The Oshawa Times, 18 Apr 1960, p. 16

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Dies At 104, Was Canada Racing's Grand Old Lady KITCHENER (CP)--Mrs. Mar- garet Madden, 104, this city's THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, April 18, 1960 . Indian Democracy Told In Lectures The following report has | India has had a continuousjenhance the display. |tradition for the democratic sys-| A special, book list of recent tem. The Indian mind loves dis-|books on India has also been cussion, argument and disputa-|prepared, irdcluding NEHRU: The tion, but issues have always been|years of power by Vincent settled by conforming to the opin-(S heean, MY HEART HAS i been written by a member of the staff of the MacLaughlin Public Library. In our shrinking world it is no| longer possible for any nation to| exist in isolation, every mation | has become inextricably concern- ed with every other nation. It has just so happens that the major |achor nations of fhe world seem to be|SPIrit, cised divided between two apparently from ancient times. X. -- On Sunday evening {the choir of the Church of the . ronto, visited the latter's parents, Six Games Mr. Mrs. F. Hickling, George street, on the weekend, | Wok Sergeant Russell Sulith, t resident and one of Can- rs. Smith and two daughters, Ses oidest horse racing fans, Ie a North Bay, are visiting Mr. and |died Saturday in hospital, whore | Mrs. Art McCartney, York street. she had been confined after breaking a hip in a fall several By COLIN MACKIE | a weeks ago. AJAX -- Six games were play- The accident prevented her ed in the Ajax Basketball Asso-| essla from attending the opening of theiblatin on Setvday, Ap 16. In ion of the majority. The Parijs. [SEVENTEEN ROOMS, by C.|racing season in Fort Erie BU ees rst Same, mentary democracy which India Bartholomew, THE OXF O R D|since her 100th birthday her aP:| ve score of 5.2. Storing for Bob | resente inherited from Britain. is HISTORY OF INDIA edited by(pearances at the tracks were © =o0r bo no Fi ne Phiri 4 ed to this democratic|Percival Spear, INDIA, THE usually greeted with applause; Pr os the an hips ) as exercised in village life MANY ~ STOREYED HOUSE by|from the crowd. foritet 8 n bi one scorer; AJA i |{Irene Vincent, INDIA, THE| Mrs. Madden en Presented ja gp i) With | is 2 routs. the ebolr e Church of t i 7| India is a growing nation, and AWAKENING GIANT by W. S.|trophies to winning jockies and| 4 y d oly Trinity, under the direction ga to | nag a singular influence in Hy and NEHRU, a politi- kissed them for their victories. [Real 2 Hit waited 10 ho |of David = Karry, presented the 3 y : ie: af | i icy|cal bi i Lid ; {second and third parts of Hae- nate circumstance in this situa-| affairs, but her expressed policy|cal biography by M. Brecher. When 101 she is reported to|y . League. the Saltminersi os i pi tion is that any nation that|0f neutralism annoys America| In addition the library contains have asked a jockey: "We're walloped the Globetr tters 12 |del's Messiah. As at Christmas, wishes to make its way in the |and puzzles Britain. The need for other interesting and worthwhile, | about the same size. Do you Scoriag for the Safriabrs were | € choir was augmented to 46 community of nations seems to|understanding is therefore great if less recent, books and pam- | think I'd be any good at jockey- as follows Hunter 2 Caldwell 1. | voices, and three guest soloists be required to make a definite|er than ever before. We can atiphlets that merit considerable in-|ing7'* She was five feet tall. Robertson 4 McGivern 3 and | Tom Hamilton were heard. These choice as to its political lean-|best achieve understanding investigation, e.g, ERN| Born in Buckingham, Que., she|yo it obs be © are (Were Ailsie Forrest, soprano, ings, toward the Communism of| Only small areas, and there must INDIA by Sir Percival Griffiths, | 5159 lived some time in Mattawa only point Was made by Severs |Florence Searles, contralto, and Russia on the one hand, or the remain large areas of non-|a Britisher, who, as Honorary |;,q Timmins. Her keen interest "pn the second Junior game of Alex Forrest, tenor. The bass Democracy of the