Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 8 Mar 1958, p. 6

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THE DAILY TIMES.GAZETTE Published by Times-Gazette Publishers Limited, 57 Simcoe St. S. Oshawa, Ont, Poge 6 Saturday, March 8, 1958 Easter Seal Campaign Is Again Launched In City This week the annual Easter Seal campaign, to raise funds to be used for the care and treatment of crippled chil- dren in Ontario, was launched. Letters eontaining a supply of Easter seals and an appeal for support for the campaign have been received in many thousands of homes in Oshawa and the surround- ing district, Sponsored by the Oshawa Rotary Club, the local campaign is part of the province-wide drive to raise $750,000 during the present Easter season, Oshawa has always given generous support to the Easter Seal campaign, This is easy to understand. For over a quarter of a century, the Oshawa Ro- tary Club has been doing a magnifi- cent work on behalf of the crippled children of Oshawa'and Ontario coun- ty. Hundreds of cases have come under the care of the club's crippled children committee, and have been given re- medial treatment and care, and ena- bled to become self-reliant and self- supporting citizens, The record of the GUEST EDITORIAL Change In The By REV, R. A. SHARP In recent years & great deal of evi- dence has been collected which leads the Christian church to believe that a religious revival of some sort is on the way. We read in Holy Scriptures that "the wind bloweth where it listeth" and it would seem that the same could be said of the wind of the Spirit of God today. Evidence collects that it is blowing afresh in these times. It is not only that from so many quarters come reports of larger congregations, of reports of larger congregations, of great- er vigor in church life, but it is also that a greater interest in and respect for the truths which the Church has to teach pan often, and increasingly, be found pmong many who not so very long ago were indifferent, It might well be Interesting to search for the reasons for this fresh wind of the spirit. It would certainly be proper te Another British Dr. Vivian Fuchs, and his party of nine British scientists, have chalked up another first for British courage and endurance, They are the first people to have completed the 2100-mile journey across the entire Antarctic continent, Their arrival at the New Zealand base on the shores of Antartica is a record which should thrill all British hearts, This trip involved 99 days of gruell- ing travel over icebound territory. Many times disaster stared the party in the face. Difficulties with mechan- ical transport on the long trek in frigid temperatures made this achievement one to merit a high place in the annals of British discovery and exploration. This trek across the Antarctic con- tinent was undertaken by Dr. Vivian Fuchs, along with Sir Edmund Hilary, as part of the planned program of the International Geophysical Year, It was sponsored jointly by Great Britain, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa, Its findings are expected to y - U : Other Editor's Views NOT ENOUGH (Windsor Star) The 7!/4 per cent excise tax remain- ing still is an unfair one. It places an inequitable burden on purchasers of automobiles, Though this is now slight compared to the 25 percent, it once was, it still is a factor in the price of cars. Had the tax been reduced more or, better still, eliminated entirely, the industry no longer would have been able to blame the high prices of auto- mobiles on high taxes, The argument still applies, to the extent of 714 per cent, at least. The Daily Times-Gazette T. L. WILSON, Publisher and General Manager. €. GWYN KINSEY, Editor. M. McINTYRE HOOD, Editor (Editorial Page). The Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa, Whith: om- bining The Oshawa Times (established 1871) end the Whitby Gozette and Chronicle (established 1863), is Biblisned daily (Sundoys and statutory holidays ex- Members of Canadian Daily Newspapers Publis Association, The Canodion Press, yr Bran Circulation and the Ontorio Provincial Dailies Association. The Canadian Press is 'exclusively en- titled to the use for republication of all news despatches in the paper credited to it or to The, Associated Press or Reuters, and also the local news published therein. All rights of special déspatches are olso reserved, Offices: 44 King Street West, T to, : 640 Cathcart St., Montreal, PG. ooo: Ontarie; SUBSCRIPTION RATES Delivered by carriers in Oshawa, Whitby, Ajax Pickering, Bowmanville, Brooklin, Port Perry, Prince Albert, Maple Grove, Hampton, Frenchman's Bay, Liverpool, Taunton, fyrone, Dunbarton. Enniskillen, Orono. Lesk~rd and Newcastle not over 40c per week. By mail (in province of Ontario) * outside carrier delivery oreas, 1200. Elsewhere 15.00 per veor. AVERAGE DAILY NET PAID CIRCULATION AS AT JAN, 31 15,975 Rotary Club in this respect is so well- known that it only needs to be men- tioned to