The Oshawa Times, 6 Jun 1960, p. 2

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

' 4 AT MRA WORLD ASSEMBLY Dr. Frank N. D. Buchman, initiator of Moral Re-Arma- ment, at the MRA World As- sembly at Caux, Switzerland, talking with John Amata, revo- lutionary African leader from Nigeria. Looking on" are Gen- | French Community in Africa; | Eudocio Ravines of Peru, for- | mer Communist Comintern | member and professor at the | Lenin Academy in Moscow; eral Bethouart, Senator of the | and Frits von Velsen, manag- coal Ruhr. Granny Celebrates 108th(?) Birthday PRINCE GEORGE, B.C. (CP) Margaret (Granny) Seymour marked her 108th birthday here Sunday, although no one was quite sure 'if it was the right date. There were no special celebra- tions in the little home at nearby, South Fort George she shares Pearson Stresses UN's Importance NEW YORK (CP) -- Canada's Opposition Leader Lester B. Pearson says the blow-up at the summit may result in the use of the United Nations for top-level fairs minister, agrees that a suni. mit conference might be of occa- sional value. But, he says if preparatory work hasn't been done at the eign imports, United Auto Work 4,000 Canadians were deprived of job opportunities in the auto in- dustry last year because of for- Curb On Imports Of Autos Urged PORT ELGIN (CP) -- About said Sunday. Following the director's report, the 125-man district council ap- pointed a five-man committee to lower levels, "when the leaders meet they should talk about their grandchildren, hybrid corn or even, after a good dinner, their philosophical and political doc- trines." UN BEST HOPE Pearson says the UN _ "still embodies our ultimate ideals and hopes for world peace and secur- ity." Canadians would like to see the big powers take advantage fof it far more for their diplo- matic negotiations. 'Perhaps the shock at the sum- mit will have this result," he suggests. Canada is worried about some aspects of its relations with the U.S., Pearson says. Canada feels that within the North Atlantic Treaty Organization there "is at times more control than co-opera- diplomacy. Writing in the New York Her- ald Tribune, Pearson describes the summit fiasco as a "'sensa- tional demonstration of the dan- ger and disadvantage of diplo- macy at the highest level." The Nobel peace prize winner, who was the prime architect of the United Nations Emergency Force when he was external af- Technical Aid Has Good Year UNITED NATIONS (AP)--The United Nations program of tech- nical assistance is having its most prosperous year yet--right with a daughter, Minnie Brown, because Granny is in poor health. She spent several weeks in hos- pital this year with pneumonia. So far as it's been possible to authenticate, Granny was born in about 1852, at or near the Hud- son's Bay Company fur trading post of Fort St. James on Stuart Lake, 75 miles northwest of here. Her father, James Barclay, was the post factor. It's a matter of record that |granny was baptized by Rev. H. McCoulgan at Stuart Lake mis- sion June 5, 1860. He placed her probable date of birth on the bapiismal certificate as 1852-55, adding that in his opinion she was definitely more than five years of age at the time. Granny married twice and had eight children. Weekend Fatalities By THE CANADIAN PRESS Muitiple Que dead In traffic mishaps, dents. death accidents at Fredericton, Vancouver and Trois Rivieres and St. Hyacinthe, pushed Canada's toll of weekend fatalities to at least 48. A Canadian Press survey from 6 p.m. local times Friday to mid- night Sunday showed 28 purspns drowned, four dead in a fire and three miscellaneous fatal acci- draft a new appeal to the fed- eral government to halt the num- ber of auto imports. Mr. Burt said Canada's auto parts industry is being threatened by the growing volume of foreign '|cars sold in the country. International secretary - treas- urer Emil Mazey urged greater interest by labor in international affairs. He favored recognition of Red China and its admission to the United Nations, He announced a $10,000 dona- tion to the UAW education centre here. Larry Sheffe of Toronto was re- elected president. Other officers include vice - president Malcolm Smith of Oshawa; secretary- treasurer, Joseph B, Kenny, Simpson, Chatham and Bruce Lee, Toronto, William Marshall of Merriton, | ers (CLC) director George Burt BIG TRIPLETS KYLE, Sask. (CP)--A Hereford cow raised by lan Gillespie, 17- year-old member of the 4-H club, gave birth here to triplet calves weighing between 40 50 pounds each. NATURAL GAS IS YOUR BEST BUY HEATING | ing director of the Nordstern mine in the German after one of its worst. The technical assistance board brought that out Sunday night in its annual report on the work of spreading skills and knowledge from country to country. The reports showed 79 govern- ments are expected to contribute a record $33,400,000 in 1960 to the program to promote use of new techniques in agriculture, indus- try and public services. years ago. BIG CONTRIBUTIONS tributions will more than pay for DIEFENBAKER REP ORTS Ten-Year NATO Plan the work planned for 1960, unless there is trouble using some of the contributed currencies. The United States: which gives 40 per cent of what all others give, including the assisted coun- tries, was committed as of April 30 to chip in $13,819,326 in 1960-- against $11,863,200 last year .Bri- tion." ticularly the way it was handled, illustrates our worries." DANGER TO NATO that NATO has for smaller coun- tries will be in danger of "wither- ing away" if the requirement of closer co-operation isn't met." Quebec, with 27 deaths, had "The U-2 incident, more par- 'TURTLE TURNS | MIDGET AUTO WAVERLY HALL, Ga. (AP)--A turtle upset a little foreign car near here. The astonished driver of the midget car was Joe D. Pearson says the advantage, Pearson says Canadians feel more than all the other provinces combined. A motor launch capsized in the