| Scan-O-Graver Fast Machine THE OSHAWA TIMES, Seturdey, Merch 36, 1960 29 Wilderness Film Canadian Struggle electrical engineer named John Hancock built the first photo-| t pres electric engraving machine for| Mr. Howey. From 1929 to 1935, he built several machines. Each] The big story in the Oshawa made engravings; but of unfavor-| Vindicator, forerunner of the able quality. |present Oshawa Times, on Fri- ALS |day, May 7, 1915, how the Cana- 0 DEVELOPED |dians saved the situation at At i - | a th same tne, Gorse Wash ove, "Te vinesor carrie The Fairchild Scan-O-Graver used by The Oshawa Times = makes a fine quality of photo- graph reproduction, and makes it | with phenomental speed. The chilida | average photograph can be scan- a "ll o-graved in about 12 minutes. z {| Former engravings were expen- "sive and took a long time to make, | They were made of zinc of cop- | per. The scan-o-graves are made of plastic. Walter Howey, 18, a reporter- editor for a small daily in Fort Nears Completion (CP)--A Walt; But the story is chiefly a peg filmed from alfor a technicolor look at nature. Filming of wildlife scenes has is nearing completion at remote been in progress in the area for locations in the Rocky Mountains|two years and will continue until west of Calgary. {early this summer. The plot is based on the book] Alihugh he jo 3 Nag a aw Stor ; el N 2 |various tim : coffee family, was developing an CV el stories 08, Rug Ins he. a Ne Jae las six different Se the movie engraver also operated on elec- leg ry Bh men| adventures of a husky lost in the also means money for about 160 tronic principles. His machine (0. i joys being wounded in| wilderness and later found after| Canadian techule ate and actors, Fo aa, ne early ag lgep|ured a hot stylus to purs a oH es engagement a series of clashes with wolves, theatre and television stars. jood a structure into metal. S engag 3 A h Jean Coutn decided to find a means for the| aa One of the stories reads as fol-{Dears and cruel trappers. Among them are Jean "| average newspaper to reproduce| ~The two principles were com-| '© of She sto) | (the dog's master) and Emile | photographs. He formulated his bined to make the plastic en OVS: Gejest (the cruel trapper) who basic concept of photo-electric|gravings that are used in the| A despatch from London says: as well as our own, under a hot(handle the two human leads. |engraving before the end of that Oshawa Times today. |The British official "eye-rifle fire at close range, Both are former members of the | year, Howey had eventually licensed witness", in a narrative of the| «our flank being thus exposed, (now-defunct Plouffe Family, a Howey felt he could find a way the Fairchild Corp. to carry on battle of Ypres says the Germans ihe troops were ordered to retire|CBC television series about a to toanolate the tonal range of a|all development and production of (had prepared to attack the allied\op gt, Julien, with their left flank French-Canadian family. photograph to electric energy. the engraver. By Dec. 1947, Fair-|line on the 20th, but the wind, not| parallel to, but to the west of| Uriel Luft of Montreal, named |The energy would be amplified|child thought it had an engraver being favorable "for their use of(the high road. The splendid re-|the best actor in the last year's it could offer to small news-|asphyxiating gases", they pPosi-igigtance of these (the|Dominion Drama Festival, and BANFF, Alta. Disney movie dog's-eye view of the wilderness PAPERS ARE BUNDLED IN THE MAILING ROOM py iii |to govern the depth of a cutting tool. This tool would engrave deep lor shallow lines, depending what | was necessary to produce light, medium or dark tones on the en- graving surface. The young inventor had been given a cylindrical photograph by {his parents. He used the parts of | this photograph to prove his basic principle. DREAM GROWS muda. at less cost. papers and the Graphic Arts in- poned it umtil the 22nd. dustry. Now the machines cover| two-thirds of the United States| and parts of Canada and Ber- More than 50 per cent of the machines are doing a job of| photo-journalism for papers under 10,000 circulation. For the larger papers, the photoelectric engra- ver is producing more pictures troops Canadians), who saved the situa- Robert Rivard, a Quebec theatre The gas, the narrative says,|tion, already has been mentioned |performer, play the parts of other was distributed along the German|by the Commander-in-chief."" trappers. {front line in front of the French of (Iv 7 {the north it was blown directly on the French. The German plan, according to the "eye-witness", |was to make a sudden onslaught | south-westward, which, if sue- |cessful, would enable the Ger-| {mans to gain crossings of the] | In the following years, he car- ried his dream with him, as he skyrocked in the newspaper business. Progress, with the in- | vention, was slow. The science of electronics had not yet caught up| with Howey's vision. He spent] AIl' FROM GERMANY TEL AVIV (Reuters) -- West ish line and Germany will provide Israel wi economic aid totalling $500,000,000 during the next 10 years, accord-|i, {oxo