The Oshawa Times, 13 Apr 1960, p. 24

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a EE a I |Citizenship and Education, Mrs. to the motto and Mrs. W. Van [F. Hoskin: Historical Research|Camp read a report of W.I. work and Current Events, Mrs. G. Mar-| rom 1915 - iw: llow: Home Economics and Mrs. Lorne Thompson gave a Health, Mrs. J. McArthur; Reso-|iumorous reading and Mrs. Ray 24 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, April 13, 1960 Chou En-Lai Plans Bazaar WED IN NORTH CAROLINA Heiress Gamble Benedict, 19, ; a simple service at a mountain | right, and Andre Porumbeanu, | hunting lodge near Henderson- 35-year-old ex-chauffeur, left, | ville, N.C. The wedding follow- were married late yesterday in | ed two-day game of hide and seek to overcome objections of heiress' family and legal ob- stacles. --AP Wirephoto Giant Social In French Algeria He reported rebel losses in| 1959 at 30,000 men, among them an od A. By DAVE OANCIA Canadian Press Staff Writer edb LIOR ; a ea a, S LO ° £3 have begun a series of far-|mates are that the rebel arsenal reaching social tasks seldom, if|inside Algeria has been cut to ever, undertaken before by an|9,000 weapons from 13,000 during | army. the last year. | They come under the heading| To cope with this new situa-| of a pacification and range from tion, the rebels changed tactics. | teaching Moslem women how to|Now groups of four or five "'death| care for their children to provid-|commandos'" are the main attack ing schools, houses, hospitals,|force. Their task is to roam the doctors, nurses and teachers. countryside at night spreading They are an integral part of death and destruction. the army's efforts to put down a| The French army admits it has rebellion that in more than five been unable thus far to cope ef- years has cost the lives of at/ficiently with the small, highly least 13,000 French soldiers and mobile commando groups | 145,000 Moslems. "If we could get them all in There is no quick end in sight. one place for a battle we could | President de Gaulle himself has|beat them in five minutes," said| said the Algerian problem can-|an exasperated Foreign Legion not be settled for a long time commander. '"'But they're like] Dp a mobollion | gh. Dron Tr ole JE EE Er» rad it wi ric- | ash--y ever know where , : | and that it will end only in vie-|the rash--you never knov ©lber of Moslems in regroupment| |they're going to break out next. tory for French forces. To starve the hit-and-run bands OFFICERS OPTIMISTIC Task dual function of providing admin- istrative and social services and maintaining law and order. V 2 0 operation as S00 as the rebels are flushed out of the villages and the surrounding countryside. The army "encour- ages" those living in vulnerable Leaves For India By RONALD FARQUHAR PEKING (Reuters) -- Commu- nist China's Premier Chou En-lai and about 30 diplomats left here today for Burma on the first leg o a fence-mending mission to In- | ia. High-ranking Communist lead- ers were at the airport when Chou, accompanied by Foreign Minister Chen-yi, took ' off for Rangoon, where he is scheduled to arrive Friday. Chou will also visit Nepal dur- ing his 2%-weeks trip. | China's common borders with those three Asian countries and issues arising from them will be discussed in Rangoon, New Delhi and Katmandu. But ithe main reason for the trip is to hold talks with India's | der dispute between their two giant countries. BORDER CLASHES { The declared aim of the week of talks in New Delhi is to '"'ex- plore avenues which might lead to a peaceful settlement" of the dispute, which flared up last year after clashes between Chi- nese and Indian forces along the in which nine Indians miles of mountain territory be- tween northern India and Chi- nese-ruled Tibet. The 64-year-old Communist pre- mier will need all of his charm on his current visits, Communist suppression of the uprising in Prime Minister Nehru on the bor- |! Susan Dickinson and Gordon Reeve downy chick is cuter--the yel- low or the black. part of a special are | | Blackstock WI EASTER CHICK-ERY Easter try to decide which | Eaton's. The chicks pre- | chicks ca window display at The window is wired so that the cheeping of the n be heard outside, By MRS. R. C. HILL BLACKSTOCK en's Institute met Wednesday in} lutions and activities, The Wom-| Van Camp Mrs. J. McKee read the reply Mrs. W.