The Oshawa Times, 30 Mar 1960, p. 2

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2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wed nesday, March 30, 1960 |UPROARIOUS ACCOUNT REFUSED A Mrs. Mona Logan, 27, a psy- chiatrist social worker, she was not allowed to rent a $75-a-month apartment in New- market, north of Toronto. The INTERPRETING THE NEWS Kootenay Mulligan Mixture In House lons of water; one bottle of Scotch whisky; one tablespoon of 60-per-cent dynamite; boil for one hour and serve hot By JACK BEST Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP) -- In his best story-telling manner, HW. Her- ridge treated the Commons Tues day to an uproarious account of how classical culture sprouted one night long ago in the British Columbia wilderness--on wings of Kootenay mulligan. For the benefit of the un- initiated, he explained that Koot- enay mulligan is a concoction prepared by road construction lcrews for their evening meal. The CCF member for Kootenay west Mr. Herridge, 66, who said he "earned the first dollar I ever made" packing supplies into mountain trail projects, vow that the brew was actually made on several occasions where he was employed. STUMP REMOVER "Would the member tell us whether this brew was used fory drinking purposes or for remov- ing stumps?" inquired Frank Mc- says | Gee (PC--York-Scarborough). "It was used at the evening |meal, and it had a most stimu- lating effect on the crew," re- plied Mr. Herridge, an English- did not make clear whether it is a food or a drink. But Mr. Herridge, speaking during debate on a government resolution to extend the Trans- Canada Highway agreement, did born forestry farmer. give the recipe. To wit: "I shall never forget one night One empty five-gallon kerosene when, in fear and trembling, my can; one case of clams; four gal-'horses tied up at various trees, New Orthography For Eskimos OTTAWA (CP)--"English is ajas examples of the sort of thing shockingly bad language." that in his view had inflicted On that note, Professor T. F.|spelling torture on millions of Mclwraith, head of the Univer-|school children. sity of Toronto anthropology de| Probably some never re- | partment, lent support Tuesday covered, Professor McIlwraith re- to proposals for an Eskimo|marked in his enthusiastic but "|orthography. {smiling assault. Now's the opportunity to do| The committee was discussing something far better for thela Rev Souprehensive orthog- rsk Englis raphy capable of preserving the Eskimo than the English have a Witte ne ny |poetry, philosophy and full pow- ers of expression. TO BE STUDIED An education committee was shows of force in an|asked to take a look at the prob- h mounting pub- lems in putting it into use. The Eskimos had no writing apartment superintendent says refusal came from former ten- AManaged in their tongue, he sug- ant who was sublettin gested to the Eskimo advisory 8. | committee meeting here. He cited --CP Wirephoto |words like "plough" and "rough" | {treats and effort to cope wit {lic unrest. South Africa Still Restless By ED SIMON Canadian Press Staff Writer In successive days, the South African government has taken eonciliatory and repressive ac- tion in its efforts to cope with outbreaks of violence between Cuban Bomb Raid | Staged By Castro. WASHINGTON (AP)----U.S. vestigators have a sworn state ment that Castro officials con- spired in all illegal plane flight which Cubans have blamed on in -|can National | while, retaliated with a campai system until syllabics, a sort of {shorthand, was introduced by {Anglican missionaries. It had |been evolved to work with the Cree Indians. A Roman - letters many of them cool to apartheid it- self, patiently continue to plead with their country's critics to withhold judgment and to insist that no outsider is in a position tounderstand the problems| prompting Verwoerd to his course of action. A minority of Britons criticiz : their government for blocking at- blunt Warames, as : a tempts to bring the apartheid is-| Education in nutrition and san- First it suspended the law re-|g o hefore the United Nations as-|itation is vital for Eskimos get- uinLg all Regroes to Carry Pas-isemply, but even after Prime ting away from the old life, said ses on pain of imprisonment. |apipister "Macmillan's . denuncia- a ' Then it moved to ban two nation-|i; "oe" cia iem during his re- Dr. P. E. Moore, director of the alist parties, the molermte a cent South African tour, the issue health department's Indian and Fekieairion a aroused little public interest. |northern service. Store - bought Wore exreme P an-African Con- "r. chootings at Sharpeville|food was replacing fresh meat "The Negro organizations, mean- last week appear, at least tem. |and it could lack essential vita- PR vy ' or (porarily, to