THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursdey, October 30, 1958 [FORMER WINNERS AGREE | Cubs Attend Russian Writer Made Service At To Refuse Nobel Prize Kedron KEDRON -- The final morning LONDON (AP)--Three Western Previously he had messaged CONSTERNATION service for this year was con- winners of the Nobel prize for|that he was "immensely thankful,| In Poland, leading writers saidducted at Kedron by Rev. Ron- literature agreed today that Boris|t ou ch ed, proud, astonished, they were sure only government|2!d H. Lave, to a large congre. Pasternak turned down his 1958|abashed" by the honor, threats had forced Pasternak's | £41107: you Cubs of "A" Pack, award because of pressure from| France's Albert Camus, winner action. The Polish Writer's Un-| ava, ed by Mrs, Harman, at- the Soviet government, not be-|of the 1957 Nobel prize for liter-lion already had congratulated na group, ; cause he agreed with the Krem-|atyre commented, "I don't be-|Pasternak on his honor, and there] Three infants were baptized by |lin's condemnation of his work. |jieye Pasternak refused the Nobel | was consternation at his rejection |the minister: Fabian Leo Hoh. Thé 68-year-old Russian writer|prize of his own free will . "lof the award. mann, son of Mr, and Mrs. was awarded the $41,420 prize a| Earl Bertrand Russell, 86-year- 1 Moscow, the author was the Sebastian Hohmann, and the week ago for his poetry and his old British philosopher who, won target of the severest attack yet, |tWin sons of Mr. and Mrs. novel, Doctor Zhivago, which is|the 1950 prize, said he was "dis-|Before a crowd of thousands in Niklaus; Walter Ruedi and critical of Soviet society. The|gusted with the Russians' attitude|the Lenin Sports Palace, Secre.|Charles Frank. Frank Hancock __|novel is a best-seller in the West | t, this from the start. Knowing tary V. E. Semichastny of the was soloist for the service, ac- rr ad has been suppressed in Rus-|the Russian way of life as we do,| Young Communist League pic- tompanied at the organ by Mrs, | sia. |we may well think that Pasternak ured him as a slanderer who RE. Lee. | ; Wednesday, after a government had no alternative but to reject should leave his country Howard Farndale began his| 2¥ campaign in which the Nobels; ize.' Shaka id term of office as superintendent # i Y 5 Pr Pasternak was still living at his go. the Sund shool. with | committee was accused of play- td Nobel wi ; A ! ! or the Sunday school, with Elea ing cold-war politics, Pasternak He joined another Nobe winner, home in a writers' colony outside no Nountioy as pianist, Harold cabled the Swedish Royal Acad-|Poet T. S. Eliot, and several Moscow but asked Weston Te |Werry concluded his term as 'lemy of Letters that he was re-|other leading British writers in a Porters not to visit him there. |joaq0r of the adult Bible class, fusing the prize "because of the plea to the Soviet Writers' Union| Dr. Anders Oesterling, secre-| meaning attributed to this award not to victimize Pasternak. The tary of the Swedish awaring com- the Lord's Supper will in the society I live in." | union, a prime organ of govern-|mittee, said Pasternak still will served at the 2.30 p.m. service. "Do not take my voluntary re- ment control of Soviet writers, al- go down in history as the 1958 The following Sunday, Nov. 9, fusal with any ill will," he added. ready has expelled Pasternak. Nobel prize winner, the annual Thankoffering service a -- -- will be held, with the WA turkey | |dinner to be a preceding event on 1 57 Jo Beryl Mountjoy, London, fs spending the remainder of her) holidays at her home, Kedron, | after returning by plane from a| week's visit with friends in New York City, Mrs, E, Norton and children, Markham, have been spending a few days with Mr. and Mrs. | W. L. Mountjoy, f Brian Lee and Lynn Farrow of Guelph Agricultural College spent the weekend with Mr, and Mrs. R. E, Lee, Olive Luke, Toronto, was a weekend visitor with Mrs, J.| Starr, Mr, Starr is at present a | patient in Oshawa General Hospi. tal, Mr. and Mrs, Douglas Love and children were dinner guests {of Mr, and Mrs, Eric Booth, Osh- |awa, at a family dinner . celebra. | tion, | Mr. and Mrs. J. Glover are on| a holiday trip with friends to New York City, Miners In Good Shape . SPRINGHILL, N.