|Bradburn reported on current * |events. Lunch was served by Group 5. the community hall. Mrs. C. Hill | {read the scripture. | Business included final plans for the bazaar April 13, and ap-| |pointment' of committees to plan |for the district annual to be held 'here in May. Mrs. Murray Byers announced {the Durham County Summary [Day will be held at Solina, April 26, at which all rugs made will |be displayed. | Birthday greetings to George |Humpage at the Golden Plow Lodge, Cobourg, on his 87th birthday. | President Mrs. E. Larmer ex-| pressed her appreciation for the| co-operation she has received dur- ing the past year. | Mrs. Stanford Van Camp report- ed on the Port Perry Hospital Auxiliary meeting and Mrs. G. Marlow presented the auditor's report. Conveners who reported were as follows: Agriculture and Cana- dian Industries, Mrs. D. Dorell; BACKACHE 0) May be Warning | Backache is often caused by lazy | kidney action. When kidneys get out of order, excess acids and wastes remain in the system. Then backache, dis- turbed rest or that tired-out and heavy- headed feeling may soon follow. That's the time to take Dodd's Kidney Pills. Dodd's stimulate the kidneys to normal action. Then you feel better--sleep better --work better. Get Dodd's Kidney Pills now. 59 \ EASTER SPECIAL I KRESFAIR CHOCOLATES 1-lb. box Reg. 95¢........ 75 MINUET CHOCOLATES Va-Ib. box 197 2 Stores To Serve You Better DOWNTOWN OSHAWA OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE Tibet shocked many Asians who formerly were apologists for the |nese troops into territory India considered her own infuriated the | Indians. And news that the Chi- | nese now are claiming Mount | Everest upset the Nepalese, who | areas to move into newly-created village compounds, or regroup- ment centres, as they: are more| generally called. In these, educational, medical and social services are provided, usually by army personnel. French officers are trying to take great pride that their little | kingdom is the home of the] world's highest mountain, Nehru already has put a dam- |per on the meetings by express- | ing doubt that they would lead to any immediate solution of the dis- putes teach Moslems the art of civic government. Local councils have been elected in most areas. SAS officers act as counsellors to the municipal authorities, but they cannot override any decision made by the council as a whole. During the last year, the num- centres swelled from 250,000 to 1,250,000 and new ones are being High-ranking army officers inside Algeria of arms and am- | blished continually. here echo this statement. But munition has become an impor- they all express optimism when tant army goal. It has sealed off ARMY PROTECTION discussing the course of opera- with electrified barbed wire and tions against the rebellion. For mine fields the Moroccan and the first time since the revolt|Tunisian frontier crossings. ripped across the North African/Naval vessels maintain a cons- a living," said an army spokes- phy "These centres are located at Statement By Liberal | Under Fire | OTTAWA (CP) -- A statement Toronto TV personality places where the people can earn Charles Templeton was described | Finance Minister Fleming| territory in 1954 and nationalists|tant watch along the long Medi- man. "We don't want people on| Tuesday night as one that "ought | began their campaign for inde-|terranean coast line. pendence from France, a mili-| 'These barriers effectively pre- tary plan to fight it has achieved vent the rebels from increasing a measure of success. there is their armed strength inside Al-|rebels, the people go to work in little danger from the the dole. In the day-time, when|to bring shame to any Cana- | |dian. | | Mr. Fleming, speaking in the| Commons budget debate, quoted] Massive blows of the *'steam- geria," said Challe"s spokesman. the fields or in nearby factories. | Mr. Templeton as saying on the roller" strategy of Gen. Maurice|'They may be able to replace At night they return to the centre |TV program Fighting Words Sun- Challes, the French military the men they lose inside commander in Algeria, have re-| country, but they cannot replace] duced some of the traditional/the arms and ammunition." rebel strongholds and dislocated| C man French army has shattered tion, pra some nationalist forces intoand central Algeria where rebel bands of from 60 to 150 men. bands have been smashed. Some groups are said to be down| This essentially is a French ef- to 20. The general's it man told a group of Common-| mary goals is to "protect" loyal| wealth correspondents there no/Moslems from rebel terrorism. was i i i so serves t revent na-|c y i is. A : | longer are any large nationalist But it also serves to p change of government in Paris Istars in the Liberal party--there the [for army protection." SAS officers are convinced that "Until the end of 1957, France fort to win back Moslem support. Moslems were either neutral or official spokes-|The army says one of its pri-ifor the rebels. "Then the pacification program started and there was a groups in either western or cen-|tionalist-minded people from giv- Since 1958 the Moslems have been tral Algeria. Large bands, how-|ing help to the fellagha. ever, still are reported in the/SOUSTELLE IDEA North Constantine region near the Tunisian frontier. |Special Administrative Challe's spokesman estimated (caps. sas) groups, each headed there still are between 15,000 and by an army officer. These groups formation of SAS and revival of |" 4 yO left--|--the brainchild of former gov-|contacts between the French and ilgs in the next election. 