Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 16 Oct 1958, p. 26

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7 Footprints Are | "| Imbedded In Ancient Rock | BLOEMFONTINE, South Africa (Reuters)--Footprints made more | {than 150,000,000 years ago by gi- |gantic creatures may still be seen quite clearly on a slab of rock in the bed of a river near Leribe, in Basutoland. But after all that time, they are gradually beginning to disap-| pear. In order to keep a record | of them, a team of scientists is % making a fibre-glass impression | lof the 15-by-20 foot rock - slab. | This will be placed in the South African Museum at Capetown. | When: the footprints were dis- |. covered three years ago, they| | aroused great interest. Their full| | significance has yet to be de-| cided. But the slab, believed to be the | ¥ |only one of its kind ever discov-| {ered in South Africa, is of great) scientific value. There are eight, | and possibly nine, different types of footprints on the slab. , 2 The footprints at first were be- > TRA " % |lieved to be those of dinosaurs. | |But now {it is thought they may POLIO SHOTS MADE PAINLESS sfc mace ome man mal-like reptile. Getting her inoculation | pos 5 Chicagos fight 3paihst against polio doesn't hurt an epidemic. The apparatus has Susan Jones, eight, a bit as Dr. no Beedle, Compressed sir "blasts" the anti-polio vaccine Charles P. Anderson uses 2 through the skin without break- new 'gun' for the injection ing it Beaver Trapping Season Opens TORONTO (CP) -- The beaver trapping season opened in Ontario | Wednesday and lands and forests) officials predict it may surpass the record 1957-58 season when 141,268 pelts were produced. Trapping is by quota only and SERIOUS SELF-SCROTINY CNR Judges lis ° (fur taken in the province, either Own Services mat tr 0 Sue 1957, to June 30, 1958. By ROBERT RICE will offer diner and dinette ser- J: L. Grew, trapline manage Canadian Press Staff Writer vice this winter on the new ment supervisor, said "indica- MONTREAL (CP)--In a new transcontinental trains. tions are that the over-all beaver mood of serious self-scrutiny, the The CNR is experimenting with population is still on the in- CNR is sitting as judge on itself "I have no personal vendetta against the passenger business,' said 'the CNR President Gordon in an interview "We wouldn't have invested other ideas. On two Montreal RILBS. rout oiticok to Beaver and its passenger services Toronto trains it is offering re- ,, ito er, din awa rail- served seats in one coach. This sist, lynx, mink and oer way is seeking Jet-age ideas, is aimed at coach-class passen- 2 oil the Same be ast year ou testing old-time assumptions and gers who for one dollar can be may on 21 Jrs rat seem {o be rethinking its whole approach to sure of a seat. The alternative D Poop Ceman x ria , A . parts of Ontario, Wed- the passenger business. was to buy a first-class fare plus Any alec marked th ng. The reason: The passenger ser- a $2.55 parlor car chair 2 oy i Ie ne ID ne a4 paying > nny mil. BERTH CONCESSION muskrat and otter Mody of jo Bldg says Donald On Montreal - Halifax trains, Gordon : coach-class passengers are being 2 B it H Id > " offered upper berths without rons e NO ABANDONMENT having to buy a first-class ticket. . But that doesn't mean the CNR There is no advance sale; the By Red Chinese wants to abandon the passenger customer must buy a berth when! i he boards the train. LONDON (AP)--Red China has To cut costs and speed up announced in Peiping the arrest travel time, self-propelled rail of two Britons on charges of run- liners have been introduced on ning an American counter-revolu- some runs. Recently four conven- tionary organization. tional trains on the Montreal-! Peiping radio reported Wednes- $74,000,000 in the last 10 years on Sherbrooke run were replaced by day they were arrested in Shang- passenger equipment unless we four diesel-driven coaches, saving hai. Three Chinese were arrested had a good deal of confidence. passengers an hour each trip and with them. i "Far from trying to kill or