United States understanding, but we have toAdvisor to the India, Pakistan|is horse racing took her to Fort\ine day Panthers 8, Celtics 4,|°00% Prominent in this work on the other. eliminate deliberate misunder-|and Burma Association, has a|Erie and Toronto Woodbine each| coping' wT os oe which depends for its mood on standing |prime interest in India; THE | goa, Her last attendance Was for the winners ani % point |the strength of male voices, were There has therefore been some| We can gain considerable EVOLUTION OF INDIA, already (ot 2 1959 when she presented Hando Told a Sher othe. | taken by Richard Freeman, a concern in the western world knowledge from reading the mentioned, by an Indian who has|y "gab oram Cup Stakes Trophy |s points for Panthers. Clarring. |TeBUlar member of the Holy Trin- over India's seeming sympathies wealth and variety of literature a keen interest and a wide experi-|; "Ni." Pp. Taylor of Toronto. 2 Do ws 3 pan Se ro ity choir. : : ; | with some Russian policies, while|on India, as contained in the|ence in Britain and. the demo- | Four of her 12 children are the Celtics scoring with 2 points From the first crisp notes play jat the same time professing to|library. However, real under- cratic world as High Commission-| "*4% yivio" Her husband ho ing Points od by Ruth Walker at the organ {be close to the American system!standing of people comes out of|er for India to the United King- |p omas. died 49 years ago Ha Plels, ii sik {it was obvious that conductor in understanding and practice. [sharing common experiences, pol-|dom. {Thomas Gis) © years a2 lg In Seiiof Soinpetition, Edun |Karry had no intention of falling But democracy in India cannot|itical, economic and spiritual. | The Reference Library con- io nn, hi ool iol ame | into the trap which the music {be measured by American stan-| As an aid in this understand- [tains copies of the pamphlet of The dav Totorty detested Mont. | bolds for the unwary. The sense |dards, as ome would become ing the display case in the main|INDIA, a monthly publication ope 0 n 2) 142 Su) Toronto Jeleated ) lof utter humiliation and stark + a Score OL 20:4 . (tragedy was conveyed by the This coming Friday eevning is, cor "of voices with no sacrifice Lor Sorrows For Junior game at 8 p.m. An all-|o iorio The first of these is the B <ketball Night in Ajax, and 9 Know will wind up the Ajax Basketball | on hace: Making the lesser-known | Association program for this sea-| "phere are two solos for female son. The Atom game will be the ysices in this portion of the Mes first game to get underway at 8|gap which are among the most aware on reading THE EVOLU- entrance to the library features issued by the Information Serv- Oppressed p.m. and then followed by the famous and familiar in the whole : |star, oldtimers' game is featured | poionant "He was despised" sung ITION OF INDIA, the text of|a very interesting exhibition on|ice of India at Ottawa VATICAY CITY (AP) -- Pobeiat o'clock, {by contralto Florence Searle. |three lectures delivered in 1957|the subject of India. Mr, E. A program of films for chil by Mrs. Vijaya Lakshmi Pandit|Pinto of 163 Grandview south has|dren will be shown in the audi- |John expressed sorrow in his| The Ajax Juvenile hocke: Wh x 1 sul orio< fyi I A Nye [This is. the. aria which sels th His crucifixion. Mrs. Searle's con- |at McMaster University as part |kindly loaned several items from torium on Saturday afternoon of the Whidden Lectures series. his large collection,and they are| April 23, with titles as follows: | This is neither a new book nor a|well worth more than a casual Heart of Highland, Wonders of |very large one, but it contains|glance. Cloth dolls, carved ele-{the Desert, Sing a Little, and |a wealth of information in an in-|phants and polished brass ob-|Stanley Takes a Trip. | teresting and enlightening man-|jects with engraving and enamel| The Library was closed all day trol and the range of her voice met the demands of the music with authority, promising that this performance was to be much more than a mere retelling of an old story. y The other and even more cele- ner. work are a few articles ,which|Easter