20,000 dedicated rebels many in Tunisia and Morocco. 'ernor Jacques Soustelle--have the! rallying to France. "Confidence in the army now In the country there are 672 makes the people come forward Section |with information about rebel ac- tivities. This may be due to the the populace. Remote TV For The Lazy NEW YORK (AP) -- Remote] control television is a lazy man's imps that sometimes heckle scien- delight. tific marvels--have been causing Without stirring from his easy |some mischief. chair, he pushes & button and the PHONE INTERFERENCE But gremlins -- those invisible 'Canso Breeze' Name Restore CANSO, N.S. (CP) -- The old t Breeze. The Breeze, News Truro. It gradually became TV set across the room changes 4 . see : channels. Another jab lowers the| FOT_ example, a housewife in sound or shuts off the set. the U.S. Midwest summoned a telephone repairman and Priest Meets "Whenever the phone rings our Man Who [the bell rings the set won't shut |off--just lower its volume." Amazingly, the repairman did newspaper serving the Canso. Guysborough area and in to the Guysborough County Advo [cate, adding '"'and Canso Breeze' |in a secondary position and smal type {wants you to fix it so that when| "1 has alwa | | $ ys been The Breeze Ito Canso readers, however. Now | aC e 01S |Canso. Strait area just that after experimenting sev-|publisher John | remote TV shuts off. My husband |bell-rings. Edward McBride came up| all its breezy glory. | P! | ; C€| "If that is not the kind of state- was hesitant in her operations in|ment that ought to bring shame | Algeria. At that time, most of the|y, any Canadian, I hope we will| [never hear a worse one than it| name is back in big type across| he front page of The Canso| a weekly, was y oh [founded around the start of the|asked him on the program 'did |century as a handbill for a Canso|! mean that I was hoping for a| {general store printed by the recession? | Publishing Company of . |phed: "Of course not, but for a -|Liberal resurgence." 1922 | told | the Truro firm changed the name |his being a possible candidate for | | with growing importance of the | . industrially, - M. Murphy de- | eral hours with various pitched|cided to restore the old title in Il er 1 | | | Neighboring Maritime weeklies |day night that there is a chance | of a Liberal revival if the eco-| the program is bearing fruit, One nomic recession predicted -- "I losely linked with these purely Captain, who talked more like a hope accurately"'--by a number sizable rebel units. The 500,000- military operations is pacifica-|solicitous social worker than a|sf well-known economists takes | ised chiefly in western soldier, commented: | lace. on television," Mr. Fleming said. | The minister referred to Mr. Templeton as "one of the rising are even those who refer to him . . . as the possible next leader | |of the Liberal party." He said | |Mr. Templeton is 'regarded as| | certain to be Liberal candidate in| one of the Toronto or York rid-| i, In Toronto, Mr. Templeton| |said, "I am afraid Mr. Fleming | |Leard only what he wanted to| { hear." "If he hadn't stopped listening {he would have heard me correct |asy misapprehension that might \have grown out of my initial | | statement." Mr. Templeton told a reporter {that Nathan Cohen, moderator of | the Fighting Words program, had | Mr. Templeton said he had re- | On Mr. Fleming's reference to | - {leadership of the Liberal party,| *{Mr. Templeton said: 1 oNLY PHILCO-BENDIX WASHES 7 SHEETS YOU CAN OWN A 1960 PHILCO-BENDIX "AUTOMAGIC" WASHER WITH WASHING ACTION FO 10% HIGH-CAPACITY R ONLY DOWN EASY TERMS ARRANGED EXCLUSIVE meH.caPacrTy cuculates a seven-sheet load enough for a bridal veil. No as much. Wash, for another Bee agitator creates sotor washing thon in any other + water waves -- 600 per minute PLUS ALL THESE OTHER w Self-batancing tub. peratures for an * Washes cleanest. load 8% cleaner washer. . You can 103d Ht No off-balance cut are ) Speed and tea. fabrics. Does a fol 20-1. than any other * Futt-wictt: Soveoscont: work ign. LJ WASHING ACTION in the mew Philco-Bendix 3s easily as a handful of hank bigger than ordi ions "Automagic® n yet it's gentle ordinary washers, it handles up rip and you save enough soap : washed, not bade-beaten! ADVANCED FEATURES! ® Friple-Duty Fitter.p; penses detergents, ers, and banishes Spenser -- dis. fabric