have shocked some mins. = |Britons into a second look ating anm MORTALITY HIGH urging, Africans to burn their South Afric Ae eg hi A an policies. But there passes, the chief weapon for en- is little indication, as yet, that On the other hand, Eskimos ac- forcing Prime Minister Ver-ly "oho wave has reverberated|commodated in housing without | White South Africans abroad, Arctic. From northern government |agencies came a variety of pro- od | Bress reports coupled with some police and Negro nationalist dem- onstrators. posid's apanheid policy, ang PO with any visible effect on the Ver- . ry wi Vi nt. severe punishment against any- 0erd government proper sanitation would run the risk of an undiminished infant mortality rate. {one who did so. As sporadic violence eontinued, the situation bore a disturbing re- semblance to the France of Louis| XVI, when another government lalternated between tactical re-| the United States. The statement came from Wil- liam Schergales, one of the two U.S. flyers held by the Cubans since their small private craft came down in Matanzas, Cuba, This is rising although it was about 25 per cent--or eight times --the general Canadian rate only recently, he said. Respiratory dis- ease caused most infant deaths in shacks or tents. But housing with- GREAT INDUSTRY Canada's pulp and paper indus-| try shipped products to the value of $1,394,000,000 in 1958, a small| decrease from 1957. March 21. Schergales was said to have plotted the incident with Dr Juan Orta, a personal secretary in the office of Premier Fidel Castro. Washington authorities viewed the incident as a bungled at- tempt by the Castro regime to give the United States a propa- ganda black eye throughout Latin America. Restaurant Standards Increased TORONTO (CP)--Don H. Mac- kay, former mayor of Calgary, said Tuesday Canada's food serv- jce industry lacks proper staff training and selection. He told the 16th annual con- vention and exhibition of the Canadian Restaurant Association] "restaurant operators must main- tain a constant high standard of appearance." G. Carroll Weaver of Chicago said growing competition has re- sulted in '"'a higher mortality rate than any other. business." In| 1948 there was one U.S. restaur- ant for every 1,200 persons, but "today there is one restaurant for every 700 persons." Vending machines probably will sell more than $4,000,000,000 worth of merchandise during 1965, G. R. Schreiber, of Chicago, | publisher of Vend magazine, told the convention. He said standard model vend-| ing machines can now deliver a| complete meal. Hugh C. Graig of Fort Mac- leod, Alta., was elected president. Alta. Court Erases | Conviction Of Man CALGARY (CP)--The Supreme Court of Alberta Tuesday ordered erased from the records the con-| viction of a former Medicine Hat man who served a 60-day sen- tence for stealing $6 worth of rk and beans 30 years ago. | P Waiter SW al fw a Wind-| WINNIPEG (CP)--What color sor, Ont, truck driver, was con-|is 9u . : victed in 1930 of stealing the] That might sound like a silly beans from a canning company|duestion. But if you asked it of in Medicine Hat and was sep-|Some 350 grade I students in tenced to 18.months in jail. Al Winnipeg, you would be told 9 is subsequent appeal reduced his blue. : sentence to 60 days. Not only does 9 have a color Since then Umphress has never, for these children, it also has a been in trouble with the law but|tangible shape. It's a wooden because of his criminal record block one centimetre square and United States immigration au-|Dine centimetres long thorities refused to allow him into] Simil 7, 4 is a pink block four the U.S. His job with the Windsor |centim: s long and 7 is a black trucking company requires that block seven: ¢*ntimetres long be be aJle to eross she border. Other numbers and their colors CAROLYN BROCK, Grade 1 pupil at a Winnipeg school, "builds" a problem in arithme- tic using colored wooden blocks. She is one of about 350 Winnipeg Tests In Arithmetic out sanitation i t--or in- I saw that the rest of the crew had taken off all their clothes. "A number of them were Eng- lishmen who had received their education at various universities and who had some knowledge of classical history. They spent most of the night posing on var- fous cedar stumps as Adonis and Venus." Works Minister Walker, whose department administers federal participation in the Trans-Canada Highway: "Is the honorable member suggesting we should re- vive the making of this brew in order to expedite the construc- tion of the highways?" Mr, Herridge: "Well, I can say this -- it was an excellent crew and whether it could be attri buted to the effects of the Koot- enay mulligan or not, the trails were built at very low cost com- pared with present-day costs." i |writing is. used in the western| } | Ci ANASTAS Anna Chisholm of Montreal claims to be the Grand Duch- ess Anastasia, who many peo- ple believe escaped when the Bolsheviks massacred the fam- habitated by Eskimos untrained in sanitation importance--could breed other fatal disease too. The incidence of tuberculosis, | long an Eskimo killer, was de- clining. mer London University mathe matics professor. The children manipulate the blocks--they're called rods -- to form number combinations and fo work out mathematical prob- ems. "They have to find the parts to construct a certain number and they can check their mis- takes," says Mrs. George But- ler, one of the teachers. 