---- INTERPRETING THE NEWS PE GALLLE -- THe NEW BRITAIN TRIES To INTRODUCE CHAMPION OF THE eRICKET ON CYPRUS "Tour De FRANCE THE DAILY TIMES.GAZETTE Published by Times-Gazette Publishers Limited, 57 Simcoe St. S, Oshawa, Ont, Page 4 Saturday, June 28," 1958 ER. ---- di Israel After 10 Years Is Nearing Its Goal Israel today, after 10 years of state- hood, is much nearer its dream of crea- ting out of the skills of its people an industrial economy, The country was an undeveloped agrarian land a decade ago. The main exports of this country were oranges and potash, Today, steel plants are springing up as the heart of a new industrial com- plex: assembly lines are turning out passenger cars and trucks that can be found on the highways of Turkey. Scandinavia and other countries; skill- ed Jewish diamond cutters, who fled for their lives from wartime Belgium and Holland, are using their talents to create an important diamond centre in Israel. The nation's textile plants and gar- ment industry are turning out fashions that are winning acclaim. The story of Israel's industrial growth is told in the statistics of her trade with other countries. Since 1949, Is- rael's exports have jumped from $28,- 600,000 to an estimated $160,000,000 this year. Trade, however, is only one facet of the Israel story. As Mr, Ben-Gurion, the premier and one of the founders of Israel, said re- cently: "In 10 years we have transformed the desert land and clothed it with prosperous settlements, We have plant- ed millions of trees, drained foul swamps, built roads and bridges and created industry where nothing exist- ed before. "Thousands of acres have been re- claimed and put to use and today there are about 500 new agricultural settle- ments. Land under cultivation now stands at nearly 1,000,000 acres, as compared with 195,000 acres 10 years ago. "The Ingathering of the Exiles -- a million immigrants have come to Israel in the past decade -- has produced many problems, Many hive been solve ed; many remain to be solved." Mr. Ben-Gurion added that Israel guve shelter to Jews from 70 countries in the first 10 years of its existence, None was barred, The sick and infirm and the aged were taken in, and most of them took no material wealth with them. This was in sharp contrast from those who went to Israel from Europe before the Second "Vorld War. These European immigrants took capital, and they were endowed with profes- sional and vocational skills. Israel's achievement is one that has won the respect of millions outside its borders and emphasizes what can be accomplished by a nation, or a race, when' there is unity within its ranks. All in Oshawa and district will join The Times-Gazette in extending best wishes to the gallant little state of Is- rael on this memorable occasion when it is celebrating its 10th. anniversary, A New Heaven And Earth REV. R. A, BOMBAY Simcoe St. Pentecostal Church And I saw a new heaven and a new earth; for the first heaven and the first earth were passed away; and there was no more sea. And I saw the holy city, new Jerusal- em, coming down from God out of heav- en, prepared as a bride adorned for her husband. And I heard a great voice out of heav- en saying, "Behold, the tabernacle of God is with men, and He will dwell with them, and they shall be His peo- ple, and God Himself shall be with them, and be their God. And God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes; and there shall be no { mere earth, neither sorrow nor crying, ' neither shall there be any more pain: : for the former things are passed away." And He that sat the throne upon said, "Behold, I make all things new." And He showed me a pure river of water of life, clear as crystal, proceed- ing out of the throne of God and of the Lamb, In the midst of the street of it, and on 'either side of the river, was there the tree of life, which bare twelve man- ner of fruits, and yielded her fruit every month: and the leaves of the tree were for the healing of the nations, And there shall be no more curse: but the throne of God and the Lamb shall be in it; and His servants shall serve Him. . And they shall see His face; and His Name shall be in their foreheads. And there shall be no night there; and they need no candle, neither light »of the sun; for the Lord God giveth them light; and they shall reign for ever and ever, The Strain On Ministers The Rev. John K. Moffat of Simcoe street United Church, Oshawa, told a ! seminar of United Church ministers in Peterborough early this month that the sccupational hazard of the calling is a pervous breakdown. "This may come as a surprise to many laymen, but not to the ministers themselves," the Peterborough Exam- jner comments. "It is, nevertheless, important that all should be aware of the demands of ministering to a con- gregation, It is something less than de- sirable for congregations to