bring generous support for the sale of Easter seals, : Under the arrangements" with the Ontario Society for Crippled Children, the proceeds of the Easter Seal cam- paign are shared by the provincial so- ciety and the local Rotary Club, Thus these funds enable the local club to continue its excellent work on behalf of the children coming under its care, and at the same time to make a worth- while contribution to the general. pro= vincial activities, The aim of the Easter Seal campaign is to make certain that no crippled child in Ontario will go without the treatment and assistance that he or she might need. There could be no more worthy campaign for which prnb- lic support is solicited. The need of the crppled children touches a responsible chord in the heart of every good citi- zen. We are glad to join with the Ro- tary Club in appealing for strong sup= port in this year's sale of Easter Seals, Wind acknowledge the power of the prayers of the faithful who have made "inter- cession for this very thing during the years gone by. The essential reaction, however, is surely for all concerned to see the challenge that lies at the heart of this new situation, That challenge is to all to see.that the Church of which they are a part is, as represented by each individual member, alive to and concerned with this opportunity, There have been revivals in the past which have by-passed the church, but this need not be the case again. Perhaps the main contribution which each in- dividual church member can make towards the cause is to be keen at all times to bring the outsider in, There is nothing new about that challenge, in fact it is as old as the words which our Lord Jesus Christ Himself spoke, "Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature." (Mark 16:15). Record provide a much greater knowledge of the geopgraphy, climate and resources of the Antarcticc They will have a direct bearing on the meterological, economic and strategic planning for the future of that region. It is not surprising that a message of congratulations was sent to Dr. Fuchs by Queen Elizabeth, and that the Prime Minister of Britain intimated that a knighthood would be conferred on him. This distinction will meet with widespread approval, and it will focus attention on the fact that among the British people the spirit of adventure still lives and is a vital force, Antarctica is a southern continent nearly twice the size of Canada, It lies almost wholly within the Antarctic circle, Most of it is a high plateau of between 3000 to 10,000 feet high, covered by thick ice. It has little veg- etation, It is not a land that can be inhabited, but its conquest will provide science with a greater deal of useful information, Bits Of Verse SIX CHILDREN Noisy Ah yes, the noisiness of Spring! Of shouting winds of swift and sudden showers; Young happiness powers, Delight and wonder found in every- thing, Who could prefer lence, Slow sunny days turbed? Better the tumult curbed; Their gladsome foolishness than grown- up sense, in using untried autumnal somno- of silence undis- of their joy un- Their eyes are clear as waters of a lake That shows the pebbles on its quiet floos, And thoughts like dasting fishes stir and break The surface briefly, then are seen no more, Six children could be Equal to that in sheer felicity! Nora B. Cunningham, Bible Thoughts Whoso hearkeneth to Me shall dwell securely, and shall be quiet without fear of evil, Proverbs 1:33. One of the most amazing episodes in human history is the failure of the great Assyrian army under Senacherib to capture Jerusalem. Isaiah prophesied that they would not capture the city, but the plague of mice that ate the bow strings of the Assyrians' bows thus dis- arming them is as dramatic a deliver= ance as humanity ever beheld. in the house--now what STUMP AND THE SLUMP HISTORY OF OSHAWA -- NO. 118 Labor Domination Ended In Oshawa's Civic Bodies " By M. McINTYRE HOOD Excitement over the sensation- al municipal election of 1938 had scarcely died down when the ef fects of the end of labor domin- ation of the city council began to be noticed. The labor faction was stuaned by the reverse at the polls. Defeated mayoralty tandi- date Alex S. McLeese demanded an investigation into irregularit- fes at the polls. The Labor Re- presentation Committee met in ial ion to ider whe- ther or not they should ask for a complete recount of all the ballots. These things stirred up the public for a few days, then died down and were forgotten. LABORITES OUSTED At the inaugural meeting of the city council, members of the anti-labor slate were awarded the plums. in the committee chairmanships. J. C. Anderson became chairman of the finance committee and John Stacey chairman of the committee of the board of works. R. D. Hum- phreys was named chairman of the committee of the whole, Labor alderman Clifford Harman and James Haxton respectively were given the chairmanships of the city property and general p.rpose committees. The new