Monday, April 18 (Basilica, the 's-year-old head of |and in the second, played the fol- brated solo was sung by the so- L *® "Small Electronic Machine he Roman Catholic Church|owing day, they managed a 2-2 prano, Ailsie Forrest. This was, . . . . Makes Missile Sites Mobile called men to the peace of the|tie, Booths won the round 5 goals locks Saturday as a fog which B TEWART MacLEOD Even DeGaulle Unable lof course, "I know that my Re- MODERN LOADER over the method of y club Hl thoes orate er sutiering because of race or de- League playoffs by dropping their nial of their civil rights. two - game, total goal series Adressing some 150,000 per-| against Booths at Leaside Arena. sons standing in the rain in the| In the first game, played April {great square before St. Peter's|15 Ajax suffered a 3-0 setback timber- rem-- pra | operators object to the system, operator unfair S---- A Seaway V ssels thorough investigation of forest | 'Start To Move jing equipment, which loads logs, are at work | years ago under which lumber throughout British Columbia, | companies have the right, sub- where forest industry the | ject to review every 21 years, mainstay of the economy. Con- | to cut timber on crown lands. troversy Is currently raging ! Small independent logging | tenure and the farm licence sy-tem has been recommend- ed by a royal commission. SAULT STE. MARIE, Ont --(CP Photo) |(CP)--More than 40 lakes vessels -- |began moving through the Soo is ; hii In an obvious reference to the|jgsers. Algorail was refloated Sunday by French gadget may have been| Ope of the missiles now under] Negro's race problem, he said:| Before closing his hockey a tug after running aground at|pehind the British government's|investigation by Britain is the ; 1 "C |a mission that previously would by racial intolerance Smith scored the goals for the The Algoma Central freighter] [ONDON (CP) A small|be considered certain suicide. "And our sorrowing gaze turns|pooks, Dennis Anthony, manager umphant climax of the evening the i . jons and getting back home from risen Christ in a world plaguedity 2. Doug Law and Rocket had halted shipping began to lift.| Canadian Press Staff Writer deemer liveth". This is the tri- | | the Lake Superior end of Canadian ship canal here. The Algorail, en route to the Lakehead, suffered no damage de mobile launching sites for mis- i cision to rely more heavily on| The gadget, called a carcino- LJ To End Algerian War | i |and continued into the Whitefish thron, has given manned bomb- it's a as reason. All the feeling I have in me naturally imagines France| |but, when de| Whopper." But the arrival of Nikita|as the princess of the fa By GODFREY ANDERSON he does, PARIS (AP) Charles - leaves for Canada and the triumph and failure as it was getting most intense. A as dedicated to an eminent and The triumph: That he has given kind of internal political truce en- exceptional destiny." France stability and increased in-/sued. De Gaulle's self-identification ternational prestige after decades; pe Gaulle treated his Russian With France he describes thus: episodic government and guest with lofty politeness. With "I feel myself filled with a func- 5 traces of an ironical smile on his/tion which very far surpasses my a not/lips, he told about Russia but Person--to serve as an Iinstru- ved the country's para-|never once referred to it as the ment of destiny. ' : problem by ending its|Soviet Union. In their private ex-| The French, long used to this ive-year war against the changes, the general impression|sort of talk from their Jealer, ac-| m nationalists in Algeria. |was that de Gaulle always gave Cept it with some Gallic Serva-| If his popularity remains high as good as he got. fuons. Tlie Jokes Siow de Carles) with the masses it has sharply FRIGHTENING DIGNITY | : berless. | dec with the politicians and r the press v The Jaan Ottawa, Washington, He has been accused of almost - thin ew or. ! , San Francisco and everything from 'personal pater- two months ago, afterNew Orleans will see this week|nalism" to "government by per-| 5 She sellers aSurrecho and next has an austere and sonal committee." Many think he allying the nation sometimes