seek spirit- ual calm from harassed and harried ministers whose tranquillity is only on "tHe surface." Then the Examiner con- tinues: Mr. Moffat gives good advice: it is advice which should be followed by all men upon whose nervous energy great demands are made. Rest and relaxation are great spiritual and physical creators and in advocating this we must make our meaning clear, By rest and relaxa- tion we do not mean laziness and sloth or neglect of work. It is possible to do a great deal of work without becoming tired and harassed providing the mind is not clutterec or strained with un- necessary concerns, A church minister, for example, may be as worried over the arrangements and success of the annual tea and sale as he is over the spiritual well-being of his flock, A church, more so today than at any time in the past, is a centre for social activities and recreation; the minister The Daily Times-Gazette T. L. WILSON, Publisher and General Manoager. C. GWYN KINSEY Editor. The Daily Times Gazette (Oshawa, Whitby), com- bining The Oshawa Times (established 1871) and the Whitby Gazette ond Chronicle (established 1863), is pu! Shed daily iSundays and statutory holidays ex- cepte Members of Canadian Dally Newspapers Publishers Association, The Canadion Press, Audit Bureau of Circulation and the Ontario Provincial Dailies Association, The Canadion Press is exclusively en- titled to the use for republication of all news despatches in the poper credited to it or to The Associated Press or Reuters, and also the local news publisned therein. All rights of special despatches are clso reserved. 'Offices: 44 King 640 Cathcart St. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Delivered by carriers in Oshawa Whitby. Alox Pickering, Bowmanville, Brooklin, Port Perry, Prince Albert. Maple Grove, Hompton, Frenchman's Bay, Liverpool. faunton, Tyrone. Dunbarton Enniskillen, Orono Lesk~rd and Newcastle not over 40c per week, By mail (in province of Ontario) outside carrie delivery orecs, 1200. Elsewhere 15.00 per vear AVERAGE DAILY NET PAID CIRCULATION AS AT APR. 30 16,166 Street West, Toronto, Untario Montreal. P.Q. is expected, more often than not, to be the power behind such enterprise; in deed he may well feel it is his duty to urge every activity of his church on to success--on his own guarantee. The effect of spending valuable energy in this direction is catalogued by Mr, Mof= fat--"no proper time for sermon pre- paration.' Spreading oneself too thinly has other drawbacks as well. We have no intention of giving a ser- mon here, but it seems to us that one of the most important aspects of churchgo= ing is the sermon. In it the congrega- tion expects something at which Bish- op Latimer hinted in 1548: "Oh that our prelates would be as diligente to sowe the corne of good doctrine as Sathan is, to sowe cockel anddarnel. And this is the deuilysh« ploughings, the 'which worcketh to have thinges in latine, and letteth the fruteful edifica- tion." The thin sermon is no new cause of complaint; Chaucer, Milton, John Knox have complained of it; the teach- ing duty of the ministry was sacrificed to the organization mania in their day, as well. To sow the good doctrine needs more than a hackneyed sermon; it means re- furnishing the mind with spiritual and philosophic matter, from reading learning and contemplation, from liter- ature and the best works of man, It is this kind of relaxation we have in mind; it is a kind which cannot be done while hustli~+ support for the church bazaar, Other Editor's Views EXIT COFFEEHOUSE The Austrian press pays nostalgic tri- bute to the Vienna coffeehouse, the time-worn backdrop of much of Central European political and literary history, which statistics indicate, is now on the way out, It .eems that there just isn't enough time any more for the contem=- plative life. Even the Viennese, aside from getting more prosperous, are get- ting too busy.--Austrian Information. Bible Thought Come to me all ye that labour, Mat- thew 11:28, Christ was a laboring man most of his life He laid down principles fair to labor. It down the that were who first laid principle that those engaged late in the day should have a full day's wage, No system based on hate ever gave labor its rights. It never will was he -- wn WASHINGTON Tievke sTuovinG WHERE THEY VE BEEN MAKING ERRORS "The MOSCOW PDYNAMO CHALLENGES YUGQSLAVIA IN "THE COMMUNIST SOCCER SERIES SUMMER SPORTS QUEEN'S PARK "Boom-Boom Era Here For Hydro By DON O'HEARN Special Correspondent to The Daily Times-Gazette TORONTO -- Hydro's biggest boom-boom of its boom era is on Tuesday. Chief Engineer Otto Holden will push a button and 3,120 cans of nitrone will be exploded. A 600-foot" coffer-dam will be blown to pieces. A 30-foot wall of water will rush through and 25,000 peo- ple will say their prayers. In a few days the years -old dream will have become a practicality-- Ontario will have its first hydro power from the St. Lawrence. THE VISIONARIES A dream? Yes, and credit to men of dreams who stuck with their vision. The plant is to be named after the late Robert H. Saunders. And this is fitting. The dy- namic Bob gave the Seaway the final push--with an energy and aggressiveness that only he had and which probably was needed for fulfillment. And there have been many other dreamers. The same Dr. Holden has been one. He is that not too common type of man -- an engineer with great imagination. Then there was his former chief Dr. Richard L. Hearn. 