» n i INTERPRETING THE NEWS Nehru Cool | Toward China i in La- By JOSEPH MacSWEEN land. Communist troops Canwdian Press Staff Writer |dakh, a part of odian-ciaisied Prime Minister Nehru gives the areas in Kashmir, ma tual |impression he expects po Sudan gecapation of about 10,000 sq ; sett t of India's border dis- miles. a gh Red China in his forth. Just what rey 303th coming talks with Chou En-Lal. fousing Some iy or Hush The New Delhi meeting was Shey Hl ng art ol much speculation. 9f there is no settlement, he Q THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tussdey, Merch 1, 1960 GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN ARE THE BAGPIPES REALLY THIS BAD? Some Scots tempers are running pretty high up around the Armories, but ex-Sergeant Tommy Gilbert won't back down. : English-born Gilbert (Liverpool) is determined : . : a to carry on his personal ? ; h | yendetis again bachipes : by : |Nehru's own idea and he has ex- in general and the proud ressed happiness that the Ri ? | ed to come. General Motors Veteran's Chinese presmits apres, Oe dlapiay clean hands, If ner Pipe Band in particular. Eiinese the belief will |Tndian leader, a proponent of the(is a settlement, nd 13 tha the GM bard |patient approach, were politely | be widely held shat he had some. i Jogi hg {cool and correct--recognizing the|thing todo with i ("one of the best class B two visits with Nehru and 'his » | Vail : : |strong bargaining position of his . his pipe bands in Canada," ac- | § Vi | : : | cording to supporters), is Pe : ' ; Ww gresumaly frequent communi ai er a ------ AA ee SKIING AIRMAN FO Peter Howe of Hamilton, with the RCAF's No. 4 Fighter Some observers believe Chou|tions with Peking. allowed to rehearse in the ould never have agreed to go to New Delhi unless he intended to BRIGHT ASPECTS Armories nearby the Ser- geant's Mess on nights when the Ontario Regiment Association meets. "Just listen to that music," roared the fiery and articulate Gilbert to fellow ORA members at a Observers see a number of settle the border quarrel. But t aspects in Nehru's cause. he will settle on a basis bright [whether he fo India is another|There's evidence Red China may matter, feel it needlessly offended neigh- boring countries--countries dis- India and Kod _Ohiia hag - joyed 10 years friendly rela- Rn until refugees fled into india following Communist suppression posed to be friendly--by its surly conduct of the last year. the Tibetan incident. of an uprising in Tibet last March. fouderd by First there was the horror en- hen the vilation of Red China's Wing in Germany, placed third in the slalom to help the Fourtk Allied Tactical Air Force team to victory in competition among NATO's air forces. CP Wirephoto border with India. Red China also Did You Know , . « in the main Dining Room of the GENOSHA HOTEL you con have a Puil-course Dinner for ONLY 95¢. recent meeting as the GM i kirled nearby. snake charmers ana, , P'PeS S i 'sians are nothing more than ven Si for human COM oise they're making isn't DID PETRILLO OUST »n." This was quite a jolt, (especially those of Scottish b. ded on ahead where angels fear, Gilbert plod- "Not only are these bagpipes --+read. charmers ~ driving me personally i them snake they're driving members right out of waction, but Members just won't sit here and listen to. ciation, thing has got to be done to correct this evi Some~ _ "Perhaps you members don't know it, bution. kicked these people right out of the musicians i110 when he decided that what they produced wasn't mq at all but some kind of a heathen wail. What did Allies use the bagpipes for in the First War? To drive the Germans out of Belgium, of course -- but that's no reason we should let them drive our members away", Staid ORA members (including those of Scottish origin) listened to the fiery Gilbert with some concern as he proposed that a three-man committee be named to approach the officer commanding, but they quickly Passed an amendment to the effect that a one-man com- mittee be named. That's right -- the one man was Tommy Gilbert, oC Was REAL Nice, UNDERSTANDING 2 ert says his hatred of the bagpipes dates back to those days in the Second World War when the Ontario Regiment was billeted at the CNE grounds, Toronto, and the skirl of the Highland pipes awakened the troops each day, usually around 5:30 a.m, What happened when ex-Sergeant Gilbert served overseas with the Ontario t. in the Second World War), appeared before Lt.