city council made almost a clean sweep of the all- labor Public Welfare Poard which had been named towards the end of 1938 when most of the board members resigned because of council interference. Four of the members who resigr d were re-appointed. These were Mrs, GALLUP POLL OF CANADA Tories Favored As Best Party For Main Problem BY CANADIAN INSTITUTE OF PUBLIC OPINION Throughout the nation, except in Quebec province, Conserva- tives win first place as the polit. ical party best able to handle major problems of the day. In Quebec, the preference is split evenly between the Conservatives and the Liberals for this choice, with over four in ten voters, as yet, not able to decide which party they would name. Periodically, interviewers for the Canadian Institute of Public Opinion have asked Canadians to name the ranking problem. As of today, about four in ten name unemployment. while less than one in ten put foreign affairs and peace in first place. After this, problems trail away to a wide variety of headaches, as seen by the average man and woman, with none of them named by any significant proportion of the pub- lie Interviewers asked all those who named a problem to select the political party which they believed could best handle the particular one they had in mind. Nationally, the vote runs like this: Party best able to handle main problem today! Conservatives Liberals Social Credit, Others .... Can't Say avis In the Maritimes, the two ma- jor parties get the same standing as they do nationally. In Quebec 25 per cent vote for the Conserv- atives and 25 per cent for the Liberals, while 42 per cent cannot make up their minds and the re- mainder vote for other parties. In Ontario the division between the two main-line parties is 39 per cent for Conservatives and 18 per cent for Liberals. In the Western provinces, Conservatives have 27 per cent standing, the C.C.F. 15 per cent and the Lib- erals 12 per cent, as party best able to handle problems. On this matter, as in other po- litical points of view, as reported previously by the Gallup Poll, there is a very large proportion of men and women who cannot make up their mind which party to select. Three-quarters of those who don't know, as yet, how they will vote in the forthcoming Federal election say they can. ot make & choice in this matter either. (World Copyright Reserved) U.K. OPINION Weather Having Effect On Public Attitudes By "Onlooker" THOMSON NEWSPAPERS London, England, Bureau It could, be weather. It has been bad. Around this time of the year the British start of course, the breathing a bit more easily, The worst, they think, is over. No more disturbed nights wondering whether their plumbing, no whit advanced from the type used by their grandfathers and great- grandfathers when Victoria was on the throne, had survived the frost, No more wondering wheth- er the water tank has burst. But this year it is different. Just as the relief was creeping in, along came snow, ice, sleet, rain, and frost. People are dis- gruntled, peevish, hungry for sun. You can see this attitude reflec- ted in public life as well. In a word, the politicians of Britain are feeling niggly. They are hy- persensitive, and touchy. Heading them is Britain's Prime Minister, Harold Macmil- lan, who is finding the need to go around beaming and spreading sweetness, light, and optimism against all comers a little trying at the moment. He has another trouble -- growing criticism in the press for the way he seems to favor television as a medium to get his messages across. When he came back from his Common- wealth tour, for instance, he gave half an hour at London airport to the T.V. cameras, no time at all the political reporters who pat. iently awaited their turn to in- terview him. It is in fact the second time within a year that, deliberately or accidentally, he has snubbed the scribblers. LIKE IKE ? Now more of Britain's press favor the idez of the prime min- ister giving specific press confer- ences something on the lines of President Eisenhower's gather- ings. 1t is true that over here there are different circumstan- ces: the prime minister can be grilled during question time in the House of Commons, before the main business of each Par- liamentary day is reached. Eisenhower has no such vul- nerable moments. But the British do feel that their elected chief execntive should meet the Brit- isu press more. D'SUNITY There is more peevishness among the main Opposition party that sits across the floor from Mr. Mcemillan's party in Parlia- ment. And one thing is becoming apparent: I. the Labor party does not put its house in order and get together on one specific bold policy to put before the elector- ate in the general election next veur, they will lose the support of scores of thousands of at- present wavering voters in the country. Some of the Labor party men are mellowing, advocating the "middle road." Some are mov- ing more to the left, Soon it may be impossible for the twain to meet. . Two