, 1956. 3 Mr born shoemaker gave up his trade to work as a laborer for the construction company and in- vested more than $700 in moving| a few p i here. He says) Those living in rented h have had their payments reduced under a "deferred rental" plan. Legally they will owe the com- pany the unpaid amount but Al- can has said it will not ask pay- ment if a laid-off family subse- {quently leaves town. { Kitimat is a district munjcipal- Hty and its reeve and councillors |are elected. Most are Alcan em- |ployees since the only other em-| | ployment in the area is in retail |establishments. Reeve Hallman edits The Ingot, weekly newspa-| We are no longer a construction [Per published by Alcan for its camp--we are a normal com-|employees. munity, living a normal life." | ing to be a ghost town, But mat's existence. Damming of| e community will never forget outlets of mountain lakes pro-| Oct. 28--"Black Monday." vided a 350- square -mile reser-| It was the day the layoffs|yoir. Water rushes through a 10- were announced. It came without| mile-long tunnel to a powerhouse warning. Many workers and their |jy the mountainside at Kemano, families left the town. Many Oth-|50 miles south of Kitimat. The ers, though jobless, stayed. |water drops 16 times the height| WORLD DEMAND OFF lof Niagara Falls before passing A slump in world markets for through five huge turbines. aluisiman brought the slow. Carpenter Dick Peterson, who . |came Lere three years ago from The glant smelter, where hun-| p4monton and lives with his wife dreds are still employed, €on-\,ngq two children in an Alcan] tinued operation, a silver stream |; "yas one of the first to be of alumimim hot and smoking. |15iq off. ii Fa Bo Me The company has geduced his cently caused by a breakdown in| TS0 [8 0 FO, SE month on & the power line between here and| M eC rel : plan. the massive hydro station at Ke.| Meanwhile he has payments tol there is no hope of getting a job anywhere else at his age. "What can we do?" asks Mrs. Nagy. "We can only hope -- we have often had to get by with hope. This is our home now and| we plan to spend the rest of our lives here." Business agent Ernie Rodda of the carpenters' union says many families like these face severe hardship because they were en- couraged to settle in Kitimat. "We are construction workers, we're used to layoffs at one | {hour's notice," he Says, "but the| wore taken by Det. - Inspector Cheap and plentiful hydro-elec- company insisted this was a per- Harry England, to~»how color No one here says Kitimat is|tric power is the reason for Kiti- manent job and encouraged men| markings on 13 stolen lambs. to regard Kitimat as their home.' NO ALTERNATIVE Project manager J a ¢ k Kend-| rick of Alcan says the company had no alternative to the con- struction close-down. | "The whole economy of North| America has lost its drive in the last six months. Many industries have been compelled to re-exam- ine their capital programs." Mr. Kendrick agrees that the| company encouraged men to bring their families to this re- mote community. But he says it paid the fares for its employees] and their dependents to come| here and has offered to contrib- ute to their cost of moving out. | mano, moré than 4,000 workers look forward to steady employ- ment in the town and plant. Re make about $1,500,000 a month. | 53 ets The halt in construction was termed by Howard Mitchell, pub- lisher of the Northern Sentinel, the the first bad news Kitimat = For C ar S ales In the first way of uncertainty following "Black Monday' union | By DAVID J. WILKIE | officials say nine families auc-| DETROIT (AP) -- When car| tioned off their furniture at give- manufacturers went to unload away prices within two days. |automobiles without announcing UNION'S CLAIMS |a price reduction they usually set Union officials have con- up sales contests. | demned management for the lay-| The