Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 21 Jul 1958, p. 5

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WHITBY and DISTRICT Russia Wins Round WED IN ST. JOHN THE EVANGELIST Ken- ving St Mr. and Mrs. Gerald neth Cole are their recent 1 shown follo marriage at Whitby, by the tev. Leo J Austin. The bride is the former Mary Jean Bloye, daughter of John the Evangelist Church, | Mr. and Mrs. Leo Bloye, 316 Mr. Cole and Mrs 227 Division Palace St., Whitby. is the son of Mr Kenneth M. Cole, St., Oshawa Photo by Ireland Welcome DownOnTh Farm For Princess SPRUCE HOME, Sask. (CP)--| warm personal welcome awaits Princess Margaret when month, There will fanfare as the helicopter carry- ing Her Royal Highness this comm north of Prince Albert. was cho- she visits the Skotheim farm in sen earlier this year as part of be playing hostess to the prin- quintupiets. The party was held northern Saskatchewan this Princess Mar garet's She'll be there July 30. be no ostentatious THRILLED BY VISIT } The Skotheim mixed farm, in unity some 16 miles itinerary. The Skotheims seem unper- sets turbed at the prospect of enter- |haired wife, admits she was |: thrilled almost speechless" when news came that she would CCSS. Like any hostess, she spent considerable time debating what to serve her royal guest. She fi-|ing quints was last Tuesday but ribbon |the big celebration was delayed nally decided on tiny | | | committee for the royal visit. The may get in five days work this THREE-MAN CREW AMMAN, Jordan (AP) -- With |the prospect of enormous tragedy hanging -over the Middle East, Soviet Premier Khrushchev has executed another brilliant diplo- matic stroke and won an im- ortant new propaganda round from the West. Krushchev"s proposal for a hurry-up Geneva conference of the big four and India dem- onstrates his uncanny ability to turn necessity into advantage. At a single stroke he has made an attempt to cool the international temperature and directed an im- pressive gesture to the neutralists of the eastern world. Khrushchev seems to have been Chooses Play The Whitby Drama Gropp have chosen for their next production, the wartime comedy, "Worm's Eye View", under the direction of Bert Heaver. A meeting will be held at the town hall on Wednesday, July 23, when auditions will be held. Rehearsals will begin in Septem- ber and the production dates have been set for November 28 and 29. NEWS BRIEFS satisfied up to now to stay mostly {on the sidelines of the Middle | East conflict and to egg on Pres- INVESTIGATE FIRE [ident Nasser forces io Sey =u 7 angerous ven s sul MOUNT HOPE, Ont. (CP)-- Soviet diplomacy to have the Mid- Fire marshals investigators have | 1 'Fast reduced to utter chaos. been called in to check on a fire |g, at the same time Khrushchev which swept four buildings and | ct avoid igniting the spark destroyed five head of cattle on |p could touch off a third the farm of Alois Popper north|\orid war. ° of this village near Hamilton Sat- | = iq appeal for a summit con- urday night. Damage, was esti ference on the Middle East is a mated by Fire Chigf George clever solution. If it is accepted, Dawe at $55,000. | Khrushchev gets the credit for RYE VEST staving off a world war. If it is : SAD RETL RN rejected, the United States will BRANTFORD (CP) Mrs. |} the responsibility for the Ada O'Dell arrived home Sunday |risks in$olved. after two weeks in Toronto to find! No matter what happens now, thieves had removed furniture however, the West's influence in and household effects valued at|the Middle East is slipping away | fast and the whole area is headed | $1,800 from her house. NAMED MISS TORONTO TORONTO (CP) -- Pretty 18- year-old Gertrude Kerath won the Miss Toronto contest heid in coo- junction with the 76th annual | Metropolitan Toronto police x | | destructive turmoil: which may lead to direst con- for eventually sequences. day Saturday. Miss Kerath, a brunette who stands five feet, 7'2 inches, is a University of Toronto student 37-24-35 an: d she says she is un- decided whether she should take the prize of $1,00 p. cash or-a Her vital statistics are he ne Cost $10 EDMONTON (CP) An aerial survey of the Arctic islands Is a university