frightening dignity. He intends to scrap the present par- m, de Gaulle seemed on rarely smiles, and the few smiles||iamentary system he world he offered seemed forced Coldly ~ ignoring the storms But he made seeming conces-| Yet he likes nothing better than around "him, de Gaulle drives sions to the army and the to push his way in the midst of a|ahead with what he thinks best--| Frenchmen of Algeria last month|crowd, shaking all the hands he 5 British Commonwealth style of vhen he forecast a long war and can reach. community to replace the former he end of it "an Algerian De Gaulle has the reputation of African empire, ultimate peace linked with France being touchy and difficult in ne- with justice in Algeria, rigorous Those words, while encouraging gotiations. He is always on the measures against inflation, a ht to expect the kind of|lookout for what he conceives as strong presidency separated from ure: That he has ne Alger Bay icefields Meanwhile, Steamship Line freighters two Canadian -- the poration dock here with the first cargoes of coal from Toledo Ohio. PERRY COMO VISITS ENGLAND LONDON (AP)--A fine old English institution named | Perry Como arrived Satur- day. Treading a path well worn by North American TV stars in search of something | to fill the gap between the commercials. It is Como's first visit to Britain but his fame has pre- ceded him, His weekly show is one of the favorites of Brit- ish television. So much so that London children sing a playground jingle which goes like this: Catch old Perry Como Wash him in some Omo Hang him on the line to dry When he's getting starchy Call in Liberace And make 'em into apple pie, (Omo is a British deter- gent.) ck Algeria solution they a possible slight towards France.|the legislature. | | ers a new lease on life with the greatest degree of protection since the advent of radar. The : y tales| Prescott and the Burlington--ar-| protection also applies to the ed States at a time of both/Khrushchev took the heat off just/or the madonna of the frescoes, rived at the Algoma Steel Cor- homber's missile cargos. American Skybolt which, | adopted, may be carried in a mil- itary version of the Vickers VC-10 {jet liner now being built. Spokes- men say that if such a missile is| |placed in service, the carcinotron |should get much of the credit | Few details have been pub- lished about the French invention| except that its radio waves cover if/also to the other children of God|of the Juvenile team, would like everywhere, suffering because oft, express his thanks to Mr. race or economic conditions, at|Andy Meyers for the financial once complex and giving reason support he has given the team for anxiety, or through the limi-|oyer the past season. tation on the exercise of their the assertion of faith which makes sense of all the ugliness |and sorrow of the events preced- ling Easter, There is little that {can be said about the flawless |rendition of a favorite aria ex- {natural and civil rights." SPECIAL EMPHASIS The Pope put special e es, PERSONALS cept thank you to a fine artist | for a beautiful moment. Most of the solo work was done on racial tolerance during Holy » The carcinotron, a small elec-|an unusually wide range of fre- Week. ultra-high-frequency radio waves, jams all radar sets that would normally pick up the aircraft, thus shielding the plane from enemy detection. On top of this, it can jam the guidance systems of many existing anti - aircraft missiles The carcinotron, developed by the Compagnie Generale de T. S.| F. of Paris, is believed already| installed in Britain's Victor and| Vulcan bombers. Sources say the gadget has been patented in Brit-| ain and the United States and de- velopment is going ahead at full speed. SITTING DUCKS It comes at a time when British defence officials are obviously worried over the accuracy of Russian missiles the moon] shot brought the message home-- | and fixed missile sites are gen-| erally regarded as sitting ducks The white paper on defence, tabled in parliament several weeks ago, indicated that new| emphasis would be placed on missile . mobility With the carcinotron, it meags| that bombers equipped with