30-YEAR-OLD DREAM The St. Lawrence story is more than 30 years old, and many men have played their part in it. There are two, however, who hid at this time of celebration may be over - looked, and to do so would be public ingratitude. One is George Challies. The former vice - chairman of the Ontario Hydro Electric Power Commission probably will be at the ceremony in his capacity of Chairman of the St. Lawrence Parks Commission. Let it be hoped that in the program opportunity is found to give him credit as the man who over the past 30 years has prob- ably been the greatest fighter of them all for Seaway power. The second probably won't be there. He is George Drew, now Canadian high commissioner in London. There was a morning in 1946 that reporters present remember well. During it then premier Drew talked to then governor Thomas Dewey of New York on the tele- phone. Later he called in the press. He announced to it that he and Mr. Dewey had decided to wait no longer. If the federal powers couldn't agree on the overall seaway pro- ject, e said Ontario and New York state would go ahead on their own with the power develop- ment. That was the real start of the actual Seaway project, as those close to. it know. With the drive and determination of Mr. Drew behind it, the interminable hag- gling ias dissipated and re- placed with action. And now we have power! "FOR BETTER HEALTH Foot Rules Diabetics Should Never Forget HERMAN N. BUNDESEN, M.D. REMEMBER the 'good old days" when youngsters used to go barefoot ali summer long? We don't see much of this any more, especially .in our urban areas. And it's probably a good thing. With With all the glass and other sharp objects left lying around these days as a result of our more civilized way of living, the chances of injury and infec- tion are fairly high. Bare Feet Hazardous So I suggest that you parents do not permit your youngsters to go around barefoot much this summer, unless it is in the safety of your own backyard. And I must rule out even ths for all diabetic children. In fact, any diabetic, young or old, shouid n eve walk around barefoot any- where any time. Any kind of an infection in a diabetic should be treated as an emergency. Infection, you see, re- duces the effectivenss of insulin. Begins on Skin Since infection is apt to begin on the skin, especially around the toes, a diabetic must take meticu- lous care of his feet. Therefore let me give you g few foot rules that any diabetic, young or did, should follow: Bathe and powder your feet daily. Pat your feet dry, don't wipe them. Don't bathe in very hot water. Even in the shower, protect your feet with paper slippers. Don't cut, scrape or injure your toes or reet Don't use commercial remedies. Don't use strong iodine solu. tions Wear Leather Shoes Wear good, supple leather shoes with f.exible soles. Old shoes that are out of shape can cause fool trouble. Don't wear poorly fitted shoes or arch supports. Don't wear shoes without hois- oy, corn Poor circulation also is extreme- ly dangerous to a diabetic. It causes damage to the tissues and the excess sugar in the blood provides bacteria with an excel- lent opportunity to grow. Conse- quently: Don't sit with your legs cross- ed over your knees: Don't use tight bandages or place adhesive tape on the skin. Don't use hot water bottles on your feet QUESTION AND ANSWER Mrs. R. B.: My 20-year-old son has a very high-pitched voice. This began at the age of 14. What can be causing this? Answer: Some disorder of the vocal cords or nervous system may be at fault. A thorough phy- sical examination will probably revea; the exact cause. Fire Chief Takes Council Off Hook FORT WILLIAM (CP) -- Fire chief Harold Lockwood has taken Fort Willlam city council off the hook for allegedly accepting a tender for fire pump equipment from an American firm in pref- erence to a local company. Chier Lockwood said Friday the company he recommended for the purchase of the fire equip- ment is the oldest established manufacturer of fire equipment in Canada. He also said the firm that had complained because it had sub- mitted a lower bid and that it had been bypassed was "an en- tirely American firm with a Ca- nadian subsidiary in Hamilton, Ont." The chief produced an advertis- ing