: 2 HE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursdey, January 14, 1960 INTERPRETING THE NEWS | GE Invites ARCTIC PHOTOGRAPHER BEAR ON | i] wt PARKS WITH CAMERA a " the United States, Inadian plants. The company is) ICE FLOE 1 65 Firms To Compete TORONTO (CP)--The General {Electric Company, fourth largest supplier of defence materials in has invited Canadian industry to compete {for about $350,000,000 "worth of subcontracts among the $1,400, 1000,000 defence orders it has ob- By ALAN HARVEY | Canadian Press Staff Writer |on Berlin," Chancellor Adenauer's latest! The statement brings out, more statement on Berlin puts Anglo-|clearly than divergent Anglo-Ger- German relations back on the old man statements at the Paris sum- uneasy basis. {mit meetings, that West Ger- With Prime Minister, Macmil-| many is determined to opp any to budge from its legal position Adenauer Opposes Berlin Concession Parents Must Be In Court PEMBROKE (CP) The mother and father of four are scheduled to appear in court to- day on charges of neglecting their children. Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Potts were taken into custody Wednes- day after one of their unattended [children was burned severely Tuesday night when their two- ther resentful toward Adenauer.[room frame cabin eight miles Last summer, some were saying west of here was destroyed by that everything would be fine if fire. the ch llor would be as rea-| Eight-months-old Barry is in the May 16 East - West summit conference, Some British officials feel ra- {tained from the U.S. government this year. At a special purchasing sem- |inar held here Monday and Tues- day = General Electric officials met representatives of 65 Cana- dian firms to discuss the offer, |The firms were invited to the {seminar by the department of de- |fence production as a result of a 'production-sharing agreement be- tween the two countries last lan visiting Africa, there is likely|flexible negotiations on Berlin. to be little public comment from Macmillan, on the other hand, Whitehall, but it is certain that|feels that some concessions must the foreign office wishes Adenauer/be médde by the West to main- would keep silent for a while tain the present more relaxed In Berlin Monday, the 84 - year-|/trend in East West diplo- old chancellor came out point/matic relations. blank and said that the West must| If Germany bars the door on! go back on the concessions on Berlin, Macmillan is understood Berlin offered at the Geneva con-|to feel, Russian leader Nikita ference of foreign ministers last Khrushchev will conclude that| summer. "detente diplomacy" has nol year. . ; "The proposals now are void," meaning after all, | Companies will compete on an Adenauer said. "Nothing must al- equal basis with U.S. firms for 10 the West to repeat them. 1 COMPLICATING FACTOR the sub - contracts, mostly fori emind the whole world that the] The difference between Mac- {electrical and electronic compon-|west has solemnly promised not millan and Adenauer, if it per- lents. General Electric officials y sists, will certainly complicate {said no limit will be placed on| matters for the Western powers {the amount of business open to| INJURED WIFE |in harmonizing their approach to sonable in his public speeches as fair condition in hospital with he tends to be in his private|arm, leg and abdominal burns. talks. They have pretty much the|Cheryl, 3, Terry, 4, and Roder- same reaction to the latest de-|ick, 5, have been placed in the velopment. custody of the Children's Aid So- A section of British opinion ciety. while agreeing with $his, may| Police sald the parents were féel that part of the fault lies|visiting neighbors when the fire with Whitehall. In this view, Brit: started in a cupboard. Its cause ain had a golden chante to assert has not been determined, leadership over Europe in the -- early years after the Second! ] . . World War, Instruction Aid Most Important She declined, citing as one ex-| cuse her commonwealth commit. MONTREAL (CP) -- Pierre Mendes-France, former French GIVEN DAMAGES 'Counse The U.S. company has offered to send teams to evaluate costs, |eompetence and facilities in Ca- LONDON (Reuters) -- A wo- looking to Canada as a longsterm| man injured in an automobile supplier, spokesmen indicated. | rast | Tariff barriers will likely pre-| to be k 'vent General Electric letting non-\was awarded military sub-contracts, a spokes- | in court Wednes man said. Her husband, ~ received £115 d: of his wife's sc r can bear er husband | damages TORONTO (CP)---Counsel for Steven Truscott, 14, under sen- ley Booker, »s for los For New Trial ments. Now, with Germany and France tending to run things on the continent, it may be too late for London to cut in on the Paris. premier, has called on the West- ern