§, (CP)--How much of a beating does a miner's body take after 6% days en- tombed 13,000 feet underground? Three doctors who treated the 12 survivors of a mine upheaval in No. 2 colliery today made these observations: Each man lost about 10 pounds. Eyesights were fine, Some may be in the hospital a Except for that, Drs. J. G, Murray, J, R. Ryan and R. A, Burton were 'very surprised at the good condition of the men," Of the 12 miners, Hugh Guthro, Larry Leadbetter and Levi Mil- ley "were the strongest," Lead- wi Next Sunday the i be oof | Lindberg, the former Mr, and Mrs, William Werry better wanted to walk out of the Biter 6% - Day Ordeal The men were trapped in a hol low about 100 feet long and three feet high, They first tried digging with their hands, INSERT PIPE Dr, Burton, the first doctor to talk with the men through the thick wall of stene, supervised the inserting of a 60-foot copper pipe through an air tube leading to the men's. prison, Fresh water was pumped through the copper pif and caught by the miners their lunch tins, Despite parched throats, the men--on Dr, Burton's instructions took cooling mouthfuls of the precious fluid on counts of 500, Hot coffee was pumped next through the copper pipe, Tomato and sons were Sunday guests of pit by himself and "go home." soup followed, Mr. and Mrs, Orville Jackson, RR 1, Lindsay, Mr, and Mrs, P, H. Short are happy grandparents of a baby born to Mr, and Mrs, H. Edythe| Short, at Kapuskasing, | The new baby girl in the Bob Fraser honve, was warmly wel- comed by her brothers and sis: mopoNTO (OP)--A doctor who el |treats alcoholics said Wednes. the evening of Wednesday, No- ATTENDED FUNERAL vember 5. Rev. R. H, Love and family HALLOWE'EN PARTY attended the funeral at Stratford The Young People's class gath- on Tuesday of his mother, the sais To power SPACE SHIP * Nixon Heads West How Trapped day medicine is only begi Medicine Just Starting On Alcohol Problems and "live to eat instead of eat- ing to live" Adiot, suffered when to solve the problems of ad-| diction, Dr. R. Gordon Bell, director of Food they tried to give up their ad- engineer. It may be a possible answer to the problem of pow- ering future space vehicles. The sails, using energy from the sun, could boost the speed of a space ship by 350 mph. Aluminized plastic sails, like | the one shown in this artist's conception, were suggested in Schenectady, N.Y., by Norman F. Barnes, a General Electric TCA Resumes Evidence Before Transport Board By JOHN LeBLANC |transeontinental air service in| renewed his suggestion that Dem-| Canadian Press Staff Writer Canada at present would not be gcrats who won't support a civil OTTAWA (CP) -- Trans an-|in the public interest rights plank on racial issues in| ada Air Lines today resumes evi-| Under questioning by board 1960 get out of the party. | dence "before the air transport|chajrman C. D. Shepard, he ad-| Butler told a press conference board in opposition to Canadian yanced the suggestion it might be that Democrats who couldn't go Pacific Airlines' bid to breakeven or eight years from now be- along with such a plank should | TCA"s transcontinental monopoly. fore this could be undertaken either stay in the party and try Evidence was expected to be| without damage to the public in- to put over their own viewpoint continued by TCA President Gor- terest. --or support a Republican ticket | don R. McGregor, who 2 Yel "I contend," he said, "that the/or a third-party movement or nesday that Sumpetiion cou -- introduction of competition on the stay home and not vote. | the development of new, ., continental routes at this RENEWS ATTACK The board also was expected to| time Would be damaging a At Greenwich, Conn.," Republi-| deliver a decision today on whet-| 'I further suggest that its in-| 1 national chairman Meade Al-| her TCA should be made to pro- troduction in the future should corn ripped anew into what he | vide a wealth of detailed informa-| only be considered after it can be called Democratic "radicals." | tion on its operating methods, demonstrated that the volume of sought ny Spa transcontinental traffic is