contests provide bonus pay- offs. They claim many of theiments to the retailers for each workers were promised perma-isale over a specified number. nent jobs when they moved to More often than not the contests Kitimat. | flourish chiefly in the windup of Union officers and members, an outgoing model year, enabl-| however, are working with aling the dealers to cut prices. community action committee with plans for aiding the jobless Yamilles, and planning for the fu- cove Hallman says existence of a labor pool here for the first time will stimulate construction. New housing projects may be started, and a $3,800,000 hospital is planned. Business and commerce have so far been little affected by the layoffs. Union officials says this is because Alcan workers re- cently received $600,000 in retro- active pay raises, The extra money is acting as a cushion for age: the Northern Sentinel, a newspaper which became a daily Jess than six months ago, has had to résume twice-weekly publica- tion, Mr, Mitchell says it will be- come a daily again as soon as Kitimat recovers from its set- osTLY DEVELOPMENT Kitimat, 450 miles north of vancouver on the ri saeql British golumbia coast, has been devel | Industry sources heard Friday that Ford's Edsel division has set {up a bonus plan under which| |dealers will be granted $100 and| {up for each sale made. Edsel ex-| lecutives said they did not want to talk about the report. | S.LES LAGGING Sales of the Edsel car, intro- |duced in the United States last {summer, have lagged below ex- {pectations. Ford Motor Co. re- {ported that assemblies through {last Dec. 31 numbered 54,607. Unit sales tabulated into Novem- ber of last year were less than half that total. What hampered Edsel sales {¢ontinues to be debated in trade circles. | Long before the Edsel line was {introduced Ford said that more than $250,000,000 had been in- |vested in its development before a single car reached the as sembly line. In the nearly three vears of its planning and prepar t was given p I } 'greatest promotional ation broadside Bonus Plan Promotion in automotive history. Ward's Automotive Report says in its current issue that De Soto| and Mercury already have sales) contests under way. The agency says the De Soto contest provides| salesmen with bonuses of $20 for| each sales above two they make] in a given period. The Mercury contest, Ward's says, varies in| each sales region, with cash and| merchandise prizes geared to a| target based on recent retail per-| formance. ji LIGHTHOUSE TV COWES, England (CP) -- The] Needles lighthouse on the Isle of | Wight is the first rock-based light-| house in the United Kingdom to| be equipped with television. | For Ambitious People Only | ADULT EVENING CLASSES | Mon. & Wed. 7-9 p.m. Tues. & Thursday 7-9 p.m. Saturday Morning 9-12 a.m. COMPLETE ACCOUNTING COURSES WITH TYPING AND BUSINESS MACHINES OSHAWA BUSINESS COLLEGE 111 Simcoe St. South Mrs, Stella Barnett, Registrar RA 5-3375 11,6--King Whyte 10.30 P.M, 11---City Dctec.ve | 6--Hit Parade 5--Pat Boone | 4--Silent Service | 2--Harbor Command | 11.00 P.M, 11--News; Late Show 4,2---News; weather; Sports 6--~News, 5-26 Men | 11.30 P.M, | 6=Wrestling 5--Movie 4--Saturday | Playhouse 2--Paris Precinct 12.00 MIDNIGHT 2---Swing Shift SUNDAY Juliette AM. on Parade | 9.15 AM. $--Christian Science 9.30 AM, $--This is the Life 3--~Christian Science 10.00 A. 8---Chrisophers 4--Lamp Unto My Feet 2--~Church Invitation 10.30 A.M. | 8--Look at Congress 4--Uncle Jerry 2--Bible Adventure 10.45 AM | 8--~Roy Rogers 11.00 AM. 8---Church Service 4--Morning Worship 3-Morning Gospel 11.30 A.M. 11--German Movies 11.45 AM. $3--Jon Gnagy 12.00 NOON \ $--Wondrous World Weather 2 This Is the Life 12.15 P.M, 6--Bonanza employment situation is just| 4--Look at Congress 12.30 P.M. | 6--This 1s the Lite S--Hopalong Cassidy 4---Wild Bill Hickok | 3--Eternal Echo P.M. 