2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Friday, December 5, 1959 Britain, West Germany 5 New Stamps [& in 1903 and served parishes' periods in Manitoba, Leth. ge, Alta. Paris, Ont, and Vankleek Hill, Ont, Boy Scouts Lauded To Be Issued He was instrumental in 'bring. ing churches of the Powassan and Schreiber area of Northwest ern Ontario into church union in 1925. Since his retirement in 1954 he has lived here and substituted for periods at parishes in the Ot OTTAWA (CP) -- At least five new postage stamps will be is sued during 1960, Postmaster- General William Hamilton an- nounced Thursday. He also said in a statement that the familiar blue aercgram To Develop Weapons gun already has been ordered by the United States. The communique said the two countries also plan to co-operate on a project for "a system of de- BONN (Reuters) -- Britain and West Germany announced Thurs- day an unprecedented plan to share and develop certain stra- c is ~~ For ,OTTAWA (CP) -- masters from Hastings, Ont., H ; A t 1 Three scout-| The trio were cited for the res-| "It is a v noble thing to cue of four tourists from Mor-{face danger for one's fellow | MILAN JAKUBEC "COLORFUL BACKGROUND Refugee Forms Anti-Red League By GERALD L'ANGE fore the Un-American Activities Canadian Press Staff Writer |committee in Washington a racket were among 20 boy scouts and masters honored at a Govern- ment House investiture Thurs- Receiving awards for heroic action from Governor . General Vanier were Philip G. Day, Wil- liam L. White and Robert H Schriver, ganstown, Ohio, whose boat had near Campbellford Aug. 31, 1958. Day and White, each 22, re- Scriver received the Gilt Cross for gallantry with moderate risk. The 20 men and boys stood proudly, yet humbly, before Gov- ernor-G 1 Vanier who pinned PRINCESS ANNE GOOD BROWNIE LONDON (AP)--Tuesday is a special day around Bucking- ham Palace--so special that the marshal of the court has to use tion when he schedul the day's program. Nothing can be allowed to conflict with the weekly meet- ing of Princess Anne's Brownie pack. The nine - year-old princess has been a Brownie since last May, learning to tie knots, set the tea table, wash dies and stay alive while w. g in heavy traffic. The last exercise involves venturing out into fairly busy streets Many motorists, waved to a halt by a pack leader, never know they are stopped so that a princess in Brownie dress could cross. If Anne were not a princess she would meet with her pack at Holy Trinity Church near the palace. But public appearances by small princesses attract too much attention. So, at the direction of the Queen, the Holy Trinity pack TORONTO (CP) -- In 1948 alin which, he said, C i J Czechoslovakian Airlines plane/countries were extracting mil- + flying from Brno to Prague sud-|lions of dollars from immigrants denly changed course and|sending parcels to relatives be- : crossed the Iron Curtain into hind the Iron Curtain. West Germany. The pilot had no| The league includes a veter- ; choice--there was a pistol at his|ans' council, and publishes a back. monthly bulletin, Voice of Free- The man who held the gun was|dom, distributed in Canada and Milan Jakubec, who mow works Overseas. as & designer of highway signs in| It claims as honorary members the Ontario highways department|Roland Michener, Speaker of the at Toronto. House of Commons; Charles E. This mav seem a sedentary oc- Rea, Progressive Conservative ry MP for Toronto Spadina; Dr. eupation for.a man who has had iw. icon Kirkconnell, president of enough adventures to fill a novel, Acadia. University in Nova but the 36-year-old Czech's life 15/50 1a. and Solon Low, leader of + still mixed with drama. Outside, "c ia)" Credit party . office hours he is leader of an or- ' was adopted by Buckingham Palace. The pack, with 23 members, follows the normal Brownie pro- gram with one possible conces- sion to the royal presence--the girls are learning to knit a little ahead of schedule. It seems Miss Mary Millican, the pack leader, havnened to mention that it was World Re- fugee Year and many women and girls gre knitting warm garments for refugees. "But I can't knit!" exclaimed the princess. The girls. are learning now. » ganization of expatriates from "behind the Iron Curtin who operate their own anti . Commu-| nist intelligence service in Can- ada. DARING ESCAPE Jakubec says he was a radio operator - navigator with the Czech national airline when he organized the escape Oct. 4, 1948. While he held a gun on the pilot, Bupther airline siploves covered jet-propelled tour of 11 countries, P s, wi s t restige--both per- wife and young son of Czecho- has a dot of prestige riding Lorry ak Prime minister, Vilam mm. so aboard was a 4 He has stated repeatedly that bee's wife and baby son. the purpose of his tour of Europe, The plot was a daring bluff, | 5g." ang North Africa Is to con for 'both guns were unloaded, (ince the people