THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursdey, April 9, 1959 21° Mother Faints [tou vied se "Manslaughter is all we ask," As Son Sent posea Dy me engineering voard ould be capable of meeting 60 cent of all electric power de- mands in B.C. and the U.S. Pa- Canada, U.S. May Develope Riven [mam suai atts. At least eight huge dams would In New Zealand be built on the Canadian section Mr. Maloney said. "Then he of the river, providing a steady AUCKLAND, N.Z. (AP)--Billy In Montreal T G 1 ws OTTAWA (CP) -- Canada and|ALTERNATE PLANS regulated flow of water year-|Graham wound up his New Zea- 0 Lzallo SEEK COMMUNIST LINK. ( : be sent to a warmer, richer p grander life than he has every Oo a Oo W S |known--a prison." the United States may move The board proposed three al-|yound for throbbing hydro plants MONTREAL (CP)--A 23- : NTREAL = closer this week to some form of ternate plans, each calling for land crusade Wednesday night --A "Year! TORONTO (CP)--The mother| RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) -- Of A Pari steam days of Queen Elizabeth's visi [International arrangement for expenditures of up to. $1,000.00. 1°" "e™: by addressing a crowd of more Uf LIUICIle: Com ko0 bong rob Jo Edward Bell collapsed ficials have begun looking fig; : found galty of mup-|Capt. E. C. Hopkins of Toronto|Joint development of the rich|000 in Canada and $2,500,000,000/ THREE PROPOSALS thas 50,000. bery case, testified Wednesday a|incnscious in her seat behind|the possibility that J mers the revolvér|harbor commission told the Op-|hvdro - electric resources of the in the U.S. Its report was a| The three proposals made by| Hundreds answered the evan-| iotemont' she signed last may|lic,,Prisoner's box Wednesday gives and demonstrations Hf ny of a Montreai grocer last|timist Club the twc ships will mighty Columbia River. Jteshaieal exammslion o = the engineering board: (1) Diver- gelier's sal 0 ake Seeisions was a collection of "pure inven- might 3s she: heard ber 18, year, brazil are instigated by Contiki [three proposals a not deal(gion of the Koot River into|foF christ. Graham's address was|g ion» bo the poli old son convie murder an January. Ward was sentenced to|bring passengers from Detroit, The International Joint Com-|iee PF touchy question of down: {fe Columbia ot como y C Cronplalso broadcast to thousands of or. °Y police, sentenced to be hanged. cow, Brazil is the fourth Latin be hanged at Montrea jail July|Cleveland and Chicago. Dates are will tackle the main ob- Wik) le foueny the Columbia at Copper Creek other New Zealanders. via tele] S0lange Guillemette, who| The youth was convicted of the| American nation to launch infers 10, Ward was the first to be tried|June 29 and 30. , stacle to such an agreement at! " near Canal Flats, B.C., where the works as a cook in a Prescott,(Feb. 17 bl a st Is sive inquiries into. Red activities : four-day meeting opening Wed-| However, the report did say goo ¢/phone lines. 'eb. udgeon and strangula quiries in activities' " Wi perio of SH he SACK LEADER'S COTTAGE 2 if Washington. 8 that for any further progress to- Columbia ig a mie Graham started with a torrent Ou a, 24 been he tion slaying of Stephanie Lysyk, in the past week. oH 4. Emile Latour, 19, is to go on| PORT ELGIN op The This stumbling block is Koowp| Yard eo « operatly ® developmen Coluybia River; (2) diversion of jor jive talk-to show he knows the when ok hg I eel: SL Searid spinster from Winni- FACES TWO CHARGES, today, Hugh® McGurnaghan, (summer cottage of Orta Ab-1as downstream benefits -- what| od oat edh tries|t e Kootenay into the Columbia|language of youth. From that he|fysed to render a judgment in the The. assize court Sury deliber- ST. CA 1 CP) Rave' wilijeral Leader John Wintermeyer ment between fhe two Co mnect|2t DOrF, about 10 miles north of moved to a discussion of teen-ltrial of Armand Roy, 39, until|ated Aa 1 Ye of del SATHAR Ives Niagara trial 22, and Arnold Heguy, 21, a Canada should get from the US.