scholz p $10,000,000 job on which the work : i A CANCEL POLICE LEAVES i$ Jimaed to two months of the MONTREAL {(CP)--The leaves |" This summer, in July and Au- of all city policemen will be can- ust, 65 men working with cam- celled for Princess Margaret's ora-equipped Mosquito bombers visit «© Montreai Aug says lund plenty of film are tackling an announcement by the mayor's the task. If they are lucky, they »ificers will be needed to patrol the streets on which the princess and her cavalcade will travel during the two days DISTURBED BY EVENTS VATICAN CITY (AP) -- Vati- can sources say the Pope has temporarily suspended his audi- ences, except for the weekly pub- lic audience on Wednesday, to de- vote more time to studying the Middle East situation. PARTY FOR QUINTS BUENOS AIRES (AP) -- About 00 guests, some of them from as far off as Italy and Canada, Sat- | urday night attended an elabor. (below. ate party in celebration of the 15th Rirthdy of the Diligenti season "We need an almost cloudless day to operate," says navigator Benny Lynch of Ottawa. "On a good day, one aircraft can cover 1,000 to 1,100 line miles, or about 6,000 square miles, and we must be able to fly a line of 200 miles to make it worthwhile to take off." AT 30,000 FEET The photographic crews, based at Cambridge Bay, N.W.T., can work only when most of the snow has disappeared from the islands They operate at a height of 30,000 |feet, leaving a lot of cloud room gators, camera operators, engin- eers, technicians, helpers and cooks. Four converted Mosquitos carry the photographic crews. Cambridge Bey and Shepherd's Bay, 1,300 miles northeast of Ed- monton, are the southern bases of operation. Resolute Bay, on at the home of the father of the children, Franco Diligenti. The birthday of the world's only liv- On Diplomatic Stroke Drama Group American and British arms gnd men are pouring into the Middle East, but arms and men are not going to save this region for the West. At best these desperate measures will, simply delay the final reckoning. And when that reckoning comes there may be lit- tle left for the West to salvage. The Lebanese rebellion was the spark that touched off these flames. When it began, the United States still was suffering from its old myopia with regard to the Middle East. It seemed to see the situation in each country in the area only in the light of the cold war between two great blocks. And because of this, the West continued to make and compound its mistakes until the .day ar- rived when the irreparable step of military intervention was un- dertaken in Lebanon and Jordan. But by then it had begun to look far too late to rescue the situation by diplomacy, which obviously had failed. Western policy had doggedly refused to recognize that there could be anything good in Arab nationalism. Step by step, it drove that nationalism into the hands of extremists who rallied under the banner of an extreme and ambitious 'leader -- Gamal Abdel Nasser. pre - eminence throughout the Arab world. But it does mean recognizing that the Arabs do have some jus- tifiable aspirations. FANTASTIC IDEA Hussein is apparently hot to have the British join him in an attack on Iraq to restore the Hashemite throne but the thought is fantastic to contemplate. The West has no choice but to accept the fact that the Iragi revolution has succeeded and that Iraq is headed for the U.A.R. camp. | .In his desperate grab for vast |power over the oil resources feeding Europe, Nasser put aside his obvious fears of deep involve- men: with the Communists and THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Monday, July 21, 1958 § sought advice and counsel from Khrushchev before heading to Damascus to look eastward and assert * his bold claim to both Iraq and Jordan. | There is no question' either but that Nasser intends to make a stab in the direction of Kuwait, while applying the strongest pres. sure in his command upon Saudi | Arabia to reject co-operation with Western attempts to save the sit- | uation. If Nasser makes a definite at- |tenipt to upset the rule of Sheikh | h in {Abdullah as Salim as Sabbal Kuwait, however, the British surely will bring great military Arctic