The Oshawa Times, 3 Mar 1960, p. 2

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SET NEW DATE wyers for Chessman, who has 10S ANGELES (AP)--Conviet-|eluded death for 11% years, ar- author Caryl Chessman's ninth|gued that the court could not set execution date was set Wednes-|a new date because a 60-day re- day--over the emotional objec-|prieve, granted last Feb. 19, has {tions of his lawyers--for May 2. not expired. 2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursdey, March 3, 1960 "IN THE GUTTER' Unemployment Seen Pressing Problem ister and his government they|LISTS PROPOSALS were ignored. Mr. Chevrier listed 25 specific Lionel Chevrier (L -- Montreal proposals he said the Liberals MORRISON'S FURS MORRISON'S FURS OTTAWA . iment must command the atten- 2 [tion of the Commons as Canada's most pressing domestic problem, Opposition Leader Pearson said Wednesday. #| "If that is obstructing, I plead % guilty to it" said the Liberal chieftain, speaking just before the i close of the seventh day of de- bate on the $15,000,000 supple- mentary estimate to cover gov- (CP) Uenmploy- MORRISON FURS SuNd NOSIWIOW NOMINATION George A, Scott, 44, assistant deputy transport minister for economic policy and research, has been named to the three- man Canadian Maritime Com- mission but will retain his present position, Mr. Scott is a _ native of Bassano, Alberta, and has been in the government service since 1945. ~CP Wirephoto Jewish Senator Blasts Growing German Strength MORRISON FURS SiNd NOSINIOW ON PRECIOUS FURS CHINA MINK STOLE 45.00 CARACUL SYOUSS ............r.. 29.00 439.00 seseseevsses Co oo Sr JORIS St 4 TP FIREMEN TRAPPED IN MONTREAL Ice-coated firemen pour water | were trapped and killed when a the building at the outbreak of on the ruins of a Montreal | roof collapsed under them. | the fire. business and residential block | Members of 20 families fled | where five of their colleagues | | INTERPRETING THE NEWS Atom Task Force MORRISON FURS S¥Nd NOSIMIOW 1 only -- Dyed KOLINSKY JACKET Reg. $795. --CP Wirephoto NUSKRAT FLANK JACKETS $249. 125.00 5: 295.00 5795. 399.00 only -- Natural Grey -- Mink trimmed 2 only Reo. $1098 oe... 949.00 Only. the Sook is Expensive AT MORRISON 12 KING WEST RA 5-6312 Dyed Black PERSIAN LAMB JACKETS Natural Grey PERSIAN LAMB COATS Reg. MORRISON FURS SuNd NOSINIOW Laurier) said Mr. Starr had| made during the debate. They in- charged the opposition with hold- cluded, he said, some the Con- ing up passage of the item while servatives had made when they offering no constructive sugges-|were in opposition. tions. In effect, he was saying the| Armgld Peters (CCF -- Temis- government had no other solu-|kaming) advocated setting up a tion but the winter works pro-inational industry planning board gram. Government members|that, through extension of tax and were forgetting it was their joblcredit concessions, would enable 2 some up with programe and resources industries to develop ] . alleviate unemployment. resources in depressed areas. He 4 ernment expenditures under the also called for a manpower re- 1959-80 winter works program. n ase sources board to retrain and re- A government member's shout D Si et establish dislocated workers. of "What are you doing mow?" 15 " e R. D. Caldwell Stewart (PC-- greeted his denial that the oppo- T Kill T Charlotte) suggested the winter [sition is prolonging unemploy- 0 1 rees works program be a ed ment debate unnecessarily, Mr. TORONTO (CP)--Disease, fol- earlier to let municipalities get '| Pearson replied: lowing hard on damage from We oariel 08 mei projects before "I. am stating my position on|sleet storms of Dec. 27 and Jan. | nerd MINS, FC Restrictiohs : ..|13, may kill millions of Ontario|,_, 8. Josened to make the most important domestic) : {schools wanting to add extra shade trees, the Canadian chapter|, toi i problem now before the Cana-| ;¢ the National Tree Conference classrooms eligible for aid. # |dian people. If that is obstruct-|renorted Wedn~~ i ing, I plead guilty to it. Secretary CG. Dobbin said the CONTINUE TODAY Le en Tig @ Th ht ay It was Mr. Pearson's fist ap-&7¢ vulnerable lo the increasing Jearanca 1 he deals ith nd |tario shade trees. The storm's full : Dpfier Liberals wish to speak onjicl may not become apparent orl 7 (this matter. | 5 i : & | Elm trees were the hardest hit | The Liberals maintain the pro- |; > 3 he i " . gram under which the govern- in She Jorouts area, hh OTTAWA (CP) -- A Jewish ized External Affairs Minister é | ment pays half the labor costs for| ihe area--a virus ro nsittad py | SERAtOr declared Wednesday that|Green for continuing to accept| approved public works