short-| range missiles stand a good] chance of working their way past| '|tronic machine that spews out| quencies. KHRUSHCHEV HAS BLUE BLOOD BONN, West Germany, (Reu- ters)--Blue blood flows in the Khrushchev, | newspaper Abendpost reports. | It says a Soviet publication on a Cossacks' uprising against Empress Catharine in the 18th | century mentioned a Ijrainian Noble, Peter Khrushchev, one of the leaders of a plot against the Empress. The plot was discovered and Peter Khrushchev was exiled and deprived of his nobility and military rank. Abendpost says the son of the exiled officer settled as a farmer in the province of Kursk | of his gre at-grandsons Serge Khrushev, Nikita's | father. "One-32nd part mates. as | was |y On Holy Thursday he AJAX -- Mr. and Mrs, Michael | Mr. per- Eastwood and Mr. and Mrs Ron | handled by the tenor and bass singers Forrest and Mr. Freeman their difficult assign- formed the traditional ceremony Lott attended the Ellicott - Price ments with the confidence of men of washing the feet of 13 per-/wedding in Markham on Satur-{who know and believe what they at the Christ for emulating supper. But sons, last first the day. |are singing, and enjoy the oppor- Mr. and Mrs. Mel Gonneau and | tunity of offering their ability as time those chosen included Ne- Garry, Deep River, and a Polynesian Before giving his Easter mes- other relatives in town. Mr. and Mrs. Ron Parish and |nificent big voice was at its best veins of Soviet Premier Nikita [ings to Laurian Cardinal Rug-| boys spent the holiday weekend in his last aria "The trumpet the Frankfurt |ambwa of Tanganyika, first Ne- with relatives in Haliburton. gro to be elevated to princedom| Dr. Scott Russell, Mrs. Russell [the singer met the music as Han- sage, the Pope sent special greet- in the church The cardinal has|and little son visited Mr. spent |groes, a Japanese, West Indians weekend with Mr. and Mrs. ton Griffith, Glynn road, wil and been ill in a Rome hospital since Mrs. Alex Russell, Churchill ave- he received his red hat last nue. and | the an act of worship. Mr. Forrest -| was required to carry a large part of the narrative, and did so |effortlessly. Mr. Freeman's mag- shall sound". As in all the solos, dle intended, vigorously and with power, bringing out every shade of iig in the 's Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Swire, To-'words. {month. New Biography On Victoria Done In Words, Pictures t This is the age of biographiesiten in an easy style, with fre-|loria was one of the most be- and had several children. One |with words and pictures, judging/quent quotations of the queen's(loved of all British monarchs and being published. One of |latest, and one well worth any of Nikita's |reader's time, is titled "QUEEN | blood is blue," Abendpost esti- |yycTORIA: A BIOGRAPHY IN [WORD AND PICTURE" by Hel- mut and Alison Gernsheim ors explain that, as far as possi- |ble, they have given preference |in the selection of photographs to |fruthful, if unflattering, photog- raphic portraits over imagination the number of such books/own words, and is enlivened with|this book is a fitting tribute to the many amusing stories. The auth- her. TOP HISTORIANS Helmut and Alison Gernsheim are today recognized as leading photo-historians. Their incompar- | drove the non - Com-|Most observers see this as result-| ---- They thought de Gaul'e|1940 when, alone, he stood up for For Killer Car | or 1 er ar | {enemy radar, firing their weap-| able collection has formed the U.S. Spokesmen Doubt Uranium Deal Report | (Longmans, Green and Co. Ltd.) representations. nt 0 Bc E y sel | : basis of a comprehens 7 | The authors have assembled a| They add: "This, we are sure, of 2 sompreieuciye Histo left en ances the "Soviet Union appears to be Holifield is earmarked for U.S. stretching out its power reactor research and development of : fuels, reactor components, de- pre t to almost open cppe-/ing from the French defeat of . ng off from his earlier|France against his allies as much Police Search the Algerians alone as against his enemies ose their future gov-| Today's president has mel- lowed somewhat from the war OFFENDS BOTH SIDES take a hint of patronage from| HOLLAND LANDING, Ont.