'This leads to understanding. It's a way of discovery for them. It gives them time to think out ways of solving problems and it involves very little counting." EASILY WEANED Mrs. Butler says the process of weaning the children from the rod system to abstract thinking {in arithmetic is "fairly painless." However, given mental arithme- tic problems, "you sometimes see the children closing their eyes to visualize the colored blocks." One advantage of the system, she says, is that the children are less likely to tire of working with the blocks than with conventional numbers. About 800 rural Manitoba school children in early grades are also taking part in similar experiments. Toronto Tax Rate Up By 2.4 Mills TORONTO (CP) -- Toronto's general tax rate will elimb to a record 58.4 mills and the com- mercial mill rate will rise to 62.4 in 1960, City Treasurer William Campbell predicted Tuesday night. The rise in the general rate will be 2.4 ntills while the rise in the commercial rate will be 27. Mr. Campbell's forecast came at the end of board of control budget-paring' sessions." Control- lers and the mayor felt little more could be cut and that these were the ratés that would be pre- sented to council in mid-April. "I'm sick about it,"" said Con- troller Jean Newman. "I feel dreadful." GET THE BEST For Less At MODERN UPHOLSTERING 9262 SIMCOE ST. N. OSHAWA RA 8-6451 or RA 3-4131 Champagne Tastes Best In France By EDDY GILMORE EPERNAY, France (AP)--Nik- ita S. Khrushchev has finally] found something that France does better than Russia--cham | pagne-making, He admitted it| Tuesday. | Surrounded by thousands of | bottles here in the heart of the champagne country, the Soviet premier said: "We make a wine in Russia and the fact that we call it] champagne--well, that's homage] to you." | After the war the Russians an-| nounced they had discovered an electrical method of making] champagne. Russian engineers in 40 min-| utes could manufacture cham-| pagne as good as the best French | brand, said Moscow. | | TASTE WAS SHOCKING The electric champagne made | a brief appearance in Moscow | stores in 1946--and quickly disap-| peared. Wags said the taste was| IA TODAY? too shocking. ily of Czar Nicholas TI of Russia in 1917. The Montreal | woman is known to police through frequent drunkenness | The | and vagrancy charges. inset shows Anastasia Roma- nov in 1917, shaven-headed after illness. The tiny picture shows a blemish near the mouth similar to that of the older woman. --CP Wirephoto | 50 to $5000 SUPERIOR FINANCE 17 Simcoe St. N., Oshawa RA 5-6541 Open Friday 'til 8:00 p.m. Saturday 'til 12 Noon Winnipeg pupils in 11 schools | taking part in a test aimed at | applying visual education to | arithmetic lessons. : [ YOU are: 1, white; 2, red; 3, light green; 5, yellow; 6, dark green; 8, brown, and 10, orange. VISUAL EXPERIMENT The children are taking part in an experiment started in 11 Win- nipeg schools this year aimed at giving greater visual meaning to arithmetic lessons. The experiment is to test the Gattegno-Cuisenaire sy st em of teaching arithmetic. The system named after its inventor, Georges Cuisenaire, a Belgian {kindergarten teacher, and its de Iveloper, Dr. Caleb Gattegno, for RA 5.6165 is RA 5.7732 RISTOW & OLSEN, REALTORS DON HOWE, REALTOR THE MOVE IN 1960 will be to . . eau . +. tan now have a custom built home in this fully serviced Northern sub-division for as little as $15,950. Sold Only Through DOWN PAYMENT ONLY $3150.--N.H.A. MORTGAGE ARRANGED +++ and you can be moved in only 56 days HARRY MILLEN, REALTOR RA 8.1679 "SCHOFIELD INSURANCE ASSOC. RA 3.2265 Whichever way you figure it -- by our weekend specials or by our every-day-of-the-week low prices -- SPROULE'S is the spot where you save a lot on food bills. And you get MORE than storewide low prices. You get the known quality of famous brands . . . PLUS the variety that adds spice to your meals « + + PLUS freshness that means finer flavor -- and all these PLUSSES add up to greater satisfaction just as our PLUS VALUES add up to bigger savings on food bills. 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