earried [park beetles. There also are vari. | Jermany is 'up to its old tricks," German and Spanish denials of out in winter is inadequate. ous virus diseases attacking no Cannot be trusted. the reports even after they had Harold Winch (CCF -- Van-|beech, birch, maple and other| 'We thought we had disinfected |been largely confirmed by the " |couver East) said Labor Minister species. and deodorized her," said Sena-| Bonn government. Starr went "right down into the| A department of lands and |" David Croll (LaOniatio) ol Bea hJush ove dows gutter" Tuesday might when helpooct vn d the upper house throne speech|for Canada that the move should stated that n sitio! |forests bulletin says many dam-|dehate, "but we find that as her have been disclosed here through 0 opposition sugges: tions had been made. This was aged trees' are in farm woodlots|strength grows so does her arro-|Ne€Wspaper reporis rather than | "Conservative hypocrisy." land few farmers can afford time gance." Rough NATO diplomatic chan-| Plenty of constructive sugges-|to trim the trees. It says they| He was discussing the furore| yrs. KE Teierrod to a letter in tions had been offered. But be-|should be cut and used for lum.|that arose in Western capitals| rin ig a ote Tom {cause they did not suit the min-|ber or fuel. last week over mews that West|pn © "O° &T0 0 all, signed by Germany had approached Spain| aro F. Fishleigh, Spanish . . seeking to obtain military supply|vice-consul in Toronto, depots on Spanish territory. DEFINES AMBASSADOR ive 1rel { 1€1 H Senator Croll . strongly critic-| Senator Croll said an ambassa- meee dor was once defined as a per- . son "sent to lie abroad for the Ld Ontario Hydro good of his country." He added: 1e In State bani . uation," Systems May Unite| Me ieans letter sad, I jf MONTREAL (CP)--The bodies|and children from six to 13 years q a part: "The news published in a i 1 i ) i Oo of five firemen killed Wednesday $25 to $30 monthly. : SEND. (Ch). The Outaks certain foreign papers that the in an inferno that left a business| J. M. Savienac chairman of has adopted resolutions calling Boveramey, of the German Fed- By HAROLD MORRISON . (one of the battalions is an indica-|of a plebiscite to let the people of{3)d. sesidential Dlock W Norioast Jie Youre! skecutive SONNE {for a study of the financial pos the Jiovblie had egotiaced with Canadian Press Staff Writer [tion that there will be wide flex- East and West Germany decide," iio nat util a eivie funeral Sands "of th le "outstanding |pilities of uniting Southern, North-| (ooo 0" 0 "pe nem e con- The plan to provide the North|ibility in the actual handling of their own political future and be 3 roy Conall ie men, 1 whea == and Northeastern Ontario hy araeing i 3 ory Jases or * Atlantic alliance with a fast-mov-|the weapons. France in the past has repeated his plan to sign al' A king orate fois sloreysittic. root EE rescued ih en dro systems, | alge" Points for missiles is +» ing nuclear task force to has refused to co-operate with the separate peace treaty with East high was used to clear the tons has been no estimate oe] F. H. Dash of Sudbury told the Senator C 1 lof smoking rubble in which the and the cause of the fire is mot annual convention Wednesday, Rngior Oral) sald It 3s obvious ting power falls short of Supreme|clear warheads on French terri-| passes for Western personnel firemen were buried when a roof known |that many areas would benefit|that Germany's real purpose was Commander Gen. . Laurls Nor- tory, principally because France|irayelling to Potsdam, a West | 4 | ed : m vhich |"to secure facilities to test stra- , i i | wi 3 | |collapsed. Paul Stock, a resident rescued [© such a merger which, he ic we: n " stad's dream of arming NATO| ould have no custody or control Berlin burb be . col ¢ : ( |said merger w he tegic apons 1 hill with full nuclear authority--but it over those weapons. Berlin suburb, are being issued Killed were Erben Soucy, 42,|irom one of the buildings, pledged |$2'%: Wa ong overdue. se | strengthen Western Europe's hit-/U.S. in stockpiling American nu-| Germany. MORRISON FURS Sind NOSINIOW MORRISON'S FURS MORRISON'S FURS For , .. OIL BURNER SERVICE And... FURNACE FUEL OIL nn ! |in the name of the East German 5 dow | Turning to the Middle East, he| fs an initial step id that direc- The significance of Norstad's government instead of the Soviet rari gag rd sean eg i pin mw Side gai jt was "hard to understand" tion. _|announcement lies in the stiffen-|administration as had been the|ang Henri Robichaud, 40. ph a ts |why Canada, the U.S. and Britain NATO will have to comply with ing attitude of Premier Khrush-|case in the past. |" It was the worst 'tragedy to I owe my life to those fire- |approved the recent World Bank| the U.S. Atomic Energy Act, chev in demanding a fast settle-| All this may be a matter of strike the Montreal fire depart- men who risked their lives to {loan to the United Arab Republic | which requires that U.S. atomic/ment of the future of Germany stage-setting to prepare for hard| ment since 1877 when seven fire->2'& MY wife and me," he said.