| hed with t Jnl es pon | face trial next week. has been ransacked, it was disc 0 the C and Should be reac reSPeCt ithe international y; (3) age she could be produced. turning its verdict which carried|the-Lake, was remanded in ous : covered Wednesday. The cottage, | io ino water in Canada which|® pri es for sharing benefits|" qiversion. |" At 1is six meetin ' gs in New APPROVE LOUNGES located near this Lake Huron| 14 he fed to American power a0d cOSts. : Biggest of tie proposed Sams Zeatand Oh oe loa ILLE --- ly damaged | A draft defining downstream 8 Zealand, Graham Is estima 0 her own volition but said she mercy. rgb Lill i FH gig waged Plans Pb generate power WHEN penefits will be placed before the|O% pe, Columbia would be atlhave addressed 265.000 people. knew nothing about the case and| Mr. Justice W. H. Spence set o hain margin' the sale of snow collapsed part of the roof. i, TIVEr ROMNEY Is Low, Washington meeting as a basis; ca Si Cy wes Upstreall Decisions for Christ total aboutithat the statement she signed|July 14 as the date for the hang- ky ine. and liquor in dining|Persons who entered through the|CANADA'S DEMAND for discussion. This follows in-| "01 Teves ote, or Rn S150. {last year was invented by a "'po-/ing. i nd cocktail lounges. broken section smashed windows| Since 1951 Canada has de-|structions to the Canadian and Sos a maximum $327,000.00 and] o_o... oo ham addressed 108/liceman who dictated . . . to an-| Defence counsel Arthur Malo- ging t of the 5,205 elig-|and stole furnishings. manded that the U.S. make pay-|American sections of the 1JC by|"ave eo Jusximuin Jenerating) iors in Pa Parua jail. Six other officer at a typewriter."|ney, in his address to the jury, By ¢ ballots ; ment in power for downstream|their respective governments to|CaPacity of 1,624,000 kilowatts. {riser decisions . |She said she signed it without|argued that the youth lacked the ble to vote cas i PROTEST U.S. OIL USED |benefits. For years the U.S. took make a joint recommendation on| The engineering board ap-| g reading it. capacity through intoxication to U.S. INFLUX FOR TOUR VANCOUVER (CP) Two|the view that it would make no/a definition of downstream ben- Her name was form the intention to kill Miss TORONTO (CP)--Two United marine unions and a shipping Lysyk. peared to favor the Copper Creek| originally payment, but it recently agreed|efits. diversion. It would call for dams would be eight miles downstream brought into the case by a de- States passenger vessels, the|firm have protested to Ottawalin principle that this country Gen. She was found slain in her bed North American and the. South|that fuel oil which could be pro- Billy Graham Ends Crusade Brunette, 23 Testifies ee -- = | Sentenced By JOHN E .BIRD northwestern U.S. to the Pacific Canadian Press Staff Writer |Ocean. op + aor och i Nose: = tte The woraan appeared under(a strong recommendation for|tody for a week when he aps peared in magistrate's court Wednesday on a charge of "ats tempting to kill his wife, Dorothy,. March 28. He was also ch. with committing wilful damage. April 7. we HAPPY YOUNGSTERS '" SASKATOON (CP) -- children won a total of $133 in prizes in a safety poster contest found in lise he i DO a kalchot A % oun a valise s accused of Motor Club, Bever e [interview that "the commission/yon, Arrow lakes and Murphy|Arrow lakes about 4% miles up-\nomie Jan, 25-26, 1958. having stored in a shed owned by|gina won first prize of $25. The' A. G. L. McNaughton, ir Canada at Copper Creek, from Donald; the dam at Downie fence witness who said she of- should receive a share of power|chairman of the Canadian sec-|Luxor, Calamity Curve, Mica,|Creek 4% miles upstream from | fered him one of the bonds stolen American, will bring about 1,000 duced in Vancouver refineries is generated at American plants by tion of the 1JC, said in a recent|Downie Creek, Revelstoke Can-|Revelstoke, and the dam on the|from the Caisse Nationale d'Eco- being bought from the United water stored in Canada. Fon reek. stream from Castlegar. All three] Roy was arrested when $350,000/a crown witness, also accused.