dry the railway about $100,000 a year. The radio said the group car-| up the passenger business, our Nineteen passenger runs using ried out counter-revolutionary ac- whole approach is directed to- this type of equipment now op- tivities under the guise of relig- ward revitalizing the operation erate across the country. fous work for the Jehovah's Wit- by tailoring it to the real needs "Passenger habits are not nesses. : of the travelling public." static," said Mr. Gordon. "They Their leader, Peiping said, was That -- the "real needs' -- is/change and we have to spot and| the US. imperialist N. H. what the railway is trying to take adyvant of the ch. » Knorr," He was not further iden- | find out. Never before has it As an example, a CNR study tified. sought the answers with such fer- showed that many Americans vor. Boe an Cox nonlibarily vague"| Another experiment that proved idea of Canada, thinking of it as popular with passengers is the PROFITS NECESSARY a wide-open, vast country with a|CNR's 'package tour" plan -- SSIs willing 1 WY, shying frontier flavor. you say where you want to go, tse of ght "" AY Mr. In contrast, the American trav- how much you want to spend and Gordon, "We're mot ' plotting or tller, with Europe beckoning, the railway plans the trip for to deprive any commu- Has becoming more sophis- you. . Pidoning passenger service which icated. What about the future? One 1 nt end are willing to NEW APPROACH railway expert said within a de- Rep big to make it worth. The CNR switched its advertis- cade the passenger coach may in Me ing approach, concentrating on take its place 'in the transporta- on _ newspapers rather than mag-/tion museum along with the A prin AB have "But Brave | azines It promoted specific de- stagecoach, the side-wheeler and are others that no longer are be. tolls for specific markets, fea. the steam locomotive." ing patronized. Our objective is tured Canada's culture and his-| Said Mr. Gordon: to get rid of services that have [0TY: its night life and res- "I don't agree that the outlook clearly outlived their usefulness." '2urants. -- in Canada at least -- is that What is the railway doing to . The result: A 10-per-cent jump gloomy. It doesn't apply to pres- in revenue from CNR ticket sales ent-day conditions or as far get oa of the buggy era and into'; yo United States. ahead as I can see." "We are reappraising all our traditional assumptions," he said. "We are testing what people want, We are becoming customer oriented." Traffic studies, he added, show that most travellers on mainline trains between Montreal and Vancouver use the service for in- ter-city rather than tramscontin- ental trips. CONSOLIDATION PLANS So the CNR decided to consol. idate its two transccntinental services for the winter, eliminat- ing eight of the 16 trains con- stantly traversing the country. The Montreal-Halifax services, however, are not affected. "This is an experiment de- signed to test exactly what the travelling public waoss. If we find that we're wrong, or that the service is inadequate, we will not hesitate to enlarge it to meet the demand." New schedules are to be an- nounced for the Montreal - Van- couver service, which changes Oct. 26. 'What we are doing now is con- centrating on inter-city schedules designed to meet the needs of the majority of people who use our main line for inter-city serv- ice, while still preserving for the others a transcontinental run," said the 56-year-old railway pres- ident Looking ahead, he visualized an increasingly dense grid of in- ter-city trains for people travel ling from 100 to 800 miles. It will take shape gradually, centring around self-contained geographic or economic areas such as South- ern Ontario, the Prairies or the Maritimes NEW SCHEDULE As a step in this direction, a brand-new train service will be launched soon on the Montreal. Ottawa run. The railway's reappraisal has i already shown results. The GNR says one old-time idea was that first-class passen- gers demanded luxury at the din- ner table. This was modified af- ter the CNR introduced six dinette cars in 1954, offering snack-bar service. The railway found that what was largely in- MONARCH MARGARINES ONTARIO CONTEST ! THIS WEEK IN OSHAWA 21 WINNERS. = of Consolation prizes in Monarch Margarine's exciting Ontario Contest. 