of the countries says Jakubec. he will visit that the United Only seven of the 15 on the States wants peace. knew of the plot, but when| 'we have tried," he explained : landed at Munich only the|at 3 press conference Wednesday, pilot and the premier's wife and «ty emphasize this point in every son elected to return behind the possible way, through diplomatic fron Curtain. \One of the escap|eontacts, through speches of the ees, now Mrs. Jarmila Stibrany, secretary of state, myself and By KEN .SMITH Canadian Press Staff Writer President Eisenhower, off on a Ike Sets Out On Peace Mission weight and authority that will be xisemely hard to ignore er over- of geology for the Royal Ontario countries he visited, his pro- nouncements will have a new Prospectors To Be Kept Out Of Parks TORONTO (CP)--The curator awards on their chests. The white-haired governor-gen- eral, performing one of his first official functions since taking of- fice, sat in a high - backed red chair on a dais as winners came forward one at a time. HIGHEST HONOR First were three scouts to receive the Cornwell Scout Badge, highest award in scout- Next were eight scoutmasters receiving the Silver Cross, in- cluding five from Springhill, N.S. who were in the first rescue group to enter No. 2 colliery in October, 1958, after a bump trap- ped 174 miners underground. Thelr awards were for "sus- tained bravery over a period of avs." General Vanier, in a brief speech after the investitute, said the occasion was a happy one for recipients who felt the deep and comforting satisfaction of having done their duty, a duty with sacred character because it involved sacrifice and suffering. overturned on the Trent Canal himself ceived the Silver Cross while|dang man," said the general, erippleG wounds in the First World War. "Never be afraid, be cause fear destroys, and facing er uplifts." "The scouting movement is one of the things that gives hope for the future. . . .I am proud of you, and I have no hesitation in saying that Canada is proud of you as well." FIRST RECIPIENT Patrol Leader Frederick John Vance of Kemano, B.C., was the irst to come forward. He re- ceived the Cornell Badge' for "great courage and fortitude dis- played when he suffered very se- vere burns to his face and arms an exploding gasoline lantern." The next Cornwell winner walked forward with apparent difficulty, but without crutches. Patrol Leader Andrew Mark Stevens of Lloydminster, Sask., has suffered spinal trouble from birth, His citation read: 'For his courage and industry in attaining the Queen's Scout Award in spite of great phvsical suffering." Scout Michael William Byng- Hall, 19, of Vancouver made his way slowly to the dais on crutches, dragging his braced legs which have been crippled since he suffered polio in in- fancy. "For his courage and en- durance in spite of great physi- cal suffering," read the Cornwell citation, EXPORT TO U.S. By H. L. JONE Canadian Press Staff Writer Close to 200,000 head of beef cattle rcam the ranges of inter- ior British Columbia where nu- tritious bunch grass grows high and a $15,000,000-a-year industry ficurishes. The province ships thousands of cattle to United tates mar kets, the volume depending on price-market demand. Last year, when prices were high, some 32, 000 head of cattle found their way across the border. However, the big, steady mar- ket of the B.C. producer is the metropolitan Vancouver area which has the highest per capita consumption of beef in Canada The province raises about one- half of her beef needs, importing the remainder mainly from Al- berta. EYED BY US. . Begun a century with American stock driven from Ore- gon and Washington te feed the the big industry now is being miners of the Cariboo gold rush, eyed by American capital. Already U.S. interests own a number of the industry's larger ranches. And real estate men say American inquiries about smaller and medium-sized prop- guided missiles. The plan was announced at the end a two-day meeting be- tween the British and West Ger- man defence ministers, Harold Watkinson and Franz - Josef Strauss, . The two powers will join forces to develop the new British Blue- water surface-to-surface missile. The communique said they will recommend that NATO adopt the in the field. The two countries also will eco- tank and develop standard tank armaments and anti-tank weap- ons, the communique said. BUY BRITISH GUNS West German defence ministry sources said British 105 - milli- metre guns will be fitted to more than 1,000 German tanks, The Lakehead Saw 131 Vessels PORT ARTHUR (CP)---A total of 131 ocean vessels called at the Lakehead this year, transporting nearly 32,000,000 bushels of grain to foreign and Canadian ports. Statistics released Thursday by port warden Captain P. C. Fin- lay show at least 16 of the ocean vessels brought general cargo and petroleum to the Lakehead, totalling 13,000 long tons, new missile for support of armies N operate to produce a prototype eral form for overseas airmail letters tawa and Pembroke areas. fence against low - flying air- or will be completely redesigned. .