| for improvements to the nis weapons be under the custody|and Berlin. {bargaining at the East-West sum- fen died fighting a downtown Canal. The .R. had been and control of American officers,| He has rejected the suggestion'mit conference in Paris next May. |pjaze, Last year two firemen, a guilty of "lawlessness" in deny- . but American diplomats here con- {one of them an assistant director, 3 tr t ing passage of Israeli ships and . Sole Jat i a time of actual eom- were killed when the roof of a I us a 10n cargo through the canal. | . bat, the law may more a burn! t caved in. 4 + matter of theory than practical Southern Alberta ing restaurant caved © application. | LEAVE 19 CHILDREN As seen by Washington author-| » y The dead firemen leave behind 0 an * fties, the three battalion task | a total of 19 children. Soucy had| force -- to be gelotieg from 19 us ar 0 10, Gariepy five, Jibicssud two | French, British an .8. ground| and Loiseau and Letourneau one fue gis at ve, ep By Cause Stress equipped with their own aircraft] LETHBRIDGE, Alta, (CP)--|cent less than was gathered In" p,.h family will receive a $5, and likely will have the U.S. This area is becoming known as 1956 when 110,000,000 pounds were (00 insurance payment and $1,500 MONTREAL (CP) -- What Honest John missile as their|the "mustard pot of the world. processed. from the department's mutual| happens to the man who works prime weapon. | From mustard fields on the| Mustard dealers expect there benefit fund plus a percentage of] at a routine, push-button job to The Honest John, which has a|broad, dryland farms of southern will pe another large crop in 1960 amounts paid into a pension fund.| provide the ever-more essential range equivalent to that of long-|Alberta each year comes the|with most seed contracting firms The Firemen's Union will pay the| "Juxaries" of modérn life? range artillery, can.be equipped|'hot stuff" for wienerschnitzel Inihoping for an increased mustard widows a monthly pension of $100, He's going to be frustrated, « with sopvestional, or stoic waf, Hambarf, hot dogs i New York acreage of from 15 to 25 per| not apt to find self-expression, * heads. It is simple esign chest plasters in London andcent. | ener utlet or pride in his » operation and can be fired from|cooking oil in Yokohama. | GREETING CARDS OE Jot of prise * the back of a truck. The federal department of agri- THREE VARIETIES That is a problem for Can- culture reports 46,000,000 pounds| Three varieties of mustard are WIDE FLEXIBILITY 1y|of mustard seed were harvested grown in the southern Alberta The fact that France will supply (from 79.900 acres in Alberta infarea. They are yellow mustard-- - 1959 and seed merchants say 95|principally used to make confi . per cent of this total was grown ments; brown mustard--also used u Finds in the triangle stretching south-/for condiments; and Oriental east from Lethbridge. mustard--mainly used by Japan- In 1959 the crop brought an/ese and Italian processors as a - estimated $2,000,000 to southern! substitute for rapeseed, flaxseed Port Credit Alberta farmers. | and soybeans in the production of . Montana where, last year, farm-| grown almost exclusively on dry- | Man Guilty le harvested 16,100,000 pounds. [land acreage where, farmers ex- STILL NEEDED MORE plain, the tap root makes it more BRAMPTON (CP)--An all-male] Even this wasn't enough for he [hardy and Jrought resistant an jury Wednesday found John Hart- hot dog-eating population of the mos tereais, whlch flave shallow ford, 19, of mearby Port Credit|United States, though, and an": of murder in the rifle-|additional 15,000,000 pounds were| Dryland farming also keeps the g of Trans -Canada Afr imported from Alberta. |crop free from weeds and helps Mal Mr. Justice D. P. J. Kelley of |U.S. market, used, though, and can add to the the Ontario Supreme Court sen- | The 46,000,000 pounds.harvested yield of the crop while supplying The second largest mustard vegetable oils. producing area in the world is| Southern Alberta's mustard is clerk Beverly Wright, 29, at| Denmark, Ethiopia and Italy|the mustard to ripen evenly. ton: Airport last Nov. 24. also shipped small amounts to the| A few irrigated