of the Labor party's most prominent members are becom- ing more right than left in their views. Both were extremists ten or twenty years ago. Easing up on the vitriol is "eld- er statesman" 'Manny' Shin- well, a Scot who fought with no gloves on in the twenties or thir- ties. Since Attlec went into the House of Lords he is the most re- spected member of the Labor Party -- outside the party -- and is now old enough not to covet public office wh . the Labor par- ty get back into power, Now he supports the Tory par- ty in their guided missile policy, and joins them in welcoming the bases for the 1500-miles-range intermediate range missiles which the British, with extensive American aid, is to set up later this year. Most of his party either do not want the weapons at all, alleging that acceptance of them would put British independence in hock, or want them to be delayed untli after any summit conference. Another Celt this time a Welshman -- also supports the missile set-up, and has adopted the use of the H-bomb. He is An Bevan, ten years ago the "enfant terrible" of the Labor Party. Bevan, to~, has mellowed. One of the main reasons: when th Laborites get in, he is earmark for foreign secretary. And by that time the H-bomb setup will have jelled, and whether he likes it or not he will be stuck with the situation. NO SPLIT YET There is no obvious split -- yet --in the Labor Party. But a small group calling themselves *"'Vic- tory for Socialism" has been set up within the Pariiamentary La- bor Party, and it may grow. Whether it does or not, the very existence of the group is an indi- cation that the ranks are begin- ning to waver. The time left to close them is running out. Hungary Increases Aid To Churches BUDAPEST (AP)--Hungary's Communist government, offi. cially godless, says it is increas ing its aid to religious groups. Somé of the money will go to repair churches damaged in the anti-Russian revolt of 1936. Four major groups -- Roman Catholics, Lutherans, Calvinists and Jews--will get about 92,000.- 000 Hungarian forints (some $3. 800.000) in 1958. Last year they got about 81,000,000 forints ($3, 300,000), T. K. Crighton, Mrs. A. A. G Williams, A. W, S. Greer and L. V. Disney. New members named were Michael Starr, Ben Jacklin, William Carvrwith, Ad- miral N. Sharp, Mrs. Alex Bell ani John Cottingham, the last- named the only new labor repre- sentative. Only two members of the board which had been ap- pointed by the labor council, of 1938, were re-named to their pos- itions, these being Edward Cheetham and H. N. Hinton. A. W. 8. Greer was later elected chairman of the board. Later in the year, when Ad- miral N. Sharp was named as tax collector, with Clarence ". Cox as assistant, Alex Browne was named to the Welfare B.ard in place of Mr. Sharp. In the appointment of council * representatives ; in 1938. To help the tax rate to the various council chambers in protest, civic boards and commissio.s, staged a stormy scene, and held by their absence. Something like An appeal from orderly procedure was restored, spokesman, Nicholas with the people named repre- president the Osh senting a good cross-section of Council, that they quieted down the city. and Slow Louch Jusiness u proc e effec! TAX PREPAYMENTS was some time before the coun- The 1988 &ity somes Jared 3 cil meeting could be continued. new ly 0 ~ ing prepayment of taxes, starting wy at Uther SoH 10 Jorce bind at the Deginsing of He Jean, gle unemployed men, su. plied Og tery thi With cots and blank ts took pos- prepaymets, of the city hall, and set policy was adopted, tax monies | "0, overs in the co ~~ cham- began flowing into the city trea- "ys, "0 "git down strike. They sury, and by the end of January would stay theré, they said, un- some $203,000 of taxes for the "yy. "were cuonlied with eith- year had been pald. even before .. ou 004 "Various organ the budget and tax rate for the izations kept them giong with Year had bees ack. focd, and this incongruous sit- 0 Mi gd WR A t jt uation of a group of unemployed intended to cut its contributions Sleeping and living in the coun cil chamber continued for some to relief costs down to 45 five or six days, when they cent, instead of the former figure were evicted from these quarters of 70 per cent. This gave the city by the police, This fed the council quite a jolt, and it looked as if the increase in relief costs 28itation for the time being. would force an increase of at HIGHWAY PLAN APPROVED I a re. | Erogss towards he consrue ever, eased that situation by an- ton of Spuva Yk conmell was ort, 1 ob aes Dioved' unasimeuny the pais : | of the departmen wi relief =, aud that bridged ¢ . "the route of the highway over the situation. through the city, and for con TAX RATE INCREAS™D necting Yoke ne He Dehawa The city council wrestled man. business section an way fully to keep down the tax rate, No. 2. These plans provided tor but it had to meet a deficit of connecting routes by way $55,000 from 1938, and higher