brochure which listed the firm's head office at Dayton, Ohio. He said' the firm which was ac- cepted is "an entirely Canadian firm operating under Dominion charter," BYGONE DAYS 40 YEARS AGO The 1I00F Lodges held their annual decoration day service at Union Cemetery. For the occa- sion Alfred Furzey was Mar- shall, Thomas Knox, chairman, and W. G. Bunker, secretary, A farewell party for 50 chil- dren of the primary class was given on the lawn of the Presby- terian Manse by Miss Lawlor, teacher of the class. The closing exercises of On- tario Ladies' College, at Whitby, was presided over by the presi- dent, R. C. Hamilton, under the direction of the principal, Rev. F. L. Farewell. Diplomas and prizes were awarded to the suc- cessful students. Among those was a gold medal, won by Vera Meath for the highest standing in the piano course. The graduating exercises of the Oshawa General Hospital was held in St. George's School Room, Members of the Presbyterian Church presented Miss Lawlor, teacher of the Primary Dept. of the SS for a number of years, with a silver tea service, prior to her marriage and departure from the town. Corporal A. E. Foster, former- ly of Oshawa, was the winner of several racing events held at Devonshire Park while overseas. BOUQUETS Thanks Given For Coverage Mr. T. L. Wilson, Oshawa Times-Gazette, 57 Simcoe street south Oshawa, Ontario. Dear Mr. Wilson: On behalf of the Games Com- mittee, of the "Annual School Games' of the Oshawa Public Schools, I wish to express to vou, and your staff our sincere appreciation for the compleie coverage of this, the closing event of our school year. The stress and importance placed on the values of this event, through the coverage of your newspaper is made more lasting for the boys and girls of our schools. We thank you, again, for as- sisting to make the 1958 Games the success that it was. Yours very truly, J. B. HENDERSON, Director and Secretary, Annual School Games. Oshawa Public Schools, Depart- ment of Physical Health and Safety Education. June 23, 1958. Man To Stand : Trial -- Murder SARNIA (CP)--Grant Wilcox, 66, charged with murder in the June 9 shooting of Mrs. Beatrice Dickinson, was Friday com- mitted for trial at the fall assizes of the Supreme Court, opening here, Oct. 14. Mrs. Dickinson died in hospital, June 10, nearly 14 hours after she was shot through the forehead while preparing supper in the kitchen of an apartment. Wilcox occupied a. basement apartment at the same address. Two eye-witnesses, testifying at a preliminary hearing Friday, said they saw Wilcox produce a gun from his hip pocket and shoot Mrs. Dickinson at point blank range They said Wilcox had been drinking but was not drunk. The shooting climaxed an argument betsveen Wilcox and Mrs. Dickin- son, during which he twice threatened to shoot her, FIRE ENGINES USELESS TOKYO (AP) Nineteen houses burned Thursday while fire en- gines called out stood helpless be- cause a drought has reduced water pressure. Seventy per cent of Tokyo's fire hydrants are use- less. Normally Devoted Pair Canada, UK. Seen At Odds By ALAN HARVEY Canadian Press Staff Writer By Le of life's little ironies, Britafn and Canada are having a lovers' spat. Normally a devoted couple, secure in their status as senior members of the Commonwealth, they are currently at odds over some important subjects, includ- ing tariffs and fishing limits. Prime Minister Diefenbaker's government, comparatively new to office, finds to ils surprise that Britain can drive a hard bargain, Whitehall is equally chagrined that Ottawa doesn't always see eye to eye with London Superficially this seems per. plexing, since the governments share a political faith -- conserv- atlsm----and have similar ohjec- tives. BRITAIN BLOCKED A year ago, when Mr. Diefen- baker flew to London for the conference of Com m on wealth prime ministers, the predomin- antly Conservative British press portrayed him as a new Abra- ham Lincoln. He and Prime Min- ister Macmillan, the papers pre- dicted, would have a regular love-feast. Instead, their tactics diverged. Mr. Macmillan came to Canada this month preaching West- ern "economic inte , freer trade and lower tariffs. Heads nodded sagely in Ottawa, but four days later Canada flung a fiscal roadblock is the path of the new British policies. Instead of lowering tariffs, Fi- nance Minister Fleming's $648, 000,000 deficit budget raised them, foreshadowing a possible return of traditional Tory protection- ism. British woollen goods--des- eribed in the Canadian Commons as the U.K.'s "classic export" -- perversity that the laissez-faire, free trade policies of former Lib- eral governments of Canada may ill Shan those of the Diehaor an than of the Dief baker administration. - Another field of Angli-Canadian friction relates to fishing rights in coastal waters. At the recent International Conference