full effect on the troops! | much of his time in search of a|ing to authoritative sources here. | light sensitive material which (West German Chancellor Konrad |canal south of Bixschoote and {place them well behind the Brit- in a position to th|threaten Ypres. "Allowing time for the vapors| | position, and the wind being from to the facing them," says the "eye-| witness", "Germans charged for-| could read the true values of a|Adenauer promised this aid to photograph. |Premier David Ben-Gurion dur- By 1929, a photo-electric tube, | ing their meeting in New York which could faithfully translate|last week, the sources said. [the gap thus created, pressed on | reflections from photographic |silently and swiftly to the south| {copy, was available. The radio] ANTI-KHRUSHCHEV SLOGANS (and west. By their sudden erup- | tube had also been developed info] POITIERS, France (Reuters)-- ton they were able to overrun amplifier had been invented that Several youths were arrested |and surprise a large proportion of |was sensitive and powerful Wednesday after police found |the French troops billeted behind | | enough to suit Howey's needs them chalking anti - Khrushchev the front line in this area and to {With these togredients 2 yong slogans on walls. |bring some of the French guns,| = y SHAWA DAILY TIMES ON THE COMPLETION OF THEIR NEW BUILDING ward over the practically umre.| sisting enemy in their immediate | front, and, penetrating through P. A. SHERWOOD LID. 26 ADVANCE BLVD. TORONTO BE 3-1197 ---- -- ' OHS RO Rv iii. i be MRS. J. McGILLIVRAY INSPECTS THE SCAN-O-GRAVER MACHINE --Oshawa Times Photo TRUCK FLEET AWAITS BUNDLES OF PAPERS HOT OFF THE PRESS Oshawa Times Photo NOT GUILTY tacks on a 18-year-old girl at] PEMBROKE (CP)--An Ontario|nearby Beachburg last Sept. 27. | scured attempts to measure the proached him to make a fore- {sun's pulses accurately. Un-lcast of rainfall in his area. Ab- i |daunted, Abbot spent three yearsiyos gig predicting a better-than- Supreme Court jury Wednesday The Crown declined to pursue| working over 1,000 months of rain for the following | found 17-year-old Donald Leith|charges against the two other) [weather records 14 times before|aVerage x: ; | ® eason. The farmer planted his/not guilty of a charge of rape. youths, George Wilson, 18, and grain closer together and reaped The youth was charged along|Gary Hepburn, 21, and the) a big harvest. iwith two others in alleged at-lcharges were dismissed. he found how to eliminate these|* simospheric troubles. When cleared of phase changes, rainfall but are hidden from cas-|/the weather harmonics stand out he official ] on the official opening f thei of their new plant 'Solar Harmonics' Predict Rainfall By HAROLD MORRISON Canadian Press Staff Writer |ual notice because of changes in WASHINGTON (CP) -- Dr.|the earth's atmosphere. Charles G. Abbot, h a keen| --- x ear for celestial mu has come| FACED MANY PROBLEMS up with a n scheme for long- Air pollution by oil - burning range weat forecasting machines, the prevalence of sun- only urban dwellers but farmers eould go a long way toward help- spots and other problems ob- were fascinated. One farmer ap- ing farmers plan crops years in ee advance The 88 - former State stitute well tell going to be f strongly and the sum of their ef- fects largely controls long-range weather, Abbot concluded. As he began to unravel his conclusions, Abbot found that not Bost Wishes . . . TO The Oshawa Times ON Their New Building | McLaughlin COAL and SUPPLIES LTD. 110 KiNG STREET WEST RA 3-3481 year - old weatherman py » United awreh In n prett | rain there r 10 years from what he calls Sm d he « "GOOD LUCK" TO THE Oshawa Times ON THE Official Opening OF THEIR Fine New Plant And Offices 'ompleted a predic- $ for the rs. By testing his ~entury of rain-| 1ieme is about Just « month-by-month rain tion for 1.8 We are indeed proud of Eastport, our close associatiom months of below normal should be, The same pattern with slightly more on should occur at Roches with Oshawa's daily newspaper . . . and hav- FIRST TIME "This is the first time," says the S Institute, '*'tha anyor s ventured to forecast the monthly rainfall eight years in advance for definite cities, stating the exact expected per-| » departures from the nor- mal values." | Abbot, who put in some 65 years of studying the sun's ra-| diation and impact on earth,| added an interview: "What can be done for the next seven years can also be done for the next 15 or 40 years, provid- ing th hydrogen war or major uption to disturb ing our offices located on the third floor of this modern building. WE ARE PLEASED TO BE ASSOCIATED WITH THEM REPLACEMENT SALES LIMITED --1920 - 52--he and t took daily urements of the si radiation at m atories cluding sky DISTRIBUTORS TO THE TRANSPORT AND CONSTRUCTION INDUSTRIES IN ONTARIO 86 King St. E. Oshawa RA 8-0537 Toronto -- Telephone EMpire 4-8543 TONY'S REFRESHMENT VENDING SERVICE LID. | 253 BLOOR ST. EAST RA 5-4598 The ble star like mu-| over a mas- months, | iods riod of s Harmonic periods identi in length to these solar variations also exist in temperature and