cloverleaf structures at Crom- costs for relief. The board of Nell avenues, Simcoe street and education asked for a municipal e The writer of this article had levy of $222,000, Sligiitly less tian the privilege of submitting these plans to the city council on be- half of the government and At- torney-General Conant at a spee- ial meeting held in camera im he board room of the publ: situation, it was asked by coun- cil to reduce its levy by $3,000 and agreed to do so, accepting a sum of $219,000. After much i 1: slang o he Juagels of bo utilities commission. As we re- ally struck a tax rate of 32 mills, call, it was a long-drawn out an increase of two mills over Session, with some members still 1938. The city's total budget for hankering after & new highway the year re 431,299. i along King street and Bond Shay street. but before it was over the UNEMPLOYED ROWDY aldermen recognized the wisdom Single unemployed men proved of the government plans, and a thorn in the flesh of the wel- passed a resolution giving them fare board and the city cuncil. full approval of the council On orders from the provincial Some 'minor protests continued, government, it was decided that but these were not well su . no relief would be pr.vided for ed, and the way was made clear single unemployed men. This re- for highway work on the Oshawa sulted in scenes of rowdyism at section to be undertaken. a meeting of the city council in = (Next Saturday--Furtier events May. The crowd which filled t"2 of 1939.) FOR BETTER HEALTH Fossils Prove Many Things Can Cause Islands Once Child To Lose Appetite HERMAN N. BUNDESEN, MD Don't let mealtime at your home b a struggle between MAC'S MUSINGS The hearts of all people Always go out in deep Sympathy towards those Children who are crippled Or who suffer handicaps Which mark them out as Being abnormal when Compared with others. There was a time when There was no hope that Anything could be done For crippled children, And they were allowed To grow up retaining Their handicaps, to be A burden on parents and In later life a charge On their community, Fortunately, in recent Years a different view Is taken of this kind Of problem, and all types Of service clubs and Other organizations Are doing a splendid Work in providing the Right kind of treatment For the disabilities Of crippled children, And giving them a chance To grow up to become Strong, useful citizens. It is on behalf of work' Of this kind that our Citizens are asked to Purchase Easter Seals, And since we: have made Our own contribution We can feel free to Urge everyone, with all Our Persuasive powers To send in their share To the Easter Seal Fund To aid crippled children, BYGONE DAYS 40 YEARS AGO The young ladies of Oshawa held a dance in the Town Hall for the benefit of those made blind by the Halifax disaster. The Quarterly Board of South Oshawa Methodist Church ex- tended an invitation to their pas- tor Rev. W. H. Truscott, to re- main for a sixth year, Sgt. Harry Abbots of Port Perry was stationed at Oshawa as a military instructor. Bowmanville High School re- opened. A number of pupils were attending Oshawa High School during the several weeks it had been closed. S. Breslin of Cobourg, formerly of Oshawa, had his store destroy- ed by fire and his entire stock worth $2500 was ruined. J. C. McCully of Blackwater was appointed Chief County Con- stable for the County of Ontario. He succeeded Carl Stevens of Oshawa in this position. J. W. McCutcheon, manager of Crystal Theatre, accepted a posi- tion as manager of the Barrie Gas Co. you and your children. If you continually have to coax your voungsters to eat, you must de- termine the reason for their an- orexia, or lack of appetite. If you can't discover the source of the trouble yourself, you should ask your doctor to investi- gate, Perhaps, lack of a sufficient vitamin supply, especially of vita- min B, may be the cause. MAY BE ALLERGIC Maybe the youngster is aller- gic to certain foods and just doesn't want to eat them. Some- times, throat or mouth disorders are responsible, The child won't eat because swallowing produces pain. Decayed teeth, hwewise, might keep a youngster from eating be- cause of the pain produced by chewing. Anemia might be another fac. tor. Generally, though, there is a relatively simple explanation for lack of appetite. In many cases, we find that a child who refuses to eat his din- ner does so simply because he eats frequently between meals. He just isn't hungry when dinner- time comes along. FOOD SUBSTITUTES Far too often, the food which he substitutes for his regular meals doesn't contain the nutri- tion he needs. Constipation sometimes is re- sponsible for a poor appetite. If Linked To Land MANILA, Philippine J3lunds (Reuters)--Recent discoveries the hig Bi the trouble Js fossils here have frwved that this might need more outdoor exer- was inked by aia bridges Dice . sian mainland. Let him go out to play when he wu Oatley Beyer, an archeolog- gets home from school, or