suffic- en TAKES EACEPTION ient to support two carriers, and er A TCA eommsel John G. Edison only then with a sufficient period WIDE Sang or see it in he hands took exception to the request-- of notice to the existing carrier oi te. Republican party? J calling it extraordinary and de:/ (TCA) to permit integrated plan-| 3S h A pm TCA is not under inves- ning of its capacity and facilities' President George Meany of hey tigation by Canadian Pacific. to meet the changed conditions AFL-CIO appeared to hit mostly In his testimony Wednesday, under which it would later oper- a Republican campaigners in Mr. McGregor said competition in ate." John XXIII Is | | First Cigaret 'Smoking Pope VATICAN CITY (AP) -- Pope ohn XXIIT is the first cigaret-| smoking pope. An aide says the new pontiff smokes two cigarets daily--one after lunch, one after dinner. | The last pope to smoke was Pius XI, who took an occasional cigar. Vatican circles said there never before has been a pope who smoked cigarets. The new pope lives simply and eats frugally, For breakfast he takes only strong Italian coffee, heavily | laced with milk, and bread and' fruit | Lunch usually consists of rice, | meat or cheese and fruit, For dinner he often has soup, vegetables or salad, and bread and fruit. NO SWEETS | An aide said Pope John never takes sweets or liquor. Pope John likes to work at his desk during quiet hours of dark- ness. As patriarch of Venice, he never slept more than six hours daily. | Usually he went to bed at 10 p.m. and rose at 4. a.m. Some- times he slept from 8 p.m. to mid- night rose and worked for six hours then went to bed for an- other two hours. ident Richard Nixon headed west today on his final bid for election| of a Republican Congress in next Tuesday's voting. Nixon, en route to a weekend of campaigning in Alaska, stop- ped overnight in Chicago. Cumpaigning in California Wed- nesday night, Democratic na- ticnal chairman Paul M. Butler strict routes "Would you rather have gov-| ent in the hands of the left- Conservation Delegat | es Ask More Financial Aid TORONTO (CP)--Delegates to| Conservation Authority chairman J the Ontario Conservation Author-|{also pointed out that delays in ities' convention which ended|obtaining approval from the de- Wednesday asked greater finan- partment of lands and forests for cial assistance from the provin- reforestation projects were prov- cial government. ing costly. The province now provides 50, The authorities could not. ob- per cent of the capital costs of{tain provincia: subsidies on such approved conservation projects. [projects until the minister ap- Garfield Disher, Grand River proves. Delays meant options - S---------------- were likely to lapse and the au- thorities may have to expend ad- ditional funds in interest on bank |loans. | The authorities also asked the {department of planning and de- |velopment to consolidate its po- licy on conservation grants and Reason For PlaneCrash Faimarisiay CHICAGO (AP) -- A Canadian sidies. phrrician reports he used hynpo-| Other requests made .to the sis to discover what he termed province: the real cause of an airliner| An increase of technical staff crash that baffled investigators so authorities would not longer for years. have to hire expensive assistants Dr. Bernard B. Raginsky of| Steps to eliminate some of the Montreal, president of the Society|red tape in conservation a@minis- for Clinical and Experimental!tration. Hypnosis, says the reason for the] Amendments of the Conserva- crash--brought out in two hypno-'tion Act to provide authorities tic sessions--was that the pilot of with the same powers of expro- the plane did not understand the priation as municipalities. workings of a new type altimeter.| Greater powers of control over Dr. Raginsky reported his find. {he streams and lakes. ings to a meetitg of the society in| ---------------- , Chicago Wednesday. He permit- ted physicians attending to listen ug to a taped recording of hypnotic sessions with the plane's pilot. Dr. Raginsky declined to name the commercial airline or the pilot involved but said the crash ; occurred in North America. 