of the Law of the Sea at Geneva, Can- ada vainly sought a 12-mile ex- clusive fishing rights zone for Maritime nations. Britain, along with the United States, fought hard against the Canadian proposal, and the bat- tle is still going on. A British official wryly com. plained to a reporter that the Ca- were among the items affected LIKED FREE TRADE $0 much, reflected patient Brit- ons, for economic interdepend- ence, Mr. Macmillan is said to feel the Canadian action is wrong, but he knows as much as any- one about the domestic pressures. democratic g o vernments must face. He may not be unduly per- turbed, Yet it seems a political stand d "tough." The reporter, caught in a cross- fire of criicism, was later told by a Canadian official that Brit- ain employed "dirty" tactics at Geneva. : Too much should not be made of present discords. Anglo-Cana. dian understanding is deep and permanent. The lovers' tiff, a surface irritation in a Darby-and- Joan relationship, is unlikely to wind up in the divorce courts. Youth Dives Into Sub-zero Water To Find Equipment By JOHN E. BIRD Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP)--An 18-year-old Montreal skin diver went swim- ming in stormy, 10-below-zero weather in the Arctic last winter in aid of international science. Donat Gesselin plunged through a hoin chopped through one foot of ice in the Brevoort Harbor on the southeast coast of Baffin Island to replace euipment be- ing used to measure Arctic tides for the International Geophysical Year. He made three dives into 30- degree water to recover three 20- pound autcmatic tide recorders. They had been damaged--most likely by icebergs--before the re- mote harbor, 300 miles south of the Arctic Circle, was frozen over last winter. 10-MINUTE DIVES Gosselin dived to a deapth of 20 feet and remained under wa- ter for about 10 minutes on each dive. He wore standard skin div- mg euipment which was not euipped with any devices to produce artificial heat. The water beiow the ice level as not frozen at 30 degrees, mainly because of its salt con- tent. Ordinary water freezes at 32 degrees fahrenheit but salt water generally does not freeze until its temperature has been re- duced to at least 29 degrees. Gosselin actually dived into wa- ter which was cold enough to freeze him solid over a period, said G. C Dohler, 34, a member of the technical survey depart- ment"s hydrographic service. The service is in charge of tide measurements at Brevoort Har- bor; Resoiute on the south coast of Cornwallis Island, some 900 miles north of the Artic Circie, Prince Rupert and Clayouot, B.C.; Halifax; St. John's, Nfld., and Churchill, Man. . INSTALLED RECORDERS The youthful skin diver works for the Foundation Company of Canada which assisted in the in- stallation of the tide recorders at the two Arctic points. As a skin diver he received $30 a day and $50 a day when he was diving, Information collected by the recorders is to be used in an IGY study of the world's oceans, which cover three-uarters of the earth's surface. One problem is to understand oscillations in sea levels not be- lieved to be caused by ordinary tides. These may be caused by storms, the earth's rotation or the great oceanic wind systems. Another problem is to 'earn whether the oscillations are caused by melting snow and ice, or by a massive flow of water across the Euator in the spring in each hemisphere. The three guages were installed at Brevoort Harbor last summer. They operated satisfactorily until early November. After they had been recovered by Gosselin it was discovered that water hac seeped inside. Repairs were completed last Nov. 30. First World War Pilots Recall Early VANCOUVER (CP)--Four Can- adian air veterans of the First World War inspected a small French Spad plane, here for B.C. centennial ceremonies, and re- calied adventures in similar craft, They climbed over the plane, tested struts, patted the canvas- covered wings, took aim with the Vickers machine - gun and spun the propelier. The men were Air Commodore Duncan Bell-Irving, Wing Commander D. R. Mac- Laren, Capt. George Dixon and Capt. D. C. Burch. "These men and the planes they flew made aviation history," said Maurice McGregor, chair man of the centennial aviation show. NO PARACHUTES Mr. Bell-Irving recalled being shot down four times, and walk- ing away from the wreck each time. "It was easier in those days," he said. "A forced landing was seldom fatal. If the plane was damaged, with luck you just Man Expects To Bag 100 Animals MONTREAL (CP) -- Dr. Paul Piriot, a biologist at the Univer- sity of Montreal, expects to bag more than 100 different animals on a province-wide hunting trip this summer. It's part of a scientific study to classify Quebec's mammals, a project that he expects will take him probably seven years to complete. The quarry he intends to shoot and trap ranges