-Col. Morley (his second name is Cameron) Finley, Canadian-born OC of the regiment who is of Scottish descent? Gilbert tells it this way: "Those so-call aid ORA members Introducing our new ORGANIST From a long successful engagement in Toronto NORMAN HOWARD NIGHTLY 9 P.M. TO MIDNIGHT HOTEL LANCASTER OTTAWA (CP)--The women of lliot Lake, sure their motorcade ttawa will reap dividends for plwuranium mining town, are The to use the tactic again. left them in the highest spiris. Isle behind them from (he VIOLENCE FOLLOWS i to locate a projected nue. | threatened by the end of uran- | 2,500-mile frontier nese residents in that island re- The women of Elliot Lake for Ottawa to protest to Prime men "Aw centre at Elliot | ium mining contracts. |ritory along the ecvhgh ani : fenbaker. They | lear resea setween the two countries igh Minister Die Wirephot tried to demonstrate othe Wighvay ied to persuade the govern- ! Lake, The town's future is | CP Wirephoto into viol and resulted in| Red China apparently outside the towh belure leaving tr Pe 3 {angry statements in the following|show a new friendliness in its months. king recog. y : 4 1 P C t | India has rejected China's/pute with Burma. Peking 3 WE RE HAPPY 1 er en calms to about 51,000 square nized the Burmese end of fhe miles of territory--an area as McMahon line, the Indian part ol large as New Brunswick, Nova which New Delhi claims as its| * . 'Unethical' | Virus Infection | TORONTO (CP)--John Rider, | resident of the Credit Union| e "© | Have More Plans =e = Can Cause Cancer ' {geste in a report to the assocla- | od States not to remew its|Centre and Manitoba's federal A Rl iy that the practice By ROBERT RICE HYPNOTISM DISPLAY | on By uranium contracts ex-| cabinet representative. Canadian Press Staff Writer | Monday, a young woman doc piring in 1962. To help soften the Afterward, Mr. Starr reported) np. Rider. in his annual report J was put isle a hypuot Lasse i | i : : ; A {thin | Show some 600 general practition- jon, the Canadian govern-|a labor surplus area, meaning\neaith service, said: infection, spreading madly within |S Th et is Winnipeg. operatin the U.S. to agree to a workers finding jobs 2 in other "Medical men have told PML may cause some} TS how they can use hypnotism | iwi qh le Convince stretch-out to 1966 of deliveries|areas through the National Em-|, "51 "ne "oant is the figure forms of cancer. or. Mion B. Erickson of Phoe Elli i | hl . : . Elliot Lakto back transfer to he a enh h J Mun 8 Yeickiod of Pte uclear| tracts. ansportatio : in reckoning the number of doc-|adviser to the National Cancer |DiX, Ariz. p Tesearch cad planec (points there was less agreement. org "whose practice of medicine|[ngtitute of Canada, told a gon. Amer i2aa 5 nual iy miles north ogteshell area 60 he 135 women Who : in general practice " \ {al| Ten of the Olthe research centre was dis-| mp : v ork on virus and can-|in general p A apie. e provinciall cde the 400-mile, 14-hour . cussed but the question of NHA The epit Softimed: ihn Eee Ssansh w His subject, Dr. Pearl Drieman os hide plane. o£ } ynnounced in Io Buses gud Jo private fime mortgages was a matter Jor 1 "qe. ods of accounts from physicians| pootors still don't know how " Dave, a Jomtly Jhysition v's E ¢ Inigrvie blic wi e-| - us nosis, went into a Women's Emergency Cu. mittee minister that lasted > minutes) SEC by the public wor! and surgeons that are grossly ex-| cer is caused. But they are|Who uses hyp elegation after a meetin, wy} instead of the schedu A Le 3 sation to the) . Sight. arr was lifted, i i t aders of the