powers to place greater stress on education and technical assistance in providing aid to Bonn axis, 1 Asks under-developed nations. In an address Wednesday night to the national convention of the Hadassah . Wizo Organization of Canzda, he said Russia has been first to recognize foreign ald for turn alone shortly afterwards. Poor nations must be channeled This supported Truscott's state-|into instruction rather than cash. He said it is important that the ence of death for the murder of ment that he dropped the girl at| = suffered |a 12-year-old girl, asked Wednes-|the highway and saw her| West catch up because the new , [ds for a new trial or acquittal |"thumb" a lift from a car, (nations might someday become + contending that the jury may| Truscott was sentenced to be| the true arbiters" in deciding have been prejudiced by a state-|hanged Feb, 16 but Justice Min-| Whether capitalism or commu- riding. ment mentioned at the opening|ister Fulton has said that the nism will prevail A doctor testified her frigid- of the boy's trial in September, death sentence will not be car-| Mr. Mendes France cited ity resulted directly from dame T John O'Driscoll is conducting|ried out. | Scag! a8 a young pation fat has age to her bra " He said i 'ruscott's appeal against his con- pROSECU' ' MEN us: oreign aia to better advan- was unlikely her relations iy i viction of murdering Lynne| william TO RGUMENT of tage than any other similar date. her husband ever would be Harper at Clinton. public prosecutions, said Trus- normal again He said Crown Attorney Glenn cott should have testified in his Mrs. Booker, head injuries in a eo years ago. of the car sion She sued the drive in which she was Natural Gas Reserves Up EDMONTON (CP) -- The Al attributed to smaller new dis- berta oil and ation |coveries and the remainder due board says the re-|to "appreciation of previously re- serves of nat ral gas within the province stand at an estimated 26.9 trillion cubic feet. The board, in an official report ¢ says the [igure represents an in- j crease of 2.1 trillion cubic feet|ywith a 1989 peak requirement of discoveries in the and Lookout Butte areas and 10|Alberta reserves and before any| developments in the field north of Ee | Dog-Loving Girl name for the puppy. since the last estimate, dated Dec, 81, 1058 ¢ feet of the in- is based on new Burnt Timber creased figure wan Hills Edmonton Another 100 billion cubic feet Receives Puppy ST. THOMAS (CP) Dog- lover Judy Ferren arrived home| Says. Wednesday with a nine-week-old COUNT ON 4.4 TRILLION puppy the German shepherd she lost on her way here from England. given her to replace Jinty, Judy has not decided on a "1 won't call it Jinty, though," ported discoveries." In addition to becoming (Hayes mentioned in his openingiown defence if he wanted to British Exports The board says approximately 604 billion cut frigid, Mrs. Booker suffered loss of sense and smell. Her lawyer said she had changed from a happy sociable person to almost a recluse. Judge Wants Testimony | On Accused NEEDS UNTIL 1989 Alberta's requirements for the next 30 years have been esti. {mated at 8.4 trillion cubic feet, 12.1 billion cubic feet. . The board says it will be neces- sary to reserve 11.7 trillion cubic feet to meet Alberta needs be- tween now and 1989 The board frequently reviews| | | | gas is declared surplus and avall-| able for export a 30-year supply for the province is computed "With the further confirmation of the reliability of the trends in the growth of reserves, the board now considers that full weight !may be given with complete safety to the new reserves which will be developed within the next (five years," the board's report Forsyth said Wednesday that pro ) ceedings to date in the trial of David Moody, 42, charged with | assaulting a policeman and car-| it appear that the policeman is on trial. "lI haven't heard much about the accused," he said | | "Taking only those reserves estimated on a conservative ba- sis which will be developed by| Witnesses Wednesday Included | {Sept. 30, 1961, 4.4 trillion cubic|constable George | Hills and a| may be counted upon injman and a woman who were | TORONTO (CP)--Judge Robert |" rying a dangerous weapon, make! address a statement taken by po- lite and signed by Truscott, but was stopped by the trial judge, | Mr. Justice R. I. Ferguson, and told he should not have said any- thing about it. STATEMENT EXCLUDED Mr, O'Driscoll said the judge then dismissed the jury and said| mention of the statement would] not matter if it were later put in as evidence, but if it were a mistrial would have caused, The judge later ruled the statement inadmissible. Mr. O'Driscoll also sald no blood was found on Truscott's jeans on the night of the murder. Evidence equally consistent Truscott's innocence