Research The team includes pilots, navi-| There are still some in Jordan power into play and fight. Britain who think it is not too late to|could survive the nationalization | make a try with a gesture in the of Iraq Petroleum Company, but "MERMAID HUNTER" AT 79 Leo Voss, 79, self-styled citi- zen of the world, mans the oars of his boat, "Mermaid Hunter," in Long Island Sound, after rowing down from Spring- field, Mass. Voss said he lost his wife in the 1912 Titanic dis- aster and has been hunting un- successfully for a perfect mate ever since -- hence the name of his odd craft. Good Catches In Bow And Arrow Carp Hunt CEDAR BEACH, Ont. (CP) -- To get a permit they had to direction of Arab nationalism. she would be in a desperate posi- The carp became a game fish in| promise they would report the this area near Windsor this sum- number of hours they spent at mer, and conservation officers the sport during the season and now are sorting out reports onthe number of fish they shot. This emphatically does not mean tion if she were at Nasser's a gesture recognizing Nassers mercy in Kuwait Million | Cornwallis Island, is the northern base, 400 miles north of Shep- herd's Bay. Spartan Air Services of Ottawa, an aerial photo survey company, is handling a $6,000,000 govern- |ment contract for the major part {of the job. The company hopes to map about 100,000 square miles a year, Its airlines carry a three-man- crew: Pilot, navigator and cam- lera operator. The cameras are worth about $15,000 each and, {shoot one frame every 30 seconds as the Mosquito speeds along at | 350 miles an hour. Each picture | covers 45,000 square feet on a| scale of one inch to 5.000 feet. eaten yo the first bow and arrow hunting | Canada. in Essex County. The conserva- tion department decided to hold it after the sport had become pop- ular in the United States. HELPS CONSERVATION For the conservation depart- ment the sport may be a bless- ing. The carp is a piggish type of coarse fish that roots out fish rests and eats the eggs oi other fish as well as other food that might otherwise be eaten by com- mercial or game fish. Archers generally use 40-pound, | target-type bows adapted for fish hunting by attaching a reel to the bow. String from the bow is attached to an arrow with a| barbed head. The 40-pound pull The reports will enable conser- season for the fish ever held In vation officers to assess the ef- fect of the sport on the fish popu- It was an experimental season, |lation and set limits for probable ending June 15, and was held only future seasons. SCUGOG CLEANERS 105 Dundas St. W., Whitby at Bell Taxi Office PHONE MO 8-479] o Pick-up and delivery ® Many opening' specials easily handles the drag of the line and the water resistance when the arrow penetrates the | water. i Since weather is a key factor, the company operates three of its| own weather stations in the sur-| vey area. They give hourly| weather checks to the main bases. BURGLAR EXITS Surprised by: policeman in the act of burgling a restaurant in Montreal's east side, one of While the men work under| two suspects is forced by Con- many difficulties in the Arctic| stable-Claude Patenaude to get |islands, they have one advantage.| out the same way he got in-- { "At the farthest north points| over the transom. Even the {where we operate' explains| police had to climb through the Lynch, "we can take pictures. for| transom: the door was heavily all but about an hour a day, be-| padlocked during night hours. cause of the midnight sun. Even Sm ------------------------------------ to the south, on Victoria Island, | light will be adequate for photog- raphy at least 18 hours a day in the summer." HOUGHT HE WAS MALE BERLIN (Reuters)--Moritz, an alligator in a Dresden zoo who for Archers say the sport is dif-| ficult. At first there is a tendency | tc shoot under the fish because | the deflection of the water makes {the fish appear to be below its] actual position. | Also a sharp eye is needed to spot the fish, while the hunter must stalk it silently. | i | Copies of The Oshawa-Whitby DAILY TIMES- MANY FISH | Essex County was chosen for | |the experimental season because | lof its numerous marshes. Carp | |abound near this tourist resort centre 35 miles south of Windsor land recently hundreds were lcaught in a carp shoot competi- ion. Some weighed up to 20 GAZETTE Available at the following dealers in DOWNTOWN WHITBY ALLIN'S DRUGS Corner Brock and Dundas sandwiches 'and 'dainty, melt-in- until Saturday- night. the - mouth pistries she learned ch a y ow to make in her Norwegian RUSSIANS MOVE WEST mother VIENNA (Reuters)--The right- The Skotheim's four girls and wing newspaper Die Presse re- six boys will all be on hand for (ported Sunday that four Soviet the visit. Arlene, at 24 the eldest, [infantry divisions and about 400 is a teacher in Calgary. She and |tanks had taken up positions in (her sister Sharon, 12, will share | western Hungary. The paper adds the honor of serving tea to thel!that further Soviet units were royal party being moved westwards from BOYHOOD DREAM eastern Hungary and that Hun- garian frontier guards had been years was believed to be a male, {upset these calculations by laying an egg. down on the Skotheim pasture. taining a princess. Yet conscious- With simple dignity, Peder aad ness of the honor is reflected in Alvina Skotheim will open their the conversation of 56-year-old hearts and their home to the Feder royal visi.or. Alvina, his attractive, brown- Ss. | Hunters reported good catches RA... nL LE BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT PHARMACY . 117 Brock Street North Bank Borrowing Helps (t {pounds Stree* Old-Timer Rode With Buffalo Bill ERNFOLD Sask. (CP) A big, 200-pound man, considerably | sidekick of Buffalo Bill and a bet- younger than the 100 years of Iter shot than Frank James is liv- age "Jesse would now be if he PALM PROOF THAT STREETS AREN'T SAFE| ! couple during the first few years. Two bullet holes mark a near- miss for texi-driver Abdala Lat- yer and his wounded passenger, who has a bandage rgund his head. Soldiers fired upon Lat- ver's taxi as he was entering the rebel section of Beirut, Le- banon, with several passengers. kin Miraculously nobody was killed, though there were about 50 bullet-hcles in the cab. Layter is believed to be a rebel but he does good business carrying newsmen and photographers from the rebel camp to the gov- ernment parts of the city, and vice versa BROCK EVENING SHOWS 7:00 P.M. LAST COMPLETE SHOW 8:20 NOW pLavING WHITBY Phone MO 8-3618 MOKDAY--TUESRAY--WEDNESDAY A MILLION DOLLAR DOUBLE-CROSS EXPLODES IN LISBON! MAURECN * (HARA YVONNE HERBERT prese RAY MILLAN CLAUDE | LESDOM in NATURAMA + TRUCOLOR by Conscidated Film Industries with FRANCIS LEDERER A REPUBLIC PRODUCTION MGM presents fdecision against time Jack Hawkins | The 500-acre farm is the fulfil- ment of a boyhood dream for Peder Skotheim, who grew up in a Norw an seacoast village While fishing, he watched farm- ers tilling their fields and tending their stock. Some day, Peder vowed, he too would till his own land He emigrated to Canada in 1923, worked as a farm hand, and 1929 bought land near Ha- warden, Sask. ITis dream was be- coming a reality In 1933 he married Alvina Han. Pany acqquired control of The formed sen, a school teacher from a Sas- katchewan farm, The prospect of rural life was a challenge to her pioneering spirit. All did not go well for the Driven by drought and grass- hoppers which almost destroyed | 2anizations similar to those their crop, thew piled their pos- Colombo Plan to aid underdevel- sessions into three wagons and cped areas of the Commonwealth. | made a 10-day, 200-mile trek to It said the Colombo Plan, devised |: the Spruce Home area. WINTERED IN CABIN They lived their first winter at could be used as a model for Spruce Home in a one-room log similar work in Africa and the diminishing | West Indies. cabin. With their funds they bought beef ~nd po- tatoes to carry them through the winter, Neighbors helped out too. "There was no money -- not even enough for a postage stamp," Alvina recalls. With the nearest well a mile away, water was a grave prob- lem. After five back-breaking at- tempts at digging a well by hand, Feder in desperation called in a drilling crew. The cry of "water" from the drilling site was * turning point in our lives," Al- vina says, "for