1 ve He said the pilot approached an 7 2, J | | Doctor Finds When her eyes say something special... give her the new BuLova oddess of Time | airport too low, hit some trees g.* and crashed. The plane caught fire. Many of the passengers 4 were burned, but all escaped | live. § Dr. Raginsky said the captain | came to him for help in trying to determine what had happened. He said the hypnotic sessions also showed the captain had an unconscious fear of high places. He said he advised the pilot to ground himself. Instead, the pilot took a job with another airline. Several months later, the phy-| sician said, a chartered airplane piloted by the man crashed in North America killing" him and about 80 passengers. | Beauty -1 hat VESSEL LAUNCHED | flows around LAUZON, Que. (CP) -- The, transport department's ice-| breaker Sir Humphrey Gilbert slid down t ways at the Davie Shipbuildi .imited yards Wed- nesday ni more than two ner months behind schedule The 1,116-ton vessel was to have been laun d Aug. 20 but the date was cancelled when a walk- put tied up the yards The twin - diesel powered ves- sel, launched by Mrs. Raymond O'Hurley, wife of the minister of gefence production, is to operate In the Newfoundland area, the Gulf of St. Lawrence and Arctic, waters i wrist! GODDESS OF TIME" 17 jewels $39.75 to $59.50 Watch and bracelet like a golden caress seems to flow around her wrist. A combination of stunning beauty and precision accuracy that only Bulova could make possible for so low a price! See that BULOVA difference! At Better Jewelers Everywhere! PLANT The largest plant bla lurnace in Africa, costing $9,800 00 was opened in 1958 at 'Iscar, gear Pretoria, HUGE steel a In Final Vote Bid Miners Were NEW YORK (CP)--Vice-Pres-|telling a nationwide radio audi-| Discovered dent. He was remanded to Mon- ered in costume for a Hallowe'en party Tuesday evening in the {lower hall, with program and decorations arranged by Alan | Francis, Eleanor Mountjoy and SPRINGHILL, N.S. (CP) -- Keith Tregunna, 1938." Here's how 12 men given up for Mrs. R. Bishop was awarded But he mentioned neither par- dead were found alive in the the costume prize ties nor candidates by name in Cumberland No. 2 colliery. Grant and Robert Spencer led assailingf what he called cam-| The 12 men had been trapped in worship. Mrs. Bishop led uni: paign talk that organized labor is pehind a wall of rock for almost SON singing with Jeanine Werry trying to take the U.S. down thelgjx days, caught in a working at the piano. The lunch commit- road to socialism. Speaking from area 13,000 feet from the mine '¢¢ Was Donna Reeves and Sue Washington, Meany said: {entrance by last Thursday night's Appleton. a hidden purpose behind upheaval. [SATURDAY JEDDING Shier Of this cry of socialism, and such| op the oth i roc Mavis juniia, cau T phrases as leading America fa) 14 96 Her Side Of ne hein Ms, and Mrs, Albert Treguuna, 'down the left lane' is to plant| yay through the rubble on their| 2% united in marriage on Satur in the minds of the American peo-|peljjes. Percy Weatherbee, a Ochaits ence he wanted to "puncture the| big labor-political scare balloon of! formerly of England, col and loca ple the idea that labor is pro- bare-faced. miner, a : an. 12 Communist, gineer Blair Pi pie £1) The reception was held at "This is an unforgivable and side by side. Weatherbee was dig- "OT Of the" bride's parents, Mr. mpletely unjustified trick." ging, Phillips raking an air sam- : » ple from an uncovered ventilating immediate relatives NEWS BRIEFS jive: : Mr, and Mrs. Walter Davis and Weatherbee and Phillips jue were guests at the Tobin. thought they heard a voice. It Cookson nutpials and reception, FOUND GUILTY seemed to come from the pipe. on 'Saturday afternoon in Sea PETERBOROUGH (CP)--Wil.| hey. Jsteneg 1 was a voice-- grave United Church, when Shir- 4 |the vi of We fred Redcliffe, 40, of Havelock Gorley Kempt, one of the men! pa Tohi ha: : : . X Dennis Tobin, s been found guilty of criminal missing since the underground Mp. and Mrs. Stanley Moffat, negligence in the highway death|rock shift Oshawa, and Mr. and Mrs. Ever- of Minika Bruchman, 21, of Ham-| Both Phillips and Weatherbee ett Mountjoy were among guests ilton, a Queen's University stu.