as his guilt was the testimony of his schoolmate, Allan Logan, that he saw Truscott giving the girl a lift on his bicycle and saw him re- Copper And Nickel Production Up OTTAWA (CP) -- Sharp in. creases in Canadian production of copper and nickel in Novem- not,| Mr, Justice W. F. Schroeder been | gqiq prove his innocence. . Truscott's defence, he said, was alibi evidence given by| At Record High youngsters, | LONDON (AP) -- British ex- Mr. Justice A. M. Lebel, oneiports reached an all-time high in of five Judges hearing the ap-/1959, the hoard of trade said peal, said, "This case is differ-| Wednesday. ent." | The 1959 ex it i 5 port total--£3,326,- Would you risk putting a 14-1500 009 ($8,870,420,000)--was five year-old child in the witness box! or cent higher than the figure when his life was at stake? {for 1958 and one per cent more "he was represented by than 1957, the previous best year. counsel. All Truscott needed to! British imports in 1959 to. do was tel] the truth." talled £3,993,000,000 ($10,660,810, 000), 6%2 per cent higher than in 1958, but one per cent less than {1957. | | Vice-Principal Receives Honor TORONTO (CP) -- Harold L. Eubank, 49, vice - principal of Etobicoke collegiate here, has been named Ontario's outstand- Ing mathematics and science teacher. Did You Know . . . In the main Dining Room of the GENOSHA HOTEL you con have a Full-course Dinner for | ONLY 95¢. Col. T. M. director of the Association of Professional Engineers On-| tario, sald Wednesday Mr. Eub-| ank was one of 13 candidates] TALLY-HO ROOM A RENDEZVOUS FOR DISCERNING PEOPLE HOTEL LANCASTER | K PROMPT |established reserves, and having|/was an rth of freight and Mr, d'Iber- expanding supplies operations. Parks contributed ng and packed a record 100,000 tons of did not have the necessary health for the north last year! certificate to take the pup across regard an|the border. However railroad of-|which it is con pictorial record of the ficials quickly arranged for the able by Sept. 30, 1961, some 5.3 dog to be vaccinated weather station on Island 400 miles away from the North nteresting photo- 3,000-horsepower ut eight ease through -thick ice be- grunting into " g have been taken within|y miles of the North Pole JUST A SIDELINE M Parks, 44-year-old native y of North Bay, Ont., started tak. he older, tous ing pictures as a boy but it wa¢lisland channels, not until last year that he ac. Mr ICEBREAKER CUTS THROUGH ICE FIELD , {feet ; ? ked In toe } 1 Mood nominated by the various di | addition to the later years of the parked in the lane where Moody, n | 8 she said on her return from De- 30 ear requirements of the prov.a mechanic, allegedly attacked ber and the Nest 31 Anonius Si{iriste of ans Ontario Secondary |troit, where she has been search-| a a reserve of some 7.3 tril.|police constable James Oliver|1999 wei A y by School Teachers' Federation. {ing for her lost pet since hel lion cubic feet must be made/with a chain. Moody, who was|the bureau of statistics. The award was established last ; . Wat het 4 " |escaped from a baggage Car inj... ,resently established re-|shot in the chest by Oliver,| Copper output in November year. . By ARCH MacKENZIE {sun often, looks brighter tham itjat a time when its northern oper- (ye railyard there. serves to ensure full and proper pleaded not guilty to the assault |rose to 35,271 tons from 20,081 in Mr. Eubank is a native of Canadian Press Siaft Writer |really is. BS ere expanding SURRY The pup was given her when | o .ooiion of Alberta require:|charge. the corresponding month of 1958, Hagersville, Ww ti wi wing fleet that i s he Erni : : ; | hg ric aban OTTAWA (CP) ih Jariiime), EBREAKER WIS BASE | with 2 Srowing Tiget thal aiudesisue appeared on the Froier Ko iments. Hills said he and Oliver were|In the January-November period pho apher who insists he is icebreakers, supply ships, an yace' television show in Holly-|™F y 3 y rd . output increased 11.8 per cent to siri an amateur is helping fill] Some of his shots were taken armada of specialized craft, wood after hitch-hiking to De-| , A further established reserve|dressed in civilian clothes when 364.946 tons from 326,200 swing demand for pictures from the deck of the powerful cranes and tractors to handle troit from here to look for Jinty,|of some 13.7 trillion cubic feet is|they saw a man looking into the Noveromr ackel production he north. government ic e breaker d'Iber-lcargo in a land where dock facil-| The pup arrived at Detroit by, required to meet present eXpUIH| witidow of a parked car Oct. 1. dvanced to 16004 tons from| en Parks, transport depart- ville which ae Joined Jast swim. ities are often non-existent. air Tuesday but was refused Ci ge TE Hat of the Jae Po icemen Jorigwed the nat3,370 2 year earlier boosting the| i i mer at Resolute 