| The regular issue stamps por- traying the Queen will placd with new designs and is expected that at least two of denominations of the new pear but will not occupy the en- tire area of the design as at present. In the remaining space some specifically Canadian sym- FOUR SEASONS TRAVEL 4 4 Nn ul RA. 8-62 bol will be printed, weer rug Addicts To Be Rided TORONTO (CP) -- Frederick G. Gardiner, who initiated a ORGANIST Every Evening 9 P.M. TO 12 HOTEL LANCASTER committee to study drug addic- Thursday sted addicts Sow, oy Jobs#iith Metropolitan th Toronto as a step to their re- habilitation, Mr, Gardiner, chairman of the metro council, told the metro welfare committee two convicted addicts have already been hired as temporary emplovees by metro and "both are first-class pected to open in late spring, at Galt. The two-storey building, which will employ about 25 persons, will be located on Main Street in the downtown shopping area. employees." Demolition of an old building] He said addicts now get six now on the site will start imme- months for a first conviction and diately and construction will con-|are sent to Toronto Don Jail tinue through the winter. where withdrawal treatment is B.C. Breeds Beef Cattle 1870s a Cariboo country aroun ton, is ewned by W.P. Studdert of Philipsburg, Mont.,| ont, Several hundred searchers and a 'Montana partner, bought it in 1948. 4,000 and 5,000 hexd of cattle, controls close to 1,000,000 acres seeing a car coming towards him nl grazing rights on crown land on the wrong side of the highway under permit, the largest in B.C. but cannot recall the actual col for grazing acreage, AID CATTLE DRIVE More than 18,000,000 bushels of grain and flour was transported to foreign ports by 81 vessels. This year was the first time that more than 1,000,000 tons of grain was shipped from the Lake- head on ocean vessels. The Lake- head, third busiest port in Can- ada, previously averaged about 14,000,000 tons of goods moved each year. the addicts be sent to the River- dale Isolation Hospital, rehabili- tated during their sentence and then given temporary employ- ment by metro following their 5 Students: [5 bi Runny bie Wg 8 Ps r all purposes . vr stamps ware Walmsley & Magill Office Equip. Ld. 9 KING ST. E., OSHAWA Tel. RA 5-3506 release. The welfare committee began discussion of a 137-page report Accepted prepared by Mr. Gardiner's com- mittee on drug addiction. Funeral For By College TORONTO (CP) -- Five of 11 students rejected by medical ex- aminers for admittance to the Hi) st Vanished Boy Returns From Sask. CALLANDER (CP) -- An 18- year - old youth who vanished dlafter a car accident 15 months |ago returned to his home in this * | North Bay district hamlet Thurs. |day and said he fled because he + 4 thought "something terrible had '% | happened." Elwood Baker, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Baker, was one of the drivers in a two-car eollision Aug.) 30, 1958, in which seven persons were injured. All have since recovered. After the acci- | +(spent more than a week hun They for him in the buch, eng by was wandering about stunned by The ranch which runs between| shock. The youth said he remembers lision. self in the bush the next day wet He said he recalls finding him- Lak e T College have been accepted after re-examina tion, Prmier Frost said Thurs- Ex-Minister day following a cabinet meeting. CARLETON PLACE, Ont. (CP) One of the five is Jim Babinetz|--Funeral service was held of Oakville, a subject of public|/Thursday for Rev. W. D. Reid, controversy who has scaled down|79, retired former minister of the his weight in a program of ex-|United Church at nearby Middle- ercise and diet. ville, 85 miles southwest of Ot- Mr. Babinetz weighed 278/taw: GET THE BEST For Less At MODERN UPHOLSTER™G 926%, SIMCOE ST. N. . OSHAWA RA 8-6451 or RA 3-4131 a. pounds when he was re; Mr. Reid emigrated from Glas- by the college on grounds of "gross obesity." He since has dropped to about 200. Health Minister said five others did not want to be re-examined by the University of Toronto's faculty of medicine and one other did not reply to the invitation for re-examination. ". +'« These students have lost some weeks in training and study," Mr, Frost said, "and it is proposed to give them special Snlonag to make up any lost e, "Sickness because of over weight has an effect on super. annuation," he added. "I'm sure 420 ELIZABETH Lisl: HAS PRO - No be more specific in requirements, CHAMBERS 65 UNDERWRITERS RD. STAN BRYNING OSHAWA REPRESENTATIVE D1 FOOD CLUB 0) GRRE RET) RA 8.5358 AN THAT EN ITSELF crties are on the increase. Not all of the 22,000 head of cattle driven north in the mid- 1800s reached the Barkerville Museum: told a provincial lands investigation committee Thurs day that prospectors and mining developers should be kept out of also lives in Toronto. others, and still it doesn't come Jakubec's adventures began | through." when as a youth he worked with the Czech underground against DELICIOUS The owners have also pur-|land hungry. He walked into Sud. chased a 1,000-acre ranch known|hury, 80 miles west and kept go- NOT CORRECT as the Meadow Creek property.