from the tiny pigmy shrew to the giant moose. While his study will be pri- marily a scientific one, the 38- year-old doctor says some of his findings likely will be of use in the formation of a game conser- vation policy, pest control and other related problems. "A «<tudy like this has never been made in Quebec," he said in an interview, "Mainly, 1 want to study the relationship of species and sub- species, with a view to under- ctanding the evolutionary the- ory". But practical applications of any information he extracts were almost as important. These in- cluded figures that would give withorities a good idea of what animals should be protected from hunters and at what times. "Hunting is considered a do- lar-making industry in Quebec," he said. 'Conservation officials are eager to know the animals that need protecting to insure their - 'existence for years to come." He said he also expects to be able to determine which of the smaller animais such as rodents should be considero pests and destroyed. Airplanes chutes were a luxury not in- dulged in by pilots in those days." Capt. Burch said the pilot's training '"'did nothing to make one over-confident, Three hours' tlying with an instructor and four or six hours solo was it. Then vou fiew," said this flyer who once led a party of 29 out of a German prisoner-of-war camp. Capt. Dixon said the Spad looked flimsy by today's stand- ards; was light on control and not easy to manouevre. "It was ideal to barge into a fight, bang off and go home. A pilot was a bit of a sitting duck if he lingered too long in the area." Wing Cmdr. MacLaren was too busy inspecting the cockpit to do any reminiscing. Tribute Paid To Canada BUENOS AIRES (AP) -- Ar gentina"s House of Deputies Frie day paid tribute to Canada. The chamber will not sit Tuesday, July 1, which is the Canadian national holiday. A spol an of the Canadi Embassy said no one here ree called that the House had ever paid such a tribute to any coun- Ty. Ambassador Philippe Picard and members of his staff were present in the House when the motion for tribute was introduced by the minority party, and secs onded by a representative of the majority party. Two deputies then spoke, one recalling he had studied in Canada and another whose mother was Canadian. Af- ter the resolution was passed, the Canadian diplomats were invited to the private chambers and drank a toast in champagne to Dominion Day. Alberta Farmers Turn To Safflower Crops MEDICINE HAT, Alta. (CP)-- Farmers in the heart of south- eastern Alberta are seeking the rewards of safflower, a high- grade oil-seed crop. Said to be as easily grown as spring wheat and highly profit- able for dry - land farming, saf- flower seed sales are assu through an ever - increasing and stable oil market. About 31,000 acres of former wheat-producing land now is de- voted to safflower raising in the Medicine Hat area, compared with less than 13,000 acres last year. It was only last year that safflower was grown on a com- mercial basis in Canada. It had been grown for three years on trial plots at the Lethbridge ex- perimental station. RESISTS DROUGHT Safflower, a member of the thistle family, is highly resistant to rain, drovght and hail and can be cultivated and harvested with the same equipment used for wheat and barley. . In industry, safflower oil is a base for paints. It is also an ex- cellent cooking oil and fine for salads, and may be used in any recipe calling for oil or butter. An annual plant, it grows to about 2% feet high at maturity. The bush has many branches, each ending in two to five mult- ipe flowers bearing from 2 to 100 seeds at harvest. The plant's strong taproot extends six or eight feet into the subsoil, ab- sorbing water even under the dry summer conditions of this area. Growers are paid between $2.50 and $2.75 for each 100 pounds. Confidence is expressed that the acreage yleld will some day ¢limb to 1,000 pounds. If so, the crop would hold its own against flax or wheat. Almost all of the safflower crop is exported to Japan in seed form. It is refined there and used principally in the shipbuilding trades. Woman Killed Highway Crash TORONTO (CP)--A St. Catha- rines woman was killed Friday on the Queen Elizabeth Way just west of Toronto when a truck, swerving with a blown front tire, jumped the boulevard into the path of her car. Mrs. George Warre, died at the scene. Her husband and two eight - year - old grandchildren, Prian Hall and Randy Warren, were taken to hospital where the Hall boy was described as in seri- ous condition, Dial RA Hon. J. Waldo Monteith, MP, PC, FCA. Robert F. Lightfoot, C.A, Monteith, Monteith, Riehl & Co. CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS 135 SIMCOE ST. N. Gordon W. Riehl, C.A. Res. Partner -- RA 5-4478 # Licenced Trustees -- AJAX 730 5-3527 A. Brock Monteith B. Comm., C.A. George E. Trethwey, C.A.