7, supply de- r ¢ , ial ships i Judy he board est l . i thi ' njorate Fair ol pot 1 mE ned RC AF The fee: ard commercial ships ary ivio Canada because Judyi innocent citizen in there 11-month total by nearly 23 per graphs from three trips to the We€ vase 1,700 miles ne Arctic in the last two years. Winn By r ity he specialized in] He was aboard ck «- strewn «northern ville's annual das} s bustling with 24-hour un- to Eureka g activity, landscapes Ellesmere bleak as the moon, vessels crash- and 700 riles g gged ice and the Pole of Eskimo boatmen landing, g, got some raphs as the essel cruised kn with rela 70 miles of fi fore nudgin For New TORONTO (CP) foo and Parks went north with the could lead to more than $1,000,-| quired his first new camera, a Supply-laden C. D. Howe in the 000,000 in new mortgage money| Japanese model (twin-lense Top- summer of 1958; landing coflex). He regards his photos as Churchill, Man., and travelling to construct 100,000 homes, y strictly a sideline to his duties Resolute Bay. During the fall he| Elliot N. Yarmon, president of| as information officer. also visited Cambridge Bay on Tankoss Yarmon Limited, an in-| 3 ' ath vo Victoria Island for 15 days while ternational realty investment) a Certs ANY ipESuin You trapsport department personnel firm, told the convention of the ing but with the rapid develop. "cre Preparing for taking over > ment of the north, there is an in- the ai sip from DEV. lie per. creasing demand from many sonriel | CCF Ur £5 publications for such pholo- FORMER NEWSPAPER MAN | Mass Media graphs. His work is being used' Before joining the department, to build up a departmental file. Mr. Parks was a newspaper His recipe for far-north photo- man. He began with a North Bay graphy in summer is simple: weekly, switched to the Daily Stick close to the light meter and Nugget and then moved to Of- aim. Light changes quickly in the fawa where he worked for The north despite six months of day- Journal from 1940 to 1957. He light, he says, and the midnight entered the transport department OTTAWA (CP)--The CCF | seeking Parliamentary commit-| tee study of the extent to which! the mass media of communica-| tion--newspapers and radio and| [television stations -- are becom-| {ing concentrated in the hands of} | fewer corporations. | CCF Leader Hazen Argue said| Wednesday night in a statement Defence Finishes In Beer Litigation TORONTO (CP)--Defence tes- ENCOURAGED MOVES timony in the trial of Canadian! Government offices also en- Breweries Limited, charged with couraged the acquisition of fail- creating a 37-brewery combineling breweries over the 30-year across Canada since 1980, ended period. abruptly Wednesday after two is| order paper a motion calling for| is a serious danger to freedom | Last witness was Francis M lof ownership i : i sme Court , i i , neti | rship in that fiel days in the Supreme Court of ward, vice-president in charge of| The " P as i id study! Ontario production for Canadian Brew. of n « w ' k anal W=lof "the degree of rent Delence Sounsel C. F. H. Car orieg from 1934 to 1956 when he control" thin ouentration of) son fold Ciel pasties yh & Pe retired. |quiring mass-media utlets and| uer all his witnesses en ! # 1 S | heard this a fier os The Mr. Ward said Canadian Brew-|"'the extent to which such mono- Crown's presentation took nearly eries was instrumental or di-|lithic concentration may effect! seven weeks, ending in late rectly responsible for introducing! free expression of opinion and November after 32 witnesses had|TCdern brewing techniques inithe emergence of new vehicles testified. |Canada. It had a $1,000,000 re-|of opinion." The defence produced only four search laboratory in Toronto and| It also would have the Parlia. witnesses and six documents,|SPent $350,000 to $450,000 annu-|mentary committee look into the {relationship between the public The Crown produced 960 exhibits ally in testing. Canadian Breweries pleaded] Mr. Ward said he thought the service responsibilities of the not guilty to the charge. Chief public has all brands It{mass media and their function as Justice McRuer sald he c« wants to choose from. Many of |eornorate enterprises sidered the essence of the case!the bre Hing defunct! The eammittes would also look is whether the merger has elimi.