acres have been tenced Hartford to be hanged|iast year in the area were farinsurance against extreme May 16. It would be the first ex-ifrom" 5 record yield and 50 per'drought conditions. * ecution In Peel County since -- x -- ANGER SOCIETY STAMFORD, Conn. (AP)-- As March 17 approaches the Ancient Order of Hibernians is becoming distressed about some St. Patrick's Day greet- ing cards. Patrick J. Hogan of Stam- ford, national vice-president of the order, Wednesday asked stationery stores and customers to beware of Irish holiday greeting cards that are more blue than green. Some of these cards, he said, are a "desecration of St, Patrick's day." Hogan called on the shops to withhold sale of such cards. Customers and stalion- ers alike should boycott the cards and report them to Hibernian authorities, he de- clared. 1942. The jury deliberated for two| hours and 11 minutes. It did not| recommend mercy. | Testimony was that Hartford, once a TCA employee, shot Wright with a rifle he had bought six days earlier and had planned to shoot other TCA em- ployees out of a grudge against the company. | Dr. Norman Easton, clinical | director of the Ontario hospital at New Toronto, testified Tuesday he believed Hartford mentally ill but not legally insane. Two de- fence psychiatrists testified they beljeve Hartford did not know that what he did was wrong. As the jury announced its ver- dict Hartford sat slumped in the prisoner's dock with his hands gripping his chair. He told Mr. Justice Kelley: "I have nothing to say." 9-Country Meeting On Foreign Aid OTTAWA (CP)--Canadian offi- elals will participate in a nine- © country conference at Washington next week dealing with ways of increasing the flow of capital to underdeveloped countries. The session -- between March COLDER IN WEST NORMAL" 77 TEMPERATURES | FOR THIS PERIOD VANCOUVER M4 | SOMONTON 23 REGINA 19 14 2 E ada's family doctors, says Dr. Maurice Hobbs, of Millbrook, Ont., retiring president of the College of General Practice of Canada. Here's Dr. Hobb's picture of a simple home scene, circa 1960 "When the husband scans the mayhem, turmoil and incessant catastrophe in the headlines of his 'evening paper, he is not apt to feel that there is much he can do about it. Management au organized labor speak for im. "And his wife, released from time consuming chores by her appliance 'armamenior ium,' has been freed to join the so-called buying public. Now, in the quietude of evening, briefly Imposed as the kiddies take thelr turn by the TV gereen, the wife can frustrate herself with all the things to be bought with dollars that expand not quite fast enough." . The result: stress, he said "We must endeavour to re lieve the tensions that provoke hypertension and neurosis, just as we remove the pressures that cause pain," sald Dr Hobbs. NEW POSITION J. C. Rutledge, director of | the defence production depart- | ment's shipbuilding branch, has been named to the Canadian Maritime Commission but will retain his present position. Mr Rutledge, 46, a native of Toron to, joined the government be. | fore the last war at the most reasonable prices "VIGOR OIL PHONE RA 5-1109 78 BOND ST. W, OSHAWA ~CP Wirephoto | 5 YOUR | BLOOD the greatest gift of all DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED AT TONIGHT'S CLINIC Visit your OSHAWA BRANCH of the CANADIAN RED CROSS ot ST. GREGORY'S AUDITORIUM 9-12--is an outgrowth of economic meetings held In January at Paris. | Also represented will be Italy, Belgium, France, Germany, Por- tugal, Japan, Britain and the United States. : a Temperatures will be colder in Western Canada during March, with much below read- ings expected for' most of the prairie provinces and southern British Columbia, according to | the long-range forecast of the | United States weather office. An area of below-normal read- ings is expected across south- western Ontario. Table gives normal readings for various centres ~CP Newsmap » 10id You Know «. « In the main Dining Room of the GENOSHA HOTEL you con have ¢ Full-course Dinner for ONLY 95¢. 190 SIMCOE ST. NORTH From 6:00 to 9:00 p.m. LEAN MEATY BLADE ROAST BONELESS BEEF SHOULDER STANDING 16 AND 7TH) PRIME RIB FRESH PORK BUTT FRESH PORK LEG ALF or wHoLE ROUND SIRLOIN T-BONE WING / ¢ ALL AT THIS EXTREMELY LOW FRICE 43 FOOD MARKET 54 SIMCOE ST. NORTH ® HIGHEST QUALITY MEATS eo RED & BLUE BRAND STEAKS IROUDS GOLDEN RIPE BANANAS LA 2 lbs. 29: Digestive 19: EGas_39 BISCUITS GRADE "A" Losses Or In Your Contwines Delivery Service Shop for your $20 and over FRER a hat Bh $10 v0 $20 ~ 25¢ $5 to $10 35¢ anywhere in Oshawe Under $5, -- 45¢

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