delegation and|rendered and in relation | e| theory is one. g Prime Minister Diefenbaker nay companions, Who walled doublel | -e3 members met in the afier-financial status of the patients. a fhe "ig il une. onl. DP: Esickeys said hypnotism in tari , i x- noon and decided before heading| As an example, he said fees , at the proper 'hands can a use- The Northern Ontario town of|to parliament Hill, waited in e back home to take the Ello Lake totalling Znore than $350 were| Sng SE and important tool for doc-| layoffs starting later this year as/ A beaming Shirleen O'Brien, situation ore their Maniloba charged for services on a |studied the day-to-day changes in| f a result of the decision of fe chairman of the committee, later neighbors, whose father is a laborer. The 1 structure in hamsters ine|t0 help patients bear heavy body! i § i i i nd ther Ontario Medical Association fee| . : f casts, by dentists to remove pain| , [emerged with Mr. Diefenbaker| A mail campaign and anothe! cical ee oted with a tumor virus from A ate ve pai land, cried: "We're happy," at|oavalcade--perhaps by air--are for the services is $100, he said. Dr. Ham said. and tension and by psychiatrists MASKED BANDIT] (which the delegates applauded. planned. Miss O'Brien said a ) t w in, the kid-|] Mr. ont . deputy president of the Canadian The tumors gre i illness. announce Dext "Moray Sn ethos | mass of ila iation, called Mr.|neys of the hamsters, so rapidly STRIP S WOMEN he will visit Elliot Lake to see|Will be arranged "completely [that some of the tiny animals HARDENING OF ARTERIES conditions there for himself, |late this week. |died within 12 days. During a symposium on hard: SAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP)+A ening of the arteries--arterios- masked bandit here Is "'extren- WALL-TO-WALL Carpets can be cleaned per- fectly right on the floor. Call us for a fast, economical job. We do in-plant cleaning, tee. the Medical - Associa; in Elliot Lake/Rider's statements libelous." SL FIGHTING FOR ELLIOT LAKE Dormant differences over ter-|feuded with Indonesia over Chi- recent settlementsf a border dis- iD atta Scotia and Prince Edward Is|rightful bo v Elliot Lake Women % Doctors doctors is unethical. 0 oF some ily MONTREAL (CP)--A Toronto! tor was put into a hypnotic trance blow and to keep some mines in he agreed to make Elliot Lake |i, 4a aggociation, a co-operative doctor has suggested that a virus| {in their work. |called for in the expiring com'loyment Service can.get [reel .. in the (medical) profession| pr. Arthur W. Ham, researc cation i its chosen | location in the from its LONG INTERVIEW Mr. Churchill said transfer oflis in some degree unethical.' tof family doctors here of nosis, t Lake ; cessive in relation to services|, ving on all sorts of clues--|gentle, restful trance when her 25,000 population faces extensive pectation in the hall outside. a Oe Soe Dr. Kirk Lyon of Leamington, [Mice probing the mysteries of mental| " i the | Tals Was TB Gp Ja clerosis--Dr. Jacques Genest of "The OC was real nice, and considerate too, despite the fact that his second name is Cameron, He listened to everything I had to say --- then promised to look into the matter thoroughly. You couldn't ask for any more than that. There was another officer with him, however who didn't seem at all pleased about my disrespect for the bagpipes, It turned out later that he was an Irish man. Didn't the Scots steal the idea for the bagpipes away from the Irish -- or did the Irish give them away?" The manager of the GM Pipe Band was highly amused when he heard of Gilbert's complaint. He's English-born (London) Alfred Metcalf who has a special place of affection in his heart for the pipes, despite what he calls "some unfortunate ex- periences with them", in the Battle of the Somme in the First World War. PIPES ARE COLORFUL -- METCALF Said Mr, Metcalf: "When we'd arrive back at our rest billets (after being at the front for days) about 4 a.m. and go to sleep only to be awakened soon by the London