|!n the 1930s were "just a lefi-|into the advisability of setting up| nated competition to an undue|over from the Prohibition daysia communications council to en-| extent when we exporte eer to the! cor e i ie Defence witnesses testified the United States." a ie a alleged combine did not conspire] The trial was adjourned tol ards of publie service and pro-| to set prices because govern-next Monday when counsel willltect individuals from "any x | ment offices in both Ontario and Begin presentation of final argu- cesses" eof communications me- | Quebec regulate beer prices. |ments. |dia. , the eries fail 0 1 Mortgage Bonds Homes -- A realty in-|National House Builders Associa-| tougher ice of Arctic vestment expert outlined Wednes- tion that government guaranteed] NEW OR LEANS (AP) -- day a proposal which he said|bonds could be sold to the gen-'Jacquesc Grellet, consul-general eral public. He said they would supplement at|in the next five years--enough to the existing National Housing Act|Chevalier des Palmes Academ- loans and conventional mortgage funds now in short supply He said he doubted that a re- cent increase in the NHA inter- est rate to 6% per cent from six per cent would produce enough new money to permit the $2,000,- 000,000-a-) operate at its necessary ecapac- ity. NEW CORPORATION His plan included the creation of a new, private, mortgage-lend- ing corporation, functioning in every province with the same rules and regulations that now govern financing and eonstruec- tion of NHA houses. Interest rates on the govern- ment - guaranteed bonds would fluctuate with market conditions and not be frozen like the NHA rate. Under the plan investors could earn about six per cent and mortgages around 6% per cent. Professor J. V. Poapst of the {he has placed on the Commons|University of Toronto's Graduate Institute of Business Administra. {the study because he feels there|tion said house building will be hard hit this year because of an of the press from concentration expected boom in other sections of the economy Prof. Poapst was a member of a panel, Most of its members were pessimistic about the prob. ability of an improved mortgage situation this year year housing industry to could be made at to the 4.4 trillion feet|at that time of the morning," he cent to 167,608 tons from 136,405. oie yp . |However, production in the 1959 trillion eubic feet is surplus to ipresent and future Alberta re- {quirements and existing export; | commitments. Consul-General Gives Award of France at New Orleans, said fident will be avail-|testified. | rion Wins shoot twice but didn't actually him when he was on duty in the | Removed From List lane and that one night a man/|oldest assurance companies, was |Wednesday he will award the| Moody said he would take aj The company, founded in 1847, Const. Hills said he heard 1 Y : {3.1 per cent below the compar- Oliver shout twice at Moody. [able 1957 figure of 173,020 tons. |see the shooting | Constable Harold Johnston tes- district late in August. He said | : Moody told him he was in the| TORONTO (CP)--Canada Life got out of a parked car and/removed from the trading list of threatened to return with a gang/the Toronto Stock Exchange chain to defend himself the next has purchased all its outstanding time he went into the lane, the|shares and requested that they iques to Sister Philip Mary STOVE OIL DELIVERY LANDER-STARK OIL LID. 43 KING STREET WEST CALL OSHAWA - RA 5-3589 Hills also said he heard Oliver ». Canada Life Stock tified that Moody had approached habit of walking his dog in the Assurance Co. one of Canada's to beat him up Wednesday after nearly 88 years. officer testified be removed from the trading list. Purcell of the Sisters of the Holy Names at Tampa, Fla., for her contribution to French culture. Grellet said he would make the presentation Jan. 23. The medal is presented to those showing outstanding work in the cultural and artistic field. Sister Purcell, a native of Win- nipeg, entered the Holy Names order at Montreal in 1926. She has been teaching French culture for more than 30 years and has been an instructor at the aca- Aemy in Tampa since 1953. She is a sister of Gillis Purcell, general manager of The Cana- dian Press. | Small-Jet Trainer In Testing Stage MONTREAL (CP) -- A small. | [jet trainer developed almost en. [tirely by Canadian aviation com- | paries was test-flown for the first| time Wednesday. | The Canadair CL-41, a basic| trainer with side-by-side seating| for two, was developed by Cana-' dair, Ltd., on speculation, | The company hopes to sell It | to governments: for military Jet | training and on the civilian mar- | ket as a high-speed, light, cour-| lier plane. 34 SIMCOE HIGH QUALITY Tulip Maxwell House Instant COFF ROUND SIRLOIN F. RICHARD 136 SIMCOE N The Examination o Fitting of Contact And Glasses For Appointment P! EVENINGS BY Children's Visual Training T-BONE WING Fresh Pork BUTT Fresh SPARE RIBS BLACK, O.D. AT COLBORNE f eves BLADE Boneless BRISKET Lenses ease Call RA 3.4191 APPOINTMENT Margarine 2 ns 6-01. JAR 39 TROUD' FOOD MARKE ST. NORTH 43 OLDEN RIPE BANANAS 89 229 49 FANCY FRUIT BASKETS From 2.00 wn Delivery Service Shop for your £90 and over FREE rder and hove # $10 to $20 -- 25¢ delivered $5 to $70 -- 35¢ Under $5. -- 45¢ avwhere in Oshawe