|ing west "because I thought the Nazis. Later. he fought with gcross the snow-covered Pyren- ees, on one journey carrying an injured companion. SERVED IN RAF He talked his way out of a Spanish internment camp by im- personating a French . Canadian and served four years with the RAF, flying 33 operations. He made his empty-gun escape after )g returned unwillingly to hoslovakia at the war's end. Back in England he rejoined the RAF and served until May, 1949, Unable to find a job with a civil That statement of his purpose, however, is not quite accurate. The alternative to the U.S. want- ing peace is wanting war, and of the countries Eisenhower will visit believe that the U.S. is eager to start a world conflagration. What the officials may have some private doubts about is what kind of a peace the U.S. wants. A common feeling in many of these countries is that the U.S. wants a peace that will be to its 'advantage. To countries such as India, Tu- nisia, Morocco and Pakistan, any dealing that would give a major Western power such as the U.S. any advantages smacas of ex- few if any of the officials of anv| . provincial parks, Walter M. Tovell, who also is president of the Fdeeration of Ontario Naturalists, told the - member government com- mittee his organization does not oppose restricted timber-cutting on park lands but is dead against mining development except in a case of national emergency. He said park lands are living museums, as important as na- tional archives and art galleries. E. T. Kelsey, secretary of the Quetico Foundation, said provin- cial parks are valuable to Canadian and United States tourists as places of recreation, adding t hat this year 5,127,000 area, centre of the gold rush. ome were sod along the way to construction gangs, others to ranchers for breeding stock. Many perished in rivers or at the hands of hostile ndians, tle strung out along the few roads and trails, bunched around rich pasture land or by favored watering places. The Alkali Lake ranch, begun in 1861, is said to be the oldest in the province. It embraces some 48,000 acres southwest of Williams Lake and maintains some 2,500 head of range cattle. SETTLED LATER o Ranches started with the cal: pane which nas grazing rights on 800,000 acres more in the Chilcotin country. of Williams Lake complemen This serves as a holding point at|something terrible had happened the half-way mark in their cattle back there." drives to the loading point on the Pacific Great Eastern Railway|got a ride in a house trailer to Elwood began hitch-hiking and at Fifty-even Mile House. Wroxton, Sask. He found Work on John L. Wad Los Angeles|2 farm under his own name bu or the 50.000 Cr oy Age es | caid he could Dot bring himself to write home. Last month he wrote a letter home from Yorkton, Sask: a The Circle S Ranch compris-|left by bus shortly after. He sa he listened to broadcasts and ig some 35,000 acres Sontpwest read newspapers on his trip west without finding any mention of by grazing land was purchased the accident. this year by Allerton Ci EAT Coming Up With... LITZ Quality Christmas of Bonita, Ariz., where he owns an 85,000-acre property. The Circle S was originally a winter holding area for horses POULTRY persons visited 52 provincial parks. Both briefs were fully en- POULTRY FARM used by freighters on the Cariboo d an PROCESSING PLANT gold trail in the 1860's. It now runs some 2,500 head of cattle, ploitation. pirline, he came to Canada in 3 This suspicion, of course, is one The Kamloops and Nicola 1953. A year later he formed the areas, now the heart of the prov- of the Mutual Co - Operation League of Canada to unite independent or- ganizations representing 19 eth- nic groups from Eastern Europe, who- form about 3,500,000 of this country's population. Jakubee, Bpesident of the league, claims represents 250,000 expatriates from countries now controlled by Communis:s. "The league was formed as a pocial and cultural body, but as most members are confirmed keystones to the Afro- Aslan neutralist policy. The depth of the feeling can be judged by the fact that India, facing a possible war with mighty Communist China, has said that any U.S. military aid would have to be on a strict nmo-strings-at- {tached basis. Eisenhower hopes his personal |dignity and unquestioned sincer- ity can succeed in overcoming this feeling where diplomacy and fine-sounding speeches made in oui «C s, this b organization's main theme. .Jakubec and fellow-officers of the group, like vice - president epe Tomory, a former ma- i '~ general in the Hungarian Army, see the shadow of Com- Runist domination following even to Canada. They be- ¢ the government may not be aware of the extent of Com- munist acitivity in this country. "For this reason, says Jakubec, the léague has organized a net- tof informants through gton have failed. No doubt remembering the en- thusiastic greetings given him by the people on his European tour | this summer, Eisenhower appar- ently is confident he again can win friends and influence people. NATIONAL IMPORTANCE U.S. national prestige will be put on the line when Eisenhower meets with his Western counter. parts at the Western summit meeting in Paris Dec. 19. and in vverseas coun- .