|talked to Kempt through the pipe. of Mr. and Mrs. S. Hohmann fol- - : __ lowing the christening of their son Sunday day for sentence. | when the car in which they were. Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Pascoe Miss Bruchman and a class- riding collided with one driven by were ' among Sunday mate, Theodore Mooij, 21, of| Redcliffe on Highway 7 near|guests of Mr. and Mrs. Walton Kingston, were killed July 11/ Havelock, 25 miles east of here. Pascoe, Bowmanville, day afternoon with Colin Smith of the can woman tourist and attacks on| Ar 0S Use other women visitors, including a and Mrs. Albert Tregunna, for Toronto girl. atherbee's uncle ley Cookson became the bride of dinner | in | diction, just as other addicts do, late Mrs. H. N. Love, who pass-|Shadowbrook Clinic in suburb: [Pr Bell said. A 3 . N y Se" adowbroo inic in suburban Aq ed to rest Saturday evening, Oc-| Willowdale, said 25 years of work| ,, Tc association decided to ask [tober 18, at her home, 122 Morn- have opened up a new objective| the Ontario hospital services |ington street, Stratford. approach to treatment of addic.|CO™mission and the federal gov- [ [ tion, but ."'we are only at the ernment for a revision of hospital | v threshold of the management of Ine\70HCe Pin regulations for | Mexican Secret addiction--no further than medi. Soria |cine was in control of infections P er P li A i lat the turn of the century." Ontario's hospital plan does not . fewer than 10 per cent of alco. 8Py and other services for out- Canadian holies are accepting help, |patients as benefits, {HARD TO TREAT The resolution sald some of MEXICO CITY (AP)--Mexican| Pr. Bell said food could be an| these services will be given pa- | ' " v { a Jave strested of, anddian Bamed] the icebox instead of the bottle plan goes Into effect Jan, 1, | wanted for questioning in connec-|" " j jd) tion with the slaying of an Ameri- He told the Ontario Hospital include diagnostics, radiological, | Association's pharmacist section clinical laboratory, physiother. : . |addiction harder to treat than|tients who cannot pay, causing secret police said Wednesday they| lcoholism, Some people turned hospitals financial deficits, The went minor surgery last week for a foot ailment, turned out for practice Wednesday night. Earlier this week Als reported |star end Hal Patterson would be back in condition, Patterson has been out for nearly a month with a leg injury, Argos have to throw everything into Saturday's affair, A loss would end their hopes of a Big Four playoff spot and take the head off Als and Ottawa Rough Riders, threatened with playoff elimination by Argos' late-season Mrs. Harriet Hicks of Coral Gables, Fla., died Oct, 2 in hos-| pital after being beaten, forced to, |drink a. liquid that was possibly | toxic and robbed by a man she| |identified before her death as| Key Men jeither an Englishman or a Can In Lineup | Dominguez said victims of : other-attacks who had identified| TORONTO (CP)---Key Mew will pictures of their assailant were: | onauts he neup on route Jean Watts of Toronto, Helen " * pomely rice lioprsh. an Ls vie (hyo clubs meet re Aula JXaty, . Whose ome aC last game of the Big Four Foot- | comeback, | Police said Thompson has lived ball Union season. Alouettes have another chance Ngzico for several years and| Argos said Jim Rountree, a top if they drop Saturday's game, | worl as a mining expert at Inel pass defence men, probably will They meet Argos again in Mont- Oro in the State of Mexico. 'be ready. Rountree, who under-|real a week later. STORE HOURS MON.-TUES.-WED. OPEN 8:45 A.M. CLOSE 6.00 P.M. THUR. & FRI. OPEN TILL 9 p.m. SAT. CLOSE AT 6:00 P.M. ONE 8-0Z, TIN BAR-X STEW with the purchese of 1 CHUCK WAGON DINNER 47+ 15.02, TIN GRAND OPENING SPECIAL FEATURES BUY 2 -- GET 1 FREE! HALLOWE'EN KISSES :29- SAVE 29¢c -- BUY 2 FOR 58¢c -- GET ONE FREE SAVE 10V2¢ -- BUY 2 FOR 21c -- GET ONE FREE MAPLE LEAF HOSTESS : 8.0Z. PKG. SAVE 31c -- BUY 2 FOR 62c -- GET ONE FREE MAPLE LEAF CHEDDAR CHEESE SAVE 55¢ -- BUY 2 FOR 1.10 -- GET ONE FREE AEROMIST 17+ Buy One -- 13.0Z. PKG. 16-0Z. TINS MANNING'S TEA TIME BISCUITS "uc 6-0Z. BOTTLE BAG 29* Reg. 39¢c SAVE 10¢ FREE! 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