The Oshawa Times, 22 Oct 1959, p. 29

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MONEY FOR PROPAGANDA E.P. Taylor Wanted Freer Liquor Laws ' [2 TORONTO (CP) -- E. P. Tay-/in line with a price agreement pany, Riverside, Ont., contained lor wanted freer liquor laws in .cacned by most of the brew- similar complaints. Ontario in 1981 and suggested the| beer industry spend "a consider- ble sum of money for propa-| a , ganda" to help bring this about, hardt Brewery Company Lim- i, the Combines Act trial of Cana- dian Breweries Limited was told Wednesday. Mr, Taylor, now chairman of| the board of Canadian Brew- with Golden Gate fittings; also| eries, sald in a letter to E. M. that your Mr. Barnesse is con-| Burke, general manager of John Labatt Limited of London, Ont, that he felt it his "duty to take the initiative" In urging action by the beer industry. Canadian BRewerlies has pleaded not guilty to the charge of operating ie, The case is tried before Chief Jus- tice J. C. McRuer of the Su- preme Court of Ontario. Mr, Teylor said in the letter, dated Nov. 5, 1931, that the beer industry as a whole was operat- ing at less than 25 per cent capacity. Everyone would bene- fit from relaxed liquor laws, he said BELIEVED CHANGE COMING | "I would not be interested in| purchasing the shares of any! brewery company in Ontario at| the present time, if 1 did not be-| lieve that's change in the liquor| laws of the province is going to come about." The letter added: "There exists a dangerous pre-| ponderance of consumption of] liquors of high, as against those of low alcoholic content, which is opposed to the intent of the Lig-| uor Control Act and which would be remedied. "A modified law will make| possible substantial reductions in | the price of beers and light wines. "The Ontario farmer will bene- | fit greatly by largely increased requirements of harlev, grapes) and apples, which at normal | prices would have a total of sev- eral million dollars SAW NEW JOBS ' "There will be created new jobs for a large number of peo-| ple in breweries, wineries, and | the Industries that supply them with materials and supplies. "Net revenue of the liquor con- | trol board can be Increased) rather than reduced as a result of a modification of the law. "There has been a great| change in the attitude of tens of thousands of prohibitionists to | government control and a modi-| fication of the present liquor laws) could be brought about which | will be more likely to advance the cause of temperance and at| the same time satisfy the re- quirements of many who are in| complete sympathy with the theory of government control but | are critical of many aspects of the application." | COMPLAINS. TO FIRMS dn-another letter introduced in evidence, Mr. Taylor asked two Ontario breweries to stop serving the bootleg trade in 1934 and fall Mine Hurts Canadian Soldier OTTAWA (CP) -- A Canadian soldier had to have both his legs amputated Tuesday after a jeep struck an anti-tank mine on the desert near Rafah, Egypt, army headquarters reported Wednes- day. Pte, W. E. Johnson, 32, of Cal- gary, a sapper serving with the United Nations Expeditionary Force, was a front-seat passen- ger in the jeep when its right front wheel ran over a sand. covered mine, | Returned to the UNEF hospi- | tal at Rafah, his right leg was amputated above the knee and | his leit leg below the knee. His condition was described as satis. | factory. * | Another Canadian sapper, Pte. James O'Dowd of Fort Henry Heights, near Kingston, suffered superficial neck and face wounds. O'Dowd was riding in the back seat, Two Palestinian employees of the UN force were slightly in- i red. All the injured, treated at Rafah, were reported in satis- factory condition, The UN said the incident was under investigation SILENT NIGHT FOR SNORERS LONDON (AP)--The British Medical Association Wednesday appealed for several hundred international snorers to take part in an experiment called | Operation Silent Night. The appeal was issued by the sp The Family Doctor. f Object of the experiment--to cure snoring. "We need some hundreds of really bad snorers who are pre- | pared to act as guinea pigs," said Dr, Har ey Flack, the mu gnzine's ed' or The volunte rs need neither money nor operations, and will not be asked to take medicine or submit to surgery. "We want our snorers to | 0 some simple exercises Juw &.d (hroat muscles {or 0 minutes every night be- fois they go to sleep," Flack | sald. He sfid the family doctor | particularly wants volunteer husbands and wives who share | the same bedroom. "The results could help snor- | ers all over the world," Flack said. "And incidentally, of | course, the volunteers may stop | themselves from snoring." J | eries, In a letter dated Aug. 2, 1934, to 8. . Davies of Toronto's Rein- ited, Mr, Taylor said: "I have been Informed that you are supplying certain hotels in Toronto with kegs equipped tinuing to service the trade in Hamilton. "Both