Scottish * Pipers I can tell you we too, like ex-Sergeant Gilbert, were raving mad. That's undoubtedly where Mr. Gil- bert acquired this unfortunate fixation about the bag- pipes -- in his early army days". Metcalf says the bagpipes are the "best possible music" to march behind, although he prefers a brass band for music. "The pipes are colorful, and there's something about the skirl that uplifts our spirits," he added. The General Motors Veteran's Pipe Band was first organized in 1938 and has won trophies as such places as Huntsville Highland Games, Maxville and Dutton "in Ontario and Syracuse, N.Y., in recent years. G. DAVID MORGAN IN VIRGIN ISLANDS G. David Morgan is remembered here as a former $vre employee and as an ex-president of the Canadian ub. He is now acting manager of the Federal govern- ment's power agency in the Virgin Islands (the Virgin Islands Corp.) and was quoted recently in the New York Times in a story under the heading "Power a Problem in the Virgin Islands." Said Mr, Morgan: "In the seven years since the Virgin Islands Corp. took over power, we have experi- - enced a phenomenal load growth which would have . required doubling the plant capacity, a 15 per cefit in- _erease per year. Who knows? This growth may stop in the next few years." " St. Thomas Island, one of the Virgin Islands, was without power for nine hours in the first three days of 1960 and the shortage is becoming a grave problerh. . Mr. Morgan was assistant meter and relay engineer ~ in Oshawa and district for the HEPCO for four years until his retirement last year to take up his present post in the Virgin Islands. ,CHAYTOR ON ANNUAL WORLD TOUR Charles Chaytor, Whitby's industrial commissioner, is currently making his annual tour around the world. He left two weeks ago and expects to be home in April * +++ Crews from the department of works removed 352 Joads of snow Saturday night from Simcoe, King, Bond and Ritson road, which total represents about 17,000 - tons, A crew of 20 men worked steady on the clean-up . from 8 p.m. Saturday to § a.m. Sunday . /, Mr. and Mrs, A. W. Rundle of 1015 King street east are attending the "87th annual convention of the Canadian Association of Nurserymen in Toronto this week. Mr. Rundle is acte Ling as chairman of the Garden Center session and of the *Bervice session. Mrs. Rundle is chairman of the ladies Program, A i ' ; t to Ot-| ely polite" but no gentleman list the women brough He's. also in 2 ruat--both choice of victins and his we of doing business. dubbed "Jack the Stripper." ps always the same: He | aves his male victims locked in the washroom -- and the | ladies nude. | . In the six or seven jobs bear- ing his stamp, he hasn't both- ered the women -- just made | them strip and then tied them | up. 'Apparently it's to inconveni- ence them so they can't call the | police," police say. "He cuts | the telephone line, too." The fact his prey, always caught unawares in-a bar at about 1 a.m., can't agree aft- erward on doesn't help police any. He's besn [tor of t what happened | |tawa. Miss O'Brien, managing direc- come." There was no decision on trans- fer of the research centre or on the delegation's request that mortgages under the National | a he Elliot Lake Standard, : |said "I definitely feel he'll Hig oi Housing Act be cancelled for| 78 those persons forced to move away from Elliot Lake and find work elsewhere. VISIT 'NOT WASTED' But Miss O'Brien said the visit was 'not wasted," Mr, Diefen- baker was a "wonderful man" land would "do all he can" for | Elliot Lake. Later, the 10 leaders had a [joint meeting with Labor Minis- {ter Starr and Trade Minister | Churchill, MP for Winnipeg South Quebec's By JOHN YORSTON Canadian Press Staff Writer QUEBEC (CP)--Everyone here agrees, Quebec's Winter Carnival is good business. A three-week binge of social, athletic and artistic events, the carnival attracts residents and non-residents by the thousands. That means a little something extra is often more than a little. It also means an easing of winter