| Then, after offending the anyone (CP)--One-year-old Chesley Bel- offénded the right The mystique which has always lar was killed Saturday night aroused general ire by re- surrounded him is wearing off|when struck by a car as he session to debate the|gii]] helps build his reputation for|outside his home in this village Erowing economiciajgofness--a lonely figure at the 30 miles north of Toronto. Police He was accused of! gymmit are still searching for the car violation of the constitution and its driver p De Gaulle himself describes his|ihe accident i | rtime Premier Paul Rey-|feeling of being personally iden-|a Sori S54 jhe cap Sorped By HAROLD MORRISON at 81 a respected elder tified with his country in the open-|road and the driver removed the, Canadian Press Staff Writer man and still an admirer of ing words of his war memoirs mangled stroller from beneath it. | |Holifield, senior congressman in| The U considers herself the sign facilities and testing which Gen. de Gaulle does not|tain idea of France," he wrote Marles said the car contained |the joint congressional atomic free world's top uranium pro-|would help in the construction gften make a political mistake'"Sentiment inspires me as much z second occupant. Police were|energy committee, says he is/ducer. Some of her uranium, as|and operation of Canadian atomic ee - rp -- ~--|able to follow a trail of oil or|confident Canada will not sell{Well as some from Canada, has plants. CROSSWORD PUZZLE time general. But he still will not to summon parliament in|gjightly for the French. But it|/pushed his stroller on the road ng towards one - man PERSONALLY IDENTIFIED Gordon Marles, who witnessed WASHINGTON (CP) Chet | construction program.' dent, was quoted as say- 'All my life I have had a cer-|The car then sped northward | 1 U | anti-freeze from the damaged car uranium directly to Russia. been made available to the Inter-| The $5,000,000 proposal must be national Atomic Energy Agency,|accepted by the House of Repre- | set up for the peaceful use of the|sentatives -and Senate before . it | international safe-| goes into effect. Holifield said he| |anticipated no trouble in getting i : A : Geo 7 |fast passage. ng Canada would be willing to| PURPOSE STIPULATED | OTTAWA (CP) [sell uranium from Blind River,| In the past in making uranium | ! 1 |Ont. to Russia if Russia wants exports, Canada has always been |any. Churchill is in Moscow 10/careful to stipulate for several miles, but it petered| phe California Democrat was out | i OW s- | Chesley, the son of Bern Beller |g OB fate through of Holland Landing, was living|pinister Gordon Churchill as say.|Suards and control. with his grandmother, Mrs. Roy | t |Bellar. She said the boy had just| been missed from the house when [the accident occurred. ACROSS . Swiss canton . Great Lake . Mix . Kicks, as a football Emmet Letter . Make a mistake . Apricot (Jap.) Tigress' nest . Persian fairy . Toward the sheltered side . Frees lyric poem Fibbed 25. Farm= er's estate Inhabi- tants | pany of Saturday's Answer addition Lemon or orange drink Tremulous Employed City (Pa.) A sweet heart Indistinct Mast 3. Affirmed , Samuel's teacher {Bib.) . Tropical climbing " plant « 29. Possessing ears + 81. "-- Hur" 32, Female goats {collog.) European skink Performed Egyptian seaport Sprite Stores Mistake 47. A phoebe 48, Artless 49. Correct 50. Celerity DOWN 1. Smoke« filled fog 2. Mulberry bark cloth & Decay® 41. Comedian ~-- Allen Mineral spring Border | Be in debt Knock 42 v | si 36. 37. 39. 