condition. every trace of hint. & Foll choice of water peratures. | h tem) mcluding cold-water wash, * -Mot-Water Sayer i = automaticat sts water level to any ly ad & Teouble-tsee -- one. yeor 2 : | WINNIPEG (CP) -- A Roman against a wild TV set while flat also have some salty names--the Speaker Catholic priest from neighboring |on his back in a Long Island hos-| Fundy Fisherman of Black's Har- St. Boniface has finally met the |pital. One day McBride decided|Por, N.B., the Coast "Guard of Pp 3 ct | Shelburne, N.S., and the Light, of man who saved his life seven|to freshen his hospital room w yers ago. Rev. Henri Quimet, Winnipeg streetcar. He might] put a tourniquet on the leg with op 10 others in the hospital. a belt and pen. His be ne factor disappeared TV MENAGERIE without giving his name when other help arrived. Recently, Les Walker, a depart- ment store employee who is a member of the Navy reserve, © was chatting with Rev. John J. nals from: Grimes, Roman Catholic chap- happened to mention the incident |'€nS low flying planes or ring of the injured priest and told how doorbells he had applied the tourniquet. One man, The chaplain knew that Father unit broke Ouimet had an artificial leg and |W brought the two together. his car keys together "It was a complete surprise to| Remote TV me," Mr. Walker said. "But I|ultra whose remote hand down, sets operate |a can of air deodorant, but when a Jesuit, |he squeezed the button on the had his right lég severed below |can, his remote TV set changed | [2 H the knee under the wheels of a|channels, 1g t gainst The can apparently emitted a have died from loss of blood but high frequency squeak that not for an unknown bystander, who only worked on his received, but | Yarmouth. OTTAWA (CP) -- "Aha," rose| the chorus from both sides of the | Commons uesday night as J. W.| | DORION, Ont. (CP) than 260,000 young lake | periment being carried out at th Chirping canaries, barking Provincial trout hatchery in this lain at HMCS Chippewa here. He dogs, crying babies, wailing si-|community, 50 miles northeast of ing|the Lakehead on shore of Lake Superior. -| Each year a different fin i the northern Pickersgill went to the chair to confer with the Speaker. | Special note was taken of the action of the Liberal MP for Lam re Ra @§ Bonavista - Twillingate because] Pp Y g {that the chair's occupant was at- -- More i trout One TV repairman recalls such Parted with their right pectoral sets sometimes have operated|fins here as their contribution to "on the remotest and craziest of|the fight against the predatory| joi | sounds." The models would be off|lamprey eel. ater E20) Jowed them, Mrs] {and running if they received sig-| tractive Mrs. Jean Casselman, 39- | year-old widow. I To shouts of "Enough of that, Jack" and a round of desk] thumping when Paul Martin (L-- | |Casselman and Mr. Pickersgill It was the third year of an ex-| chatted briefly under the eyes of €1200-~dd chaperones. Paul and Jack, both married, just grinned] as they congratulated Jean. Mrs. Casselman, smartly dressed in a navy blue jumper Sland a white silk blouse with was able to|clipped so that, if the fish are||,. ; ; eh, . : arge nav 1ka S p ork his TV by simply banging|caught, it will be possible to de. (Debs oa le pe torial nin Hh ; ermine their rate of growth be-|fow minutes as the Commons pre- on|fore being attacked by the lamp- high frequency 'signals|rey eel which has made serious| confidence motion was very glad to meet the father.|above the range. of the human inroads into the trout population pared to vote on a Liberal non- Mrs. Casselman is the second FREE! THIS HANDY KITCHEN TOOL . « « to every lady who visits our store to see the fabulous Philco-Bendix washer in action -- '# HURRY - Supply Limited * Before You Buy... Give Starr A Try x FURNITURE [ had often wondered how he |ear. These signals generally can|ir the Great Lakes. member of her sex in this Par- made out and what had happened |be transmitted mechanically with] The clipping was done by four liament to occu: the Si A will to him." a modified tuning fork or elec-\women using surgical scissors |chair i Aitken (PC 3 Father Ouimet said: "After trically from a tiny battery. Aland working at a rate of about | York- Humber) acted brief] last more than Saver years pe won m Sroplone type device in the set|29 fish a minute. During the op-| session ey mm dering who the man was it was|picks up the signals and trans-|erztion the fish were anae o-| rs, Casse is x wonderful to meet my--what do lates them into specific opera- tized. Later they were Hasse. Sassen ihe Brogres. you say--sayiour." Itions. | Lake Superior. | wile-Dundas, | AND APPLIANCES RA 3-3343 OTARR 485-491 Ritson Rd. S AMPLE FREE PARKING

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