unemployment, although there are no statistics to prove it, says Stan Picard, district man- ager of the National Employment Service. Businesses which benefit most, he said, are "service industries such as hotels, motels, restafir- ants and the industries that de- pend on service industries." These would include food and drink suppliers, transportation, laundries and cleaners. NEAR CAPACITY near capacity during last week- end when the carnival reached its height. it ends tonight. A spokesman for Canadian Pa- cific Rallway--which ran extra sections on some trains from Montreal--said there was a '"no- ticeable increase in the number of people arriving." Other trans- portation companies agreed. When the carnival started in 1964, sales for Quebec and dis- trict in January and February totalled $27,000,000. They have risen each year to last year's high of $36,516,000 for the two months. That is considered a pretty fair profit margin on a carnival that costs about $200,000 to run, SHIRTS FOR ASIA TAIPEI, Formosa (AP)~Five garment factories are opening here to make more than 1,000,000 dozen shirts annually for export to Southeast Asia. The owners are importing 22,000 sewing machin for the project. 1 x Means Business : 'the jockey club. Carnival (raised through government grants {public subscriptions and ticket |sales on events. | The carnival means increased sales for 'many types of small | specialty shops which cater to |visitors. Party favors and carni- |val decorations of every descrip- [tion are in demand. Even the ice man, who virtu- ally disappeared when the re- |frigerator appeared, gets in on the act, selling ice for winter castles and sculptures. MPP's Claim On Racing Challenged TORONTO (CP) -- A Jockey Club official challenged Monday claims by a member of the On- tario legislature that racing is be. ing subsidized by the govern. ment and that Ontario's tax on the pari-mutuel is the lowest in North America. John J. Mooney, general man- ager of the Jockey Club Limited, which operates Woodbine, Old Woodbine and Fort Erie race Montreal said it is "imperative" | that Quebec's ban on margarine sales be revoked as soon as pos- sible. He explained that margarine normally is made from vegetable | oils, while butter--and "spreads" available now in Quebec--are of | animal origin. Doctors are find-| ing a relationship between animal fats and: the level of cholestrol] in the arteries, a clue to the' NU-WAY Rug and Upholstery Cleaners RA 5-0433 174 MARY STREET DISCUSS NEW PLANE Jack Hunter (left), chief pilot with the Canadian depart- ment of transport, holds a model of the Lockheed Jetstar presented to him by Lockheed's cause of arteriosclerosis. | 4aes LIVES New Donors Urgently Needed Make That Saving Call Now - Call Your CANADIAN RED CROSS RA 3-2933 For an Appointment at the next Clinic Thursday, March 3 at ST. GREGORY'S AUDITORIUM 190 SIMCOE ST. NORTH CLINIC OPEN FROM 1:3) TO 4:00 P.M, AND 6:00 TO 9:00 P.M. Charles Vogely during a recent visit to the aircraft company's plant in Marietta, Ga. The DOT has purchased a Jetstar to evaluate navigational aids at high altitudes. CP Wirephoto For . .. tracks, described remarks made in the legislature by Elmer So- pha, Liberal member for Sud- bury, as '"'erroneous and mislead- Mr. Sopha last week called for {an investigation into racing in the province and stated that the legislature's current estimates provide $172,000 for the Ontario Racing Commission, whereas the ORC collected only $76,000 from the Jockey Club to pay for its operations. ; Mr, Mooney said in a state- ment the government's revenues from thoroughbred racing last year were $4,901,501 from wager- ing taxes, $143,088 from hospital taxes on admissions and $76,000 in licences and other fees from CHAMBERS 65 UNDERWRITERS RD. For Information Call (J00]0) And . .", CLUB (O) GI BAR E:T: STAN BRYNING 470 ELIZABETH STREET THE FOOD PLAN THAT HAS PROVEN ITSELF RA 8-5358 SERVICE FURNACE FUEL OIL at the most reasonable prices "VIGOR OIL PHONE RA 5-1109 78 BOND ST. W. OSHAWA