|posters stressed bicycle safély States for use in Canadian navy ships. They claim Canadian sea- men have lost jobs pecause the fuel is being carried in U.S. tank- ers from California. If is being The Canadian and American/now has a mandate to come up; The dam at Calamity Curve'would be on the Columbia. worth of the stolen bonds were' The trial is continuing. and proper street crossing. " representatives on the IJC will with a recommendation." consider the share of power Can-| International development of) -- ada should receive. Unofficial re-|the river also will depend on thei} « ports in Ottawa say Canada wil attitude of the B.C. government, ADVERTISING (Continued from Page 20 brought in at a slightly lower price than B.C, bunker fuel. FAVOR BEVERAGE RIGHTS ONTARIO PROPERTY SALE NO. 281-A AUCTION SALE LAND Part Lots 29 and 30, Con- cession 1, Village of New- castle being a parcel of land containing approx. 30 2/5 acres more or less, located north of Highway 401 ond east of Road Allowance be- tween Lots 30 ond 31. Sale to be held on the above property on THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 1959 at 2:00 P.M. EST. TERMS: $500.00 Cash or certified cheque at time of sole, balance payable in 30 days. Sale subject to reserve id. For further information please contact The Auctioneer, Mr. Murray Noble, Baltimore, On- tario. Telephone 34 R 2 OR Department of Highways, Dis- trict Engineer's Office, 138 "Hope Street North, Port Hope, Ontario, Telephone TU 5-2481 Department of Highways, Toronto Regional Office, Downsview, Ontario, Tele- ghone CH 4.2571, Local 4 DEPARTMENT OF HIGHWAYS, ONTARIO. 83a NOTICE OF APPLICATION The Liquor Licence Act, 1946 LICENSING DISTRICT NUMBER 7 TAKE NOTICE that Wilming- ton Developments Limited (an Ontario Company) of the City of Toronto in the County of York, will make application ot a Special Meeting of The Liquor Licence Board of One tario to be held at the Cana- dian Legion Hall, 217 Murray Street, in the City of Peter- borough in the County of Peterborough, on Friday, the 1st day of May, 1959, at the hour of 11:30 o'clock (D.S.T.) in the forenoon for the issu- ance of a 'Dining Room Lic ence' for the sale and con- sumption of beer and wine with meals and a 'Public House Licence" for the sale and consumption of beer in premises to which Men Only are admitted and a "Public House Licence" for the sale ond consumption of beer in premises to which Women Only or Women Escorted by Men are admitted for the following premises: A build- ing situate on the south side of King Street East and known as 35 King Street East in the City of Oshawa and to be known as the Colonial Inn, having a frontage on King Street East of 52 feet 6 in- ches by a depth of 82 feet 6 inches, being of four and two storeys with oa basement, of brick and steel construc- tion ond o two-storey build- ing immediately at the rear ond adjoining to the aforesaid hyilding ond having a width of 35 feet 814 inches ond a depth of 101 feet 6 inches and being of steel, cement, end brick construction and being known as 7-11 Celina Street in the said City of Oshawa. The aforesaid buildings when completed will have ot least 20 bed- rooms and will contain the specific accommodations, fac- ilities and equipment required under the provisions of The Liquor Licence Act and amendments thereto, Any person resident in the licensing district may object to the application, ond the grounds of objection in write ng shall be filed with H. J. BROWNE, the Registrar of the licensing district, whose address is 55 FLEET STREET EAST, TORONTO 2, ON. TARIO, at least ten days be- fore the meeting at which the application is to be heard. DATED ot Toronto, this 7th day of April, 1959. Wilmington Developments Limited, per M. H. Clayton, Secretory, 55 Yonge Street, Toronto, Ontario. WALPOLE ISLAND, Ont. (CP) Residents of this Indian reserva- tion voted 130 to 71 Wednesday to seek permission Lo keep alco- holic beverages in their island residences. Less than 50 per cent of the 498 eligible voters cast ballots, electricity developed in the U.S.