these practices are not in accord with the decisions reached by the Brewers' Ware- housing Company Limited recent meetings. I think you will agree with me that unless the industry can co-operate In such matters that the future profits of every- one will be jeopardized?" Another letter of the same date, addressed to E. Sebulske of the Riverside Brewing Com- bootleg | FALL-IN-LINE ADVICE "As you are aware, the brew- industry agreed on certain prices and to eliminate other un- | desirable practices. We trust that {you will promptly fall in line with |the rest of the industry," he said. The agreement among the brewers was referred to in a document read to the court by fat n 1 Donald Guthrie. It was a letter from Mr, Taylor to R. B. Prichard, sec- retary of the corporation's com- mittee in London, England, dated July 4, 1981, "You will be interested to know all of the breweries of Ontario {have signed an agreement which is expected to eliminate the un- |desirable tactics which had 'grown up in the business through | | Dog Saved From Starving TORONTO (CP -- A small dog has been saved from starv- ing by two detectives who raided an apartment on a tip from St. Catharines police who had the dog's owner in custody. The detectives heard the dog whining and found it locked in the bathroom Tuesday night, After feeding it they searched the apartment and found 10 guns, four of them loaded. They also recovered $3,500 worth of stolen goods, Police said that if St, Catha- rines detectives had not found the apartment address on one of the two mfen they arrested for shopbreaking, the dog would have starved to death while its owner awaited trial, Toronto detectives went to St, Catharines Wednesday to ques- tion the men. | {the very keen competition that has prevailed," the letter said. "In our case, we will be able to effect a saving of at least $20,000 a month as long as this agreement remains in force." Oblate priest advocates shark provide Eskimos with possibly a SOURCE OF REVENUE Shark Fishing May Aid Eskimo CHURCHILL, Man, (CP) -- An fishing in the Eastern Arctic to major source of revenue. Even if it should not prove feasible as a commercial venture, it could provide Eskimos with the winter supply of food for their dogs, says Rev. Guy Mary-Rous- seliere. He outlines the possibilities in the current edition of Eskimo, a quarterly magazine on life in the Arctic published here by the Ob- late Fathers of the Hudson Bay vicariate, Successful experiments at catching sharks were made, during the last two winters at Pond Inlet on the northeast coast of Baffin sland, more than 400 miles north of the Arctic Circle. LARGE NUMBERS / Fishermen from Greenland and Norway recognize the commer- cial value of the blue shark found he says, and quotes a Canadian in large numbers in Baffin Bay, government report stating these two in 1948 caught sharks valued at $1,850,000, "The shark has two products of recognized commercial value, From its huge liver is extracted an ofl, rich in vitamin A, and its skin serves to manufacture a high-quality shagreen," he says. Shagreen is a type of untanned leather, The RCMP conducted experi- ments in shark fishing two win- ters ago, catching about 10 sharks in a few days, Father Mary-Rous- seliere said, and last winter he asked Constable Dale Nelson to renew the attempt. During a mild spell in late No- vember they cut through foot- thick ice several hundred yards from shore and dropped about 100 feet of line to the rocky bottom. On the line was a metal leader and a four- or five - inch hook, THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, October 22, 1959 20 Publishe I Receives Praise Loses Appeal LONDON (AP)--Dr. Geoffrey ppe of Fisher, archbishop of Canterbury,| VANCOUVER (CP) -- George told a meeting of British church- North lates 4 a eo men Wednesday that no Chris-|,; "oonon) against conviction for tian could possibly put forward|contempt of court and will a better disarmanent plan than|30 days. Nikita Khrushchev's, "I am surprised that no Chris [tian body made any comment possible to catch a respectable number of sharks without much trouble." ; "Doubtless we would have provided paper was fined $3,000, x He referred to the Soviet pre.| The appeal court unanimously mier's disarmament plan pres- upheld both the fine and the im: ented at the United Nations last|prisonment. month, Mr. Justice Whittaker found an The religious leader spoke be- editorial published by the paper fore the British Council of|entitled, "Injunctions won't catch Churches. 2 fish, nor build bridges" was #& flagrant case of contempt. ' caught on one hook, that is to say two heads and one complete shark, the third having eaten the) second which had already eaten and ate them hungrily, he said. However, no signs of poisoning or {llness could be observed and the dogs thrived on the diet. "I am satisfied to quote this fact without drawing any conclu. sions." 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