42, 45. Many Plans and repayment schedules fe suit your budget. $50 to $5,000 Without Endorsers or Bankable Security Loans Life Insured & ypERIOR FF. NANCE {upon Queen Victoria's photograph artistic licence deviating from books. Dine dhe a seven ally illustrated. They have also|trated by photography during the collection at the Victoria and Al the 400 photographs alone, this, eg necessary until fast gelatine Holland Switzerland, Gersaany {book -on Queen Victoria and her|jy the 1880's. | The accompanying text is wril-/hahit "to commission artists in many of these are preserved in| S : uccessor To Muir | They possess a large quantity of I says speculation about a succes- WwW. M. Gil-| | : io |of the period. We have been priv-| I en} . fhe and president, centres on CNR in exports|gai 3 y |¥hem, 3 ny | | 'S|said he had no knowledge of any Ottawa Mild lof contemporary portrait minia- | 1 pact. to be used for peaceful purposes|pium to 35] | tures." |ernor of the Bank of Canada. (Children Accused | "We have very fine relationsjonly Perhaps that is what | Bussia. " 3 a | By THE CANADIAN PRESS addition to the numerous books walters of the Royal Bank and h A . agent purchasi rani |joint committee has approved alever, U.S. officials here doubted] 8 Darciasimg vranium from . 3 y S Sunday across Canada |of the finest works of its kind|as possible choices if the Royal Several children who found and | could help both the United the Kind of international controls Atomic Energy Commission and Ay wopths S20: Wil be pro |sunshine and mild weather al-|scholarly research. Queen Vic-'bank staff, the newspaper says. sec pad, as p © I. M ed TT TG water, natural uranium re: struggle for new uranium mar-| Canadia . | RD _producers alse ex | above 40 in Winnipeg. | monses against some of the chil-| He added: E £ |Energy Agency under bilateral| guepec City while Montreal was hoard, found in a trailer on &| which the Western countries re- ---------- sons visited Parliament Hill to] News of the discovery leaked would export uranium to Russia.| |had a difficult time. An Easter of 'pocket money." One hoy told| RUSSIA HAS PLENTY h cof 4, daffodils am equivalent of $500 "because I got/lieved Russia has plenty of her| the 'park of 440 datiodis and for the money. and the supreme added that if Canada sold ura- Whitby Council, Thursday night, lout of court. RAIN AT COAST |mable Disposal Limited, o ts 3 18% rain kept a sunrise service at| ie not stated there was a connection tas in The reeve told the c py | LONDON (AP) Chancellor) Another commission official ' el thai "the matter wag held than predicted. r s held u |council was awaiting J I after West Germany's repara-|building up her atomic shone and. the fhetmometer The last report of Russian nu-| Township {the area were confidenti heavy ing day in| persecution of the Jews was re-|clear activity, contained in the ; M snijslia avy shophing day. bul in most valuable book, one to be|is as Queen Victoria herself} biographies of great 19th century s vhich her life i , y albums, thanks to which her the truth. Comparatively few |voars they have also arranged presented a large amount of hith-| greater part of her reign, on ac-|pert Museum London, and In ait {book is likely to establish itself gry plates made instantaneous ang Ttaly. : and preserved fi family. {'Before the days of the press| Pp ed for many years to a ~ |water color to make sketches {freshness and spontaneity lack- ; or to the late James Muir, |christ, president of Eldorado |ileged. to include a selection of (a chit y President Harold Gordon, 60, and sign a new Canada-Russia trade agreements that the uranium is| intention to sell ura. | : | Eldor is . . with the Canadians," Holifield Churchill had in mind in his Mos: | Gori is the crown em : A Of Robbing Cache Sunshine, showers and stolen published in late years on the|Kenneth Sedgewick, vice-chair | Canadian voroducers and re-sell- 4 Cac 40 | ; he Maritimes .and Western|€ver attempted, one, also, that/Bank board of directors decides spent part of a cache of £40,000 ate5 and Canada in research|that would provide safeguards. |the United Kingdom Atomic En. day by police 3 ) kets to replace those built up un-|port urani itzer- | | P P post uranium to Japan, Switzer Rain drenched Easter parade | dren, aged nine to 14, on charges| 'I believe uranium is on the in 1962. » toned U7) | ) men J ion ylagreements, |cloudy. The temperature touched circus parking lot in a Sydney |strict in trade with the Commu-| . No Connection "Bat "in Vite out when police checked reports|I don't think we would either." |egg hunt in Beacon Hill Park police he "bought all the lollipops | An official of the. U.S. atomic aL | s a rampl il |tired of spending it." own uranium and wouldn't need| A statement by Reeve Wilfred court action against his com. otiier blooms and trampled bolled court is expected to decide to/nium to Russia even though|Was denied this morning by M.