1.00 P.M. 11--Bravo Theatre 6--Roy Forrest Wizard 4---Film Feature 2-The Changed World 1.30 P.M, 6--County Calendar S--Frontiers of Faith 2 £2.00 P.M. 6--Juniur Magazine 4--Film Feature $30 P.M. 11--8acred Heart 6--The Living Ses 5--Roy Rogers 4--Film Festival 3.45 P.M. 11--Living Word 4.00 00 P.M. 11-This Is the Liis 6--~Twentieth Century 2---Bowling Stars 4.30 P.M. 11--Rev. Roberts 6--Lassie 5--Feature Movie 2--Paul Winchell Show 5.00 P.M. 11--Western Marshall 6--Fighting Words 4--State of the Nat' = 2-Texas Rangers 5.30 P.M. 11---Lasaie 6--Perspective 4--Bing Crosby 2-Lone Ranger 8. M 11--Amateur Hour 6- -Burns and Allen 5--All Star Theatre 2-Casey Jones 6.30 P.M. 11--Invitation Playhouse 6--Father Knows Hest 5--Men of Annapolis 2--Bishop Sheen 6:45 P.M. 11--Playhouse 13 7.00 P.M, 11- -Father Knows Best 6--December Bride 5--Silent Service 4--Lassie 2-You Ask For It 7.30 P.M. 11--Movie Showcase News Magazine 5--Sally 4---Jack Benny 2--Maverick 8.00 P.M, 6,4--Ed Sullivar 5--Shirley Temple 8.30 .30 P.M. 2--Adventure at Scott fsland 8.00 P.M, 11,6--World's Stage 5--Dinah Shore 4--GE Theatre 2----Starlight Theatre 9:30 P.M, 11 6--Showtime 4--Alfred Hitchcock 10.00 P.M. 11,6--Close Lp S--Loretta Young 4--$64,000 Challenge 2--Scot'~~d Vard 10.30 P.M. 11,6--Explorations 8, 4--What's My Line 2-Jackie Gleason 11.00 P.M 11--News; Late Show 6,4,2--News: Weather; Sports $--Mike Wallace P.M. 6--Camera Three 8--All Star Theatre 4--Theatre 2-Swing Shift MONDAY 8.00 AM. 8---To-day 4 Capt. Kangaroo 2-Playhouse 9.00 A B--Susie Play $---Rumpus Room 9.30 AM AM. S5---District Attorney 8, 4--Susle 10.00 AM. $--Arlene Francis 4--Garry Moore 2-My Little Margie 10.30 A.M. S--Treasure Hunt 4--Arthur Godfrey 2---Abbott and Costello 8--Price Is Right 3-My Favorite Story 11.830 A.M. STruth or Union 4--Dotto | | | 2---Public Defender 12.00 NOON 8--Tic Tac Dough 4--News; Serials 2-Mid-Day Matinee 12.30 P.M. 8--It Could Be You 1.00 P.M. 5--Feature Movie 4--Matinee Playhouse 145 P.M. 4--Speaker of the House 2--Dept. of Agriculture 2.00 P.M. 4--As the World Turns 2--Helen Neville 2.30 P.M, 6---Matinee 5--Home Cooking 4--Meet the Millers 2-House Party 11~Movie Matinee 5--Matinee Theatre 4-The Big Payoff 2--American Band. stand 3.30 P.M. &--The Verdict is Yours 2-Trust Your Wife 4.00 P.M, 6--Open House 5, 4--Serial Stories 2--American Band- stand .30 P.M. 11, 6--Howdy Doody 5.00 P.M. 11--Family Theatre 6--Puppet Show 5--Playhouse 4-Fun To Learn 2--Superman 5.15 P. 6--Children's Newsreel 4--Children's Theatre 5.30 P.M, 6--Champion 2--Mickey Mouse MONDAY EVENING 6.00 P.M, 8--Kaliedoscope 8---Zorro 4--Headlines; News 2--Colonel Bleep 6.15 P.M. 6--Scan 4--Cisco Kid 6.30 P.M. 11, 2--News; Weather: Sports 6--Patli Page 6.45 P.M, 8, $--News; Weather 7.00 P.M, 11--8ir Lancelot $--Tabloid 5-TBA 4--Helicopter Adventure 2---Man Behind the Badge 7.30 P.M, 11--Man Behind The Badge 6--Provincial Affairs 5--Price is Right 4--Robin Hood 2--American 7.45 PA 6---Movie suseum 8.00 P.M. 11,6--Millionaire 5-Guy Mitchell 4-Burns and Allen 2---Guy Mitchell 11,6-On Camera 5-.Wells Fargo 4--A. Godfrey 3---Bold Journey 9.00 P.M. 11,61 Love Lucy 5--Twenty One 4-Danny Thomas 2-Voice of Firestone 9.30 P.M, 11, 6-Tugboat Annie 3-Twist of Fate 4--Men of Annapolis 3-Lawrence Welk 10.00 P.M. 11--Alfred Hitchcock 6, 4--Studio One 5--Restless un 10.30 P.M, 11-Oh Susanna 5--Lawrence Welk 2-The Whistler 11.00 P.M. 11, 6, 5, 4 2--News; Weather; Sports 11.30 PM 11-The Late Show 6--The Tapp Room 5--Theatre 4--Playhouse 2-Outdoors Inn 11.45 P.M. 2-Swing Shift STOPPING CHINKS (CP)--The Post Of- LONDON m Bandstand fice has started a drive against colds and chills. It has ordered draught excluders fitted to con- trol pedals, steering columns ard doors of Post Office vans, follow- ing complaints from drivers. EVIDENCE IN COLOR CANTERBURY, England (CP) For the first time in the criminai courts colored