| in exchange for Canadias ad-| ministration and regulation of the year-round water flow. Canadian officials are optimis- tic about the chances of an agree- ment being reached, either at this week's meeting or at sub- sequent ones. However, if the Americans refuse to make what Canadian officials describe as a reasonable payment for down- ARBITRATION ORDERED MONTREAL (CP)--The Que- bec labor department told the Dominion Rubber Company Wed- nesday an arbitration board has been ordered to settle contract negotiations between the com- pany and 800 employees at its plant in St. Jerome, Que. e company is one of four in the province negotiating new con- tracts with 2,600 production em- ployees represented by the Fed- eral Union of Rubber Workers (CLC). TO STUDY FREIGHT BRIEF CHATHAM (CP)--A bid to re- duce freight rates in Southwest- ern Ontario to attract industry will be discussed at the south- western Ontario conference of chambers of commerce April 23. A committee was set ap last year to prepare a brief for presenta- tion to the federal government. JUDICIAL INQUIRY TORONTO (CP) -- A judicial inquiry into subu: ban York Township's financial affairs will begin May 19, Judge Joseph A. Sweet said LL nd Tb was iL . ie Shafi Watt ratepayers complained about sales of township land to indivi- duals. WOMEN STRONGER: POPE VATICAN CITY (Reuters)-- Pope John told an audience of [ 8,000 women of many nationali- ties Wednesday that "women are the stronger sex." He expressed the view in a brief address on the role of women in modern so- ciety. COLD IN US, WEST CHICAGO (AP) A -- heavy spring snow as deep as seven inches, blanketed areas from the Rockies to the upper Mississippi Wednesday. Temperatures on the eastern slopes of the Rockies dropped to the 20s. Seven inches of snow was measured at Den- ver, Colo. RUSSIA OFFERS AID MEXICO CITY (AP) -- Russia has offered to help underdevel- oped nations by lending them money at low rates, selling ma- chinery on long-term deals and providing technicians free. The offer was made Wednesday to the United Nations Economic and Social Council. FIND ALGERIAN BODIES ALGIERS (Reuters) -- Bodies of about 20 Algerians, many of them chained together, have been | discovered by French forces! near caves in the Tizi-Ouzou re- gion used by nationalist insurg- ents. '"'Colonel" Amirouche, rebel leader killed last month by French troops, was reported to have killed about 400 of his fol- lowers in a purge of disloyal ele- | ments. | ENTERTAINS BOLSHOI LONDON (AP)--The director and members of the Bolshoi Bal- | 'arrender after| | stream be ne fits, negotiations may collapse. | The Washington meeting also |will consider a report by the In- {ternational Columbia River En- | gineering Board concluding that press for half the additional {Which controls the water in Can- ada. MINISTER'S VI "W Ray Williston, B.C. lands and forests minister, said last month that the engineering report is a good basis on which to work out the problem of hydro develop- ment on the river, However, he said downstream benefits still is the top question and B.C. is co- operating with Ottawa in pre- senting the Canadian case to the 1JC. Agreement on downstream ben- {it is "physically and e ically |feasible" to go ahead with joint r able to assess each of the pro- development of the Columbia. | The river rises in British Col- umbia, crosses the international [boundary near Trail, B.C., and The development program pro- posals. Its next step would be to recommend to both governments |the particular project that should be undertaken. : flows through the power-hungry | | a al oe 8 20 id LES GULF OF ST.LAWRENCE Suk % NN 3, 45 rit pA Sy \ \ Nt] o J S & £ ORT AUX \l A a \} \ visit. Men's ICE PLUG A great ice fleld -- called the worst in 25 years -- lies in the Gulf of St, Lawrence across the sea approaches to gulf and St. Lawrence River ports. With the help of ice-breakers, the German freighter Volumnia made her way through the ice into the: relatively ice-free St. Lawrence River and reached Montreal April 1 to inaugurate the 1959 shipping season. But other ships have been reported making slow progress through the pack ice. Shaded area on this map shows the extent of the ice as reported by the transport department's aerial ice patrol. The Strait of Belle Isle between Newfoundland and the north shore of Quebec is impassable. The ice field also 'ies across the 90-mile-wide Cabot Strait between the eastern tip of Nova Scotia and the southwest corner of Newfoundland. Be- cause