in the ist Wio has been working in co morning and afternoon if he isn't operation with the Philippine Mu- old enough for school. Call him opera of Archeology for more in well Jeiove, eaitime, how- than 30 years, says the fact that ever, and let him sit down to _,_. ~ . hi bah 4 » Ss, nH 1, rest. Never permit him to play , so hard that he becomes fatigued. {medium sind elephants} id Over-exertion, especially near once roamed the Philippines is meal-time, is bad, because it de- proof that the islands, together Dresses gastric and intestinal se- (op Formosa ad the a . Indonesia, form part L] on ally, ¥ 2 chug Terie to al mainland of Asia a million years ago. go and not allow him to eat any- Be discovery in May, 1957, of hing Sel the next jes) is due. the fossil remains of many an- -- it ws be a good idea to siegt animals in ihe Cagayan reduce the amount 5 milk or valley, in Te Sorieasies pant v of Luzon Island, has n de- sve stop it, but only temporar- _. iq as the most important LY ow. 1] I Have always [0SSil find here to date. It in- urged children -- and adults ys cluded fossilized teeth, tusks, -- to drink some milk every day. bones other remains of an- But 32 ounces of milk a day, per- "qm. discoveries according to haps even as little as 24 ounces, Dr. Beyer, prove that the Philip might for a short while have pines must® have been linked to Somewhat os depressing effect sin sometime in the glacial pe- on, the appelle, riod. Similar fossils have been QUESTION AND ANSWER foune in he Seiubes, Formosa M. B.: I have heard that there and on the' Chinese mainland is usually a warning before a which proves that, since the fos- migraine attack. Is this true? Sil animals were essentially land Answer: In the majority of mi. mammals and not able to cross graine cases, there is a warning Wide expanses of water, they of an oncoming attack. The sign Must naturally have come to the may be depression, irritability, Philipplaes by some land route. restlessnes, loss of appetite, spots Hydro Project Hiking Tour Supplies Man With Card Collection SWIFT CURRENT, Sask. (CP) A five-month hitch-hiking tour from Amherst, N.S. to Vancou- ver during, the hungry 'S80s pro- vided Horace Negus with what he terms the rarest collection of playing cards in the country. This deck boasts the official seal of a well-known Canadian city or town on each card, along with the autograph of the mayor or some other city official. Mr. Negus, a welder by trade and now employed with a lum- ber company in this southwest- ern Saskatchewan city, has mounted the cards on a dark mat and framed the collection. Getting the names of the of- ficials and the seals was no easy task, he says. The seal from his home town of Amherst gave him a start and as the collection grew, the job became less diffi- cult. MUSICAL GROUP In 1932 Mr. Negus and two companions headed west with their musical instruments and billed themselves as~The Bluenose Melody Boys. Nayce Ruslton was violinist, Raymond LeBlanc banjo player and Mr. Negus pianist Sometimes they stayed in one community for two or three days playing for dances to replenish travelling funds. Built In Jungle ness and a weakness of one side of the body. LOIKAW, Kayah State, Burma (Reuters)--Amid the deep moun. tain gorges and torraats near here, Japanese and Burmese en- gineers are building Burma's big- : gest hydroelectric project. A great variation can be seen When completed in 1960, at a in the different kinds of ink used cost of 230,000,000 kyats ($48,500,- by the officials who autographed oo it is expected that the them, Regina's seal is on the nine Te rpose Poy tuppy: of diamonds and it bears a sign- ith cheap and abundant power. ature that looks like "Doran" The first of three power sta- and the autograph is acting ity ong js belag built 11 miles south clerk Grace Hodgins. of Loikaw, capital of Kayah Mr. Negus recalls an incident state, near the Lawpita water- connected with the Winnipeg seal falls, when Mayor Webb was that city's The entire complex is designed magistrate. While overseas dur- to harness the wild and turbulent ing the Second World War, Mr. Balu-Chaung, or River of Ogres, Negus was relating the story of which it is estimated will have the playing cards ot a compan- 5 total energy output of some 1, ion and spoke of the, hospitality 74 000,000 kilowatt-hours a year. of the Winnipeg mayor. The Balu-Chaung, a tributary The companion smiled and of the Salween River which bi- said: "That fellow was my dad." sects the Shan Plateau, has a "We have been friends ever drop of almost 2,000 feet in less since," Mr. Negus said. than 10 miles. a Monteith, Monteith, Riehl & Co. CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS Dial RA 5-3527 135 SIMCOE ST. N. Hon. J. Waldo Monteith, A. Brock Monteith, M.P, P.C, F.CA. 8. Comm, C.A. Gordon W. Riehl, C.A. Res. Partner -- RA 5.4478 Licenzed Trustees -- AJAX 730 Robert F. Lightfoot, C.A, George KE. Trethwey, C.A,

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