photographs were produced in evidence here. They "RECORD HOPS" Dancing to the Top Pop Record: EVERY SATURDAY AVALON King St. W. -- Oshawa Admission -- 50 Cents DANCE TONITE OLD TIME--MODERN Msic By THE SAINTS Caller--BOB FOWLER Red Barn ADMISSION 75¢ UKRAINIAN . "DNIPRO" HALL 681 EDITH STREET DANCE Saturday Nite 8.30 - 12 p.m. Good Orchestra FIRST 10 COUPLES ADMISSION FREE EVERYONE WELCOME 4 a UA JAKk's SALTED ; REDSKINS or BLANCHED Other Snack Foods from our Spotless Kitchens aaa PO Kile! RAYMO Cheese Twists Cheddar-etts Caramel Corn \ | y I's sasy and fun to make these captivating Nut and Snack Recipes. They're free i 3 write loday lo: Jacky, Box 82, hener, Ont. ND'S NUT SHOPS LID RITCHINIR, ONTARIO GOOD FISHING LOWESTOFT, England (CP)-- The East Anglian autumn herring catch of 83,250,000 fish is the largest since the Second World War. LONDON (CP) -- Thieves in London's Peckham district made certain of their holiday liquor supply. They stale a truck loaded with 50 cases of Scotch whisky. WOODVIEW COMMUNITY || <n. CENTRE ( COME and DANCE Moss x R | Mitchell Zaleski's Orchestra MORE THAN ! aot the 1,000 in PRIZES || POLISH NATIONAL EVERY MON. | UNION HALL RED BARN ee m-- FUN FOR ALL! EVERY SATURDAY 8:30 - 12 Round & Square Dancing SATURDAY - 9:00 P.M. C.R.A. BUILDING GIBB STREET Admission: Ladies 50c, Gents 75c SPONSORED BY Central Council of Neighborhood Associations BALLET REGISTER NOW IRENIE HARVEY TAP--BATON CT.DA. ACCM 424 KING ST. W. Phone RA 5-6122 Saturday Night S 0 The Adventure Oma Khavvam (DDE RENE PAGE DANCE SAT. NIGHT, JAN. 11th VARCOE'S PAVILION (under new management) "THE TROTTERS"" @ Barbecued Chicken Dinners ® Barbecued Chicken . . . Take Out Service | A FAMOUS PLAYERS THEATRE Boo TODAY our. Ore "APRIL LOVE" BOONE HE CALLED HIMSELF "THE P . « « and he wrote his sermon in leod! IN COLOR RANDOLPH 2 THRILL-PACKED FEATURES! E BOLDEST STORY OF LOVE YOU'VE EVER BEEN PERMITTED TO SEE! ADULT ENTERTAINMENT BURT ANNA CASTER - MAGNANT HAL WALLIS 4" ms sun suing JOAN JACK FONTAINE - PALANCE CORINNE ROBERT TEIN | CALVET- DOUGLAS "TATTOO Pdvced by MAT HOLT « A PARAMOUNT PICTURE MONDAY |, [:1:1,4. Gory "ARTISTS & MODELS" Plus "BUCKSKIN LADY" WARNER BROS | OHOOT-OUTAT [4 'MEDICINEBEND'}; | a a JAMES CRAIG * ANGIE DICKINSON Plus -- This Gay Adventure! PRESENT A STORY THAT COULD BE WRITTEN INSIDE ANY GIRLS HEART! | NDAY WAYNE At His MIGHTIESY! ADVEN THCHNIRAMA ™ ed TECHNICOLOR™ FIRST OSHAWA SHOWING ADDED TREATS! "THUNDER BEACH" COLOR CARTOON Jast Day 'Sea Wife' & 'Broken Arrow' "GEORGE NADER- JULIE ADAMS - MARIANNE COOK - ELSA MARTINELLI -- GIA SCALA - SYDNEY CHAPLIN - GRANT WILLIAMS - JOHN GAVIN BILTMORE = STARTS TODAY MONDAY NIGHT THE OSHAWA KIWANIS CLUB PRESENTS 'THE FOURTH IN THE SEASON'S TRAVEL - ADVENTURE SERIES FOR '57-58 "CALL OF THE SEA" BY COL. JOHN D, CRAIG = Japanese pearl divers encounter From Col. John D. Craig's "Call of the Sea." Co!. Croig is one of the best known television artists in America. For many years he worked with Hollywood > producer. ments, most of them requiring underwater photography. pie. hess a": an octopus.-- John Wayne puts his brand | ed in glorious Technicolor and on Sophia Loren in their sen- | CinemaScope, Premiere Osh- satjonal action packed | oa showings commence at the | romantic adventure of the(Sa- ["€7¢ > i ¥ | hara "Legend of the Lost" fikg. | Plaza Theatre on Monday. new scores of exciting experiences, He was in char 4 e the fearsome atom and H-bomb tests in the Bocifie te engaging speaker, and,.in 1955 he won the "Oscar" and Adventure Series". He will bring to us his Jatest and thrillina wolor, movie, gay of the Sea", which shows Fd seq s on land, on and under th seq! > on le e sea and in. the air aboyes-all CENTRAL COLLEGIATE AUDITORIUM 8.15 P.M, TICKETS 1.00 Tickets at STUDENTS .50 Door or from Kiwanis Member | a --"

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