without water we couldn't have stayed." Another high point came in 1937 when Peder officially became a Canadian citizen. BUILT IT HIMSELF The immaculate white build- ings and the well-kept yard sur- rounded by trees bear witness to the hours of care that have gone into building this little farm. Most of the actual construction was done by Peder himself | Since the early days, machin- ery has replaced horses for field |work. About 300 acres are culti- | vated, planted to wheat, oats and {barley. As well, the family grows all its own vegetables. | Peder and Alvina recommend {a farm as an ideal place to bring {up children. "Make the farm attractive to your children, and they will stay," Peder says To bear this out, Harvey the eldest son has alreadv taken much of the responsib farm work from his fathe 29 "al 1 { | ing in this southwest Saskatch- ewan village and reviving old memories by supervising films placed under Soviet command NEWSPAPERS MERGED CINCINNATI (AP)--The E. W based on his adventures. Scripps Company Sunday pur-| Robert E. Grossehmig, 91, has chased the Cincinnati Times-Star been many things--seaman, cav- and immediately merged it with |alryman, wagon-trail scout, sheep the other afternoon n paper in!farmer, cattle rancher, ihe city, the Cincinnati Post. [rodeo rider, magician, With the acquisition of the Times- |guard, and game warden. Star property, Scripps assumed Above all, he was a crack shot complete control of the daily/and together with Buffalo Bill rewspoper field here. The com- land Annie Oakley, once per- for Queen Victoria in prison Enquirer, the only morning news- London aper in the city, in 1956 3 = ' pay 317+ 11.1956 JUMPED SHIP ASKS AID FOR OTHERS LONDON (Ruters) The 1866, British Labor party Sunday night (his sh YE nroposed the establishment of or- |1ater, farmed for a while, Joined of the |@ circus to do shooting, riding and magic acts, and. then in 1880 found himself in Kansas City out- shooting Frank James in a shoot- to boost food production and pro- |IP% fallery. = vide hie failities in vd Invited to the James farm--"it derprivileged Asian countries, | 25, 1°, More a farm than ] can fly," he says, "it was their hide- out" Mr. Grossehmig slept for two days in Frank's bunk. He was 14 years old at the time. Mr. Grossehmig deserted ip in New York 13 years five other boys share his interest lie that Jesse James is still liv- in agriculture. ing," he says, referring to Frank Meanwhile the two youngest,!Dalton who a few years ago Sandra, 8, and Marilyn, 4, are claimed he was the real Jesse bubbling with excitement as they James. practise their curtsies. For them _Jes:ie, he says, was a fairly July 30 will truly bring a visit from a fairy-tale princess. | ROOM AND BOARD paper clippings of Dalton show a [I WAS OO JUMPY AND HE TOLD ME SATURDAY WE / 17 A | | cowboy, | were still living." KEEPS RIFLE Mr, Grossehmig still has the made-to-order .22 . calibre Colt ; Lightning rifle with which hel OTTAWA (CP) -- Like ocean, performed his shooting acts, and tides, money in its various forms | the acts were good is constantly ebbing and flowing "I could 'snip ashes off your through Canada's economy. cigaret two inches from your It surged upward recently | lips standing 40 feet away, he When the federal government says. borrowed $400,000.000 for five He also claims he can drive months at 22 per cent annual a pin into a wall with a pistol interest from the chartered or cul che stem of an apple from banks and the Bank of Canada. | a tree. He still wears a gold| To the uninitiated it sounds | medal presented him 15 years Paradoxical to say the govern | ago when he defeated crack shots ment, hy-borrowing this amount Born in Meissen," Germany, in from the RCMP and Moose Jaw rom the banking system, crea- | with paper and bookkeeping en- city police. ted $4p0,000.000 in new money. | A couple of scars on his face But thit is the effect, and there prove that Mr. Grossehmig was is an eyplanation. not just a circus cowboy. Once! To understand how borrowing attacked by six Indians, he killed money: from the banking system four of them and scalped two, can create money it is neces-| keeping two tomahawks as souve- sary