| Reeve Pascoe told The Oshawa| , Churehes were crowded across| --=---------------------- there would be concern in the ' n 3 f | |Ma between the companies, His only Vancouver's Empire Stadium | : no action had been.taken against | Konrad Adenauer is reported to|said that if Russia suddenly : that | Stroll sh d off spring until the action against a similar | rol:ors Showed or spring weaponsicome of a court action against! He also c nte a ad|climbe x I Ph rted its Bhi GIL i § C ) ctiol gai e also commented that he had|climbed Edmonton reported its Mr. Solomon said there was|General Motors papers but rather|chilly Winnipeg most East ported Saturday by an authorita-|commission's annual report Pape Y ag - cherished by lovers of history. would have wished, for in later|, wr Were brivileg to draw| : g : |photographers. In all, they have |They were privileged to |years she did not permit any rublished jointly, or singly, 14 can be intimately and authentic-|events, however, could be illus- large exbiolions PHOT erto unpublished material. For|count of the rather long expos- museums in Sweden, Belgium as an essential source material oxposures . possible (out-of-doors) | This is a book to be treasured a y ome, FINE STYLE photographer it was the Queen's| re - [from life of royal occasions, and| Speculations On |the souvenir albums at Windsor. | ; OTTAWA (CP) -- The Citizen In Toronto ling in the woodcut illustrations| ¢ ' Royal Bank of Canada chairman {Min ini imi | P lining and Refining Limited, together with a number | Canadian |Graham Towers, 62, retired gov- 1 : n | This book will be a welcome| Both Vice - President Matthew : that ots {said in an interview. "Why, the|cow statement Thursday. How- Bcis 85 the federal A Tcarex. v hs flowers-- a summary of Easter British Royal family, as it is one| man of the board, are mentioned v n 2 ralia | Er = A f lw . i , 3 SYDNEY, Australia (Reuters $5,000,000 appropriation w hic h|whether Russia would agree to ing it to the United States | canada were mostly favored with|bears the imprints of fine and| to fill Mr. Muir's position from six months ago will be pro- the C di t f 1 vl : K ) on the Canadian type of heavy) Canada is facing an uphill/ergy Authority. Aevting Swati | though the mercury didn't climb | , Last week police issued sum. | actors der U.S. contracts which t|land d t Sc acts ch run out|la : 8 utlland and the European Atomic spirits in Toronto and showers hit of stealing money from thellistofstrategic commodities | The $5,000,00 75 in Ottawa as thousands of per-| suburb nists. 1 would not think Canada| But in Victoria the flowers of schoolboys having large sums | ° | Between Firms | there turned into chaos as an es- in the world" but gave away the|energy commission said he be {Limated 15,000 persons stripped ' i | Pasco t a meeting of the East|pa Easter eggs hidden in the grass Ten persons have lodged claims|any from the West. However, he" a3 €, al a meeting of the Fast/pany had already been settled whom it belongs. |there are surpluses in Canada|Sclomon, an official of Inflam-| Times this morning that he had the country but early wind and REPORTS PLEDGE Us. ia y 1 &) | statement in this regard was down to 3,000 persons, 7,000 less Industrial Garbage and Disposal have given Israel a secret pledge started buying uranium from the|yimited, of Oshawa. because the shione iti i: : of a long-term $500,000,000 loan|West it would indicate she was the out. company" had been settled fasiions iu cities Whete the Suh {the same company Vv han | not sa 1 ying a w /n area as as | dramatic. postscript to 'the Nazi C pany - in Vaughan not said the papers blowing about|downtown area as crowded as on| ur is-| absolutely no connection between|that "a lot of them could be|paraders were on their way to or tive Israeli informant here. sued a few months ago, was that|the twe eompanies and that the|confidential." from church. 17 Simcoe St. North RA 5-6541 OFFICES THROUGHOUT ONTARIO

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