2000 Prizes are being given away in addition fo o@ new Italian cor each week! ist PRIZE a Fabulour FIAT 600 Each Week for 5 Exciting Weeks! This Week's Winner of a Fabulous FIAT 400 is MRS. MARGARET STEVENSON 320 John St. North, Hamilton NEW CONTEST EACH WEEK! YOU TOO CAN WIN! HERE'S WHAT YOU DO... Just pick up a pound or two of better tasting Homogenized Monarch Margarine or unsalted "Sweet Sixteen". Fill in the coupon below and send with on end flop from Monarch or "Sweet Sixteen" Margarines. Monarch margarine tastes better because it's made from PURE VEGETABLE OILS I MAIL THIS COUPON NOW! Clip 10 0 Monarch or "Sweet Sixteen" Morgarine End Flap (or Reasonable Focsimile) | ond mail First Clos in sealed envelope to MONARCH MARGARINE ONTARIO CONTEST Please Print) P.O. Box 316 Station "F" Terents, Ont. «Phone or Sweet Sixteen Morgerine wos purchased, Mark X in square beside onswer you think is correct MONARCH MARGARINE TASTES BETTER BECAUSE -- tended for the hamburger mar- A. Monarch is made from Pure Vegetable Oils ket appealed to some of the B. Monarch is Vitamin A, Vitamin D enriched pheasant crowd too. It ordered | Every Winner will be notified by moil. Contest ends November 15,1958, | five more dinette cars Our employees and those of our Advertising Agency ore not eligible. But to please both groups, it| gg el a A ml Beffer AYLMER FANCY GREEN PEAS POLY BAG 39° YORK FANCY GREEN BEANS 2 POLY BAG 73° FRAZERVALE--FANCY MIXED VEGETABLES 2 POLY BAG 53° BEEF--CHICKEN--TURKEY SWIFT'S PIES 8-0Z. 95+ PKGS. SERVE SOUP OFTEN HEINZ CREAM OF TOMATO SOUP JUST HEAT AND SERVE VAN CAMP -- INT. §. BEANS with PORK MAKES DELICIOUS SANDWICHES HELLMAN'S SPECIAL 10-0Z. 5 TINS 59+ SPECIAL 15-02. 27° TINS SPECIAL SANDWICH SPREA 43+ REFRESHING! SPARKLING! SPECIAL AMERICA DRY 2.+::29° SERVE SOUP N' CRACKERS : CHRISTIES -- PLAIN OR SALTED PREMIUM SODAS FOR A HEARTY BREAKFAST INSTANT OR QUICK COOKING QUAKER OATS FOR EXTRA ENERGY BEEHIVE CORN SYRUP ECONOMICAL SPREAD MONARCH -- REGULAR MARGARINE 16-02. JAR SPECIAL we 39° SPECIAL LARGE 3 Qe PKG. SPECIAL LB. TINS 2 2 L SPECIAL SPECIAL OFFER PINK LIQUID VEL no 38° 9 SAVE Se 24.02. TIN SAVE 10¢ cASCADE PANY -- WHOLE a STRAWBERRIES 2::..83* FRAZERVALE -- FANCY " RASPBERRIES 2:4i.79* PRAZERVALE -- FANCY a CORN KERNELS 2.:i.49* YORK -- FANCY ol PEAS & CARROTS 2.-+i-47* VALLEY HI-FANCY a STRAWBERRIES 3 »< 85° er Meals! DOMINION foe / 16, 1958 27 isa) THE DAILY -TIMES-GAZETTE, Thursday, October 7 % rm" V4 McCAIN'S POTATOES French Fries Booth Cod Fishsticks Golden Boned Haddie Rainbow Troup AT oF MAINE Fish and Chips RUPERT HALIBUT Fish and Chips *°™ °° Downy Flake Waffles Snowflake Potato Puffs 2b. Poly Bag 59 ir 89 34s. 87¢ 58¢ 88¢ 59 i 20¢ a | 12.03. Pkg. 16-03. 14-03. Pkg. did LE TTT ALL Choice -- Meaty LAMBLEGS WHOLE OR HALF ¢ LB. LIBLOIN LAMB CHOPS uw 49° Red Brand Beef Boneless Plate Brisket POT ROAST wu 42° Maple Leaf -- Skinless PORK a SAGE we. D3* Qiloey (itor DINNERWARE! WITH PLATINUM BORDER By shopping regularly ef your Dominion Store ota a unit of dinnerware each week rt 39¢ or 49¢ with every $3.00 purchase. START YOUR SET TO-DAY For Colds Home Use EXTRA SPECIAL KLEENEX SIZE 300 NO 's 300s € umir Gives Floors A Brilliant Colorless Shine KLEAR FLOOR WAX SPECIAL b%- PINT TIN California For Salads, Fish, etc. SUNKIST LEMONS Pkg. of 6 25¢ Size 152° B.C. Extra Fancy -- Sweet Eating ANJOU PEARS Jumbo 35¢ Size California No. 1 -- Fresh Tender BRUSSELL SPROUTS 2 Lbs. 35 Ontario No. 1 Grade Tender WASHED CARROTS 5 Lb. 19¢ SPECIAL! DOMINION ORANGE JUICE Bl FRUITS & VEGETABLES Ontario No. 1 Small, Excellent for Boiling COOKING ONIONS 23 Local Grown Good Cookers Buy Now for Winter Supply No. 1 Guaranteed POTATOES 89- Values effective in Oshawa and Whitby until Saturday, Oct. 18 5-LB. BAG 50-LB. DOMINION STORES LIMITED

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