also to remember that| nirs. money has more forms than cur- 4 ; {rency--dollars and cents. JOINED CAVALRY While money exists in the form Later, working as a wagon of currency, it also exists in the train scout along the old Chey- form of bank deposits, vhich are enne and Oregon trails, he literally nothing more than en- Joined the U.S. 14th Cavalry and tries ini bank books. But they are "And I can tell you'it's a darn/met Buffalo Bill Cody, who came daily transferred from one per- €ryone accepts it, from the east to help the cavalry- son's bank account to another's men round up the Indians and [through the simple means o place them on the reservations writing out cheques they live on today, . : | He travelled with the Buffalo CREATED $400,000,000 Bill show for years, then settled| In the case of the govern hort, slim man. while the news: down on a 160-acre farm in Ore- ment's loan; what the banking pension or some other cheque, gon awarded him by President System did, in effect, was create| To Create More Money ¢/ernments $40,000,000 loan may {be turned into dollars and cents when the government uses it to bank. These institutions, in re-| turn, put an entry in their books creditin,' the governments ac-| count with the dollar - and cents] value of the bonds. When the government redeems these bonds five months from] now, its bank account will be down by $400,000,000. Thus the over-all supply of money in the form of bank deposits will have! ebbed by that amount. Its a kind of magic carried on tries. Yet it works because using | money in its various forms is a more convenient way of exchang-| ing goods and services than trad- ing, or bartering, them. CONFIDENCE IN MONEY People also have learned that they can accept Canadian money --in bills or bank deposits rep- resented by cheques -- without fear that suddenly at any time it might become worthless. Everyone has faith in it. Ev- The money created by the gov-| pay its bills; when it sends out | your family allowance or old age toosevelt for his work among the $400,000,000 in bank deposits out Indians. Selling the farm in 1909 of the air, in exchange for the| he moved to Hodgeville, Sask.,| governments promise to pay, and then to Clear Lake, Sask.,|back this amount in five months. where he became a sheep Every time a bank makes a rancher. loan to anyone, new money is He moved to Ernfold with his created in the same way. The| wife a few years ago, and has money supply swells by the] just retired as game warden in| a@meunt of the loan. The money | the area after holding the post {supply drops by that much when for nearly 30 years the loan'is repaid. - In other words. the government ' [has turned over its five . month | MISSED PAPERS "IN WHITBY Phone MO 8-3111 It you have not received your Times-Gazette by 7 p.m., Call BELL TAX All calls must be placed between 7 ond 7:30 p.m. LEGISLATORS MEET FE SAILLES. "France (Ret. bonds tg the chartered banks and | igh the: Bank of Canad ers)--The seventh world congress addi 2 of the World Parliamentarians' Association for World Govern ment wili open Sept. 8 in the his- toric chateau of Versailles. Na- tions renresented include the United States, Britain, Canada, Brazil, India and Australia SAND BY AIRMAIL TEHRAN (AP)--Mayor Ahmed Moham of Tehran has airmailed 250 grams of sand from the city's cemetery to officials in Tokyo. A spokesman said the sand was re- quested by the Japanese govern ment for buiiding 'a new temple Custom calls for using sand from all countries, | or cenfrall Now open... SPEEDY HILL Snack Bar -- Groceries 1121 DUNDAS ST. E.,, WHITBY SPORTING GOODS 130 Dundas Street West RIGLER'S STORE Corner Brock & Colborne Streets JURY & LOVELL PHARMACY 317 Breck St. S. SHORTY'S CIGAR STORE 106 Dundas Street East THE TUCK SHOP 159 Brock Street North Or at any of these dealers in Whitby and Areca. . ALMOND'S GROCERY Almonds BENNETT'S GROCERY 832 Brock Street North CORNER GROCERY Port Whitby DAVIS SUPERTEST No. 2 Highway West of Whitby SOLDRING'S GROCERY Port Whitby NORTH END GROCERY Brock N. For HOME DFI IVERY by Carrier Boy PHONE Or Call at our office: 111 DUNDAS ST. W MO 8-3703 WHITBY

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