- He claims this intelligence at times has provided yal Canadian Mounted Po- fice with information. EXPOSED RACKET last year Jakubec exposed be- Woman To Be Tried fo Husband's Death ORA (CP) -- Dorothy Joan Herman, 36, will be tried at. the spring assizes of the Su- preme Court of Onterio opening iti Belleville Jan. 12 for the mur- der of her husband, John. m of Madoc at the conclu-\views, Eisenhower needs some-|248,001 tons in November, 1958.|umbia's lake - dotted and river- m of her preliminary hearing ay, when she was com- If Eisenh is ul in the personal part of his trip, it will add great stature to his po- sition at the Western summit. Britain, France and West Ger- many have been busy building up their international egos during the last year, Prime Minister Macmillan, for instance, has taken credit for eas- ing international tensions by get- ting East and West leaders to start talking to each other, President de Gaulle has, been calling for other Western coun- tries to follow France's advice in international affairs. Chancellor Adenauer suspects that the U.S. is backing down on the Russian threat, and indicates that the Western alliance needs a new, vigorous policy. Whatever the justice to these thing to re-emphasize the U.S. position as wilted for trial. Oct. 10. "Her husband was shot at their the conference table and point to tons, compared to 52,792,715 in 'sewly-won solid support from the' al dorsed by the Conservation Council of Ontario. Forbes McFarland, Ontario mining commissioner and chair- man of the committee, said op- posing viewpoints were that pro- vincial parks provide little rev- enue for the government and mining operations can be taxed. r ince"s cattle country, were not permanently settled until later because they were not on the strictly of Hereford breed. route to the gold fie'ds., Prior to 1870 another rich ranching area --the Chilcotin .country -- re- ined almost babiiad Today there are hundreds of h spread throughout the Iron Ore 'Shipments Increased CLEVELAND (AP) -- Great Lakes iron ore shippers, hurry- ing to bring ore down from Up- per Lakes ports before the winter freeze, moved 5,065,942 gross tons in the last three weeks of November. This compares with 4,281,562 moved in the full month of No- vember last year, according to figures released Thursday by the American Iron Ore Associa- tion. Shippers lost the first week of the month this year because of the steel strike. Through November, 39,541,448 tons had been shipped this year to Lower Lakes ports in the United States, compared with 50, 601,774 in the comparable period cattle country, stretching from the East Okanagan northward al- most to the wheat-growing Peace River country." They range from small units with about 50 head to massive operations like the Doug- las Lake Cattle Company. ituated in the Nicola Valley, it comprises some 144,000 acres of owned or leased land and has between 10,000 and 13,000 head of cattle, It also has grazing per- mits on 400,000 acres of crown land. The holdings were sold recently by Col. Victor pencer of Van- couver and Lieutenant-Governor Frank Ross to Woodward's stores, Vancouver, for a sum be- lieved to run into millions, START "SUPERFARM" Recently an enterprise new to British Columbia--the superfarm --was disclosed. Triangle Ranch Limited, which has several thou- sand acres in the Peace River country far to the north, plans to launch a $3,000,000 operation for the mass production, not only of beel, but of dairy products, feed last year. |, Shipments to Canadian ports in the first 11 months were nearly double those for the first 11] months last year--3,999,896 tons compared to 2,190,941 tons. | The Canadian ports' total dropped slightly during Novem- ber to 244,817 tons, ed to and other crops. | The company, controlled| majnlv by Dawson Creek inter- esfs, hopes to have an income of some $200,000 a year by 1962 and now is applying for rights on sur- rounding crown land on which to operate. Ranchers from Texas, Arizona and Mont seek British Col- With the Canadian totals, the the strongest power in|over-all total of shipments from tential compared to drier lands {the West. 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