of the ice, the ferry Wil- liam Carson has taken as long as 60 hours to make the nor- mal six-hour run between North | Sydney and Port aux Basques. Ice-forecasting headyuarters at Halifax says conditions vary slightly from day to day be- cause of winds. At times the wind blows the ice away from the southwest shore of New- foundland leaving open water. At other times, the wind makes an opening on the Nova Sco- tia side and blows the ice into | the Newfoundland shore, f (CP Newsmap) | LOCAL KILLED let Company were entertained at lunch Wednesday by the Cana-| dian ambassador in Moscow, | David M. Johnson, before they; start a tour of the United States and Canada. Parliament At-A-Glance | By THE CANADIAN PRESS Wednesday, April 8, 1959 f Finance Minister Fleming tab- led budget papers showing a record peacetime deficit in] 1958-59 of $616,600,000 on reven.| ues of $4,770,800,000 and expendi. | tures of $5,387,400,000. Transport Minister - Hees post- | poned changes to the Canada| Shipping Act, apparently because! the U.S. has not yet decided on pilotage policy in the Great Lakes. Approval in prineipie--second reading--was given 2 bill to pro-| vide for 16 parliamentary secre- | taries to cabinet ministers at; $4,000 a year each. ! Thursday, April 9, 1959 | The Commons covsiders gov-| | Apr 9-15 April 14 at 8 p.m. |ernment business, Mr Fleming | presents his budget at 8 p.m. | adjourned until e Senate is DRESSED Pork Should GATES' FRESH MEATS | ers DRESSED Fresh Ham HOME CURED RINDLES Breakfast Bacon S OUR HOMEMADE Headcheese HOME RENDERED Lard uw 19° OUR HOME MADE free. 22 SIMCOE ST. N Pork Sausage We have a full line of meats, beef, pork, veal or lamb at reasonable prices. $5.00 orders delivered LB. 49° RA 3.3732 PANTS Assorted fabrics. Sizes 28-44 only. Reg. to 5.95 9.99 MEN'S ASSORTED DRESS SHOES Broken sizes. Reg. to 5.95, NO EXCHANGE OR REFUNDS! FRIDAY -- 10 A.M. to 8 P.M. GIRLS Cottons, etc. Sizes 8 to 14x. Reg, to 3.95. Ladies' Better SLIPPERS Reg. 2.98 ... Boys' Leather Pe ..... 2 TELEPHONE ASH TRAYS 69° Reg. 98c .. ' 5% AJAX SUPER CLEANER Boys' Plaid LINED JEANS Looped top. Reg. 3.88 ...... 2.69 2 FOR 5.00 Girls' Nylon DRESSES Reg. 3.99 Boys' Sport & Dress SHIRTS Sizes 8-14. Reg. 2.98 1.00 Seebreeze RECORDERS 2 Only. Factory warranty. 3255 ....... L090 32.95 Super ¢ AJAX CLEANER .. 22 23 SOAP . Colgate [] TOOTH PASTE ... 29 Kitchen Foam 6 FOR 10¢ Mews, Boys' RUBBERS, OLOSHES ¢ Reg. 3.95 ........ 69 GCLOSHES ¢ Reg. to 4.95 .... 89 Automatic Wall CAN OPENERS 3 Bars Palmolive SPONGES. Each r Ladies', Girls' Boxel. Reg. 2.98 .. 69° LADIES BETTER SKIRTS Reg. 3.95 1-00 Record Greeting 6 CARDS. Reg. 98c . 10 Men's Chino CAR COATS Fully lined. Reg. 698 ...:.. 3.98 Kiddies' Spring COATS and CAPS Reg. 4.98 1.99 Ladies' All-Wool JUMPERS Reg. 4.95 ...... 1.25 Ladies' Better Grade SHOES (Loafers). Sizes 5 to 9%. Reg. 495 ...... 1.99 Ladies' Better Grade SLACKS Reg. 595 ...... 2.99 Ladies! Su Skin GLOVE ¢ Reg. 1.950pr. ..... 59 2 FOR 1.00 Ladies' and Girls' Beautiful LOUNGING PYJAMAS Reg. S95... 0 1.99 POCKET NOVELS. Each GREETING CARDS . 6 FOR 10e be id BIRTHDAY RIBBON. Roll .... Plastic 3 FOR 5¢ HAIR BRUSHES Reg. 89c 2¥ Unbreakable Plastic GLASSES be Reg. 1%¢ .... 4 FOR 16¢ Stopette Spray DEODORANT 39 Reg. 6%9¢ | efits must precede 1JC considera-| [tion of the three proposals by the |engineering board. : Once such agreement is hed, the ission will be SATURDAY -- 10 A.M. to 5 P.M. Beside Pennyworth's Department Store in Ajax. Just 7 minutes from Oshawa 5 minutes from Whitby. This unit will act as a disposal outlet for the whole chain of Pennyworth's Stores. The clearance house will carry only discontinued lines, broken ranges and counter soiled merchandise. Due to the ridiculous low, low prices, all merchandise will be sold AS IS ON A NO EXCHANGE, OR REFUND BASIS. So if you really want merchandise away below cost -- or something practically for nothing, be sure to pay us a Ladies' Merry Widow STRAPLESS BRA by Lovabl. Reg. 6.95 1.0 Men's White DRESS SHIRTS Reg. to 4.95 1.00 TABLE 500 items. Reg. 1.98 . . MEN'S 2-PANT SUITS Single breasted, sizes 34 to 44 Reg. to FROM 9.77 b' S AND ENDS 25¢ RT | 44.95. to 1