St. Lawrence River Sunday night after hitting a channel buoy, and four Trois - Rivieres residents drowned. They were Mr. and Mrs. Emilien Arcand, their son Plerre, 5 and Mariette Clement, 35. Four other persons were rescued. Near St. Hyacinthe Sat- Herbert Kelly of Windsor and Dominic d'Angelis of Brantford were elected to the resolutions committee. Mentally Ill Big Challenge NOTHING DOWN No Payment That will be an increase of $3,740,000 from 1959--when con- tributions dropped $1,650,000 from a 1958 high in the first slump since the program started 11 The board said prospective con- Until September !! Easy payments over 5 vears on monthly gas bills $14.60 [500 tiace, "ie cluding labour and terials to connect continentalism is a threat to the national development and the in- dependence they cherish. Some form of continentalism is inescapable, he says, but Cana- dians "are determined to do our best to prevent co-operation-- which is essential--from becom- ing absorption or domination, which is not." | urday night three persons died in a car-truck collision. New Brunswick reported five traffic deaths, four of them in a two-car collision near Frederic- ton. The four were L. Cpl. Au- guste LeBlanc 28, L. Cpl. Earl A. Nogler, 29, Pte. W. J. Camp- bell, 25 and Pte. William Rich- Miller. He suffered minor injuries when the wheel of his car hit the turtle, caus- ing the auto to veer off the road into a ditch where it turned over. The turtle, about a foot in diameter, was killed. For Medicine SARNIA (CP) ~The greatest challenge facing the medical pro- fession today is that of mental ill- ness and the rehabilitation of its victims, Ontario Health Minister* Dymond said here Saturday. mond, 26, all of the Black Watch, Savants Discuss University Job Camp Gagetown. None were from Ontario. FOUR DIE IN FIRE In Vancouver Sunday, an apartment fire which took only 10 minutes to extinguish took the lives of Mr. and Mrs. William Bain, both 39, and their daugh- nearest existing bases In an address to the Ontario ant dusts. Association of Medical Clinics, Dr. Dymond said there are more than 20,000 mentally-ill patients and about 5,000 mental defectives in 18 hospitals in the province. Dr. Dymond said the medical profession must realize the im- portance of this field of medicine. most furnaces. CHANGE-OVER CAN BE DONE IN A FEW HOURS Units for all types of home heating FREE BURNER SERVICE Your Gas.company does not employ ters Willa, 4, and Susan, 2. Two of Ontario's four weekend traffic deaths were children, On- tario had one drowning. Newfoundland reported two drownings, Alberta and British Columbia one each. Two persons died in Manitoba traffic accidents while British Columbia had one traffic fatality. 'New Brunswick had an acciden- tal shooting death. The survey includes weekend traffic, boating and holiday activ- ity deaths but not industrial fatalities. THREE YOUNG VICTIMS Oatavio dead: Peler Capsalis, 4, Saturday when hit by a car in the street near his east-end Toronto home, Keith Stack, 19, of Killaloe, Sunday when the car he was driving left the highway and rolled over. Edward Green, 43, of Rich- mond, Saturday night when his car Jeft the road 25 miles south-| east of Ottawa James Pollock, 8, of Brantford, drowned Saturday in the Grand River. David Brohman, 5, of Essex, Saturday when hit by a car near his home. tain is pledged to pay $3,000,000, against $2,240,000--in equivalent He urged doctors to spend more time with the mentally ill. In another address, David Archer, president of the Ontario Federation of Labor, said there is a desperate urgency to estab- lish a proper comprehensive na- tional health plan in Canada. He said "certain powerful forces" had been working against establishment of a national health plan . . . "an unholy alliance of the insurance industry. big busi- ness and, to a certain extent, some el ts in the dical "profession." By GERRY FREEMAN Canadian Press Staff Writer KINGSTON (CP) -- Canada's most learned men today turned their attention to the training ground of the top thinkers of the Adult Education was told Satur- day that Canada now has 1,000. 000 adult students and increasing enrolments are expected during the next decade. J. Roby Kidd, director of the Toronto-based association, said in his annual report that in addition to the 1,000,000 people enrolled in classes or other regularly sched- uled educational activities, an- other 1,000,000 to 2,000,000 people participated in short - term courses, workshops or farm forums. "This is not a passing phenom- enon. This is a clear indication of what lies ahead, namely, con- tinuing education for most men and women, most of their lives." CONCLUDE SESSIONS The Canadian Association of Geographers, the National Con- ference of Canadian Universities and Colleges and the Capadian Psychological Association wound up Hele sessions during the week- end. E. G. Pleva of the University of Western Ontario was elected president of the geographers, suc- ceeding D. P .Kerr of University of Toronto. door salesmen nor telephone canvassers, Gi bh Sr ario Fuel Boal 8 the Sales 0% ey (Consumers as RA 3-3468 "SUPPORT THE HOSPITAL DRIVE ! {Fou 3 B80 NEW FRANCS {to support India's charge of Chi-| inese aggression on the Indian border. Koirala has ignored the demands. Koirala says China claims only | {100 to 150 square miles of Nepali territory Commissions are being established to try to resolve the disputes. Loirala has expressed both confidence the problem will be solved amicably and appre- hension. Confusion reigns on the owner- ship of Mount Everest. This is the most spectacular of the border| disputes between Nepal and DIFFERENCE A new picture tube would make . . . For price, etc. consult our service department. "How much. i that in DOLLARS 7" available in all of these STANDARD WINDOW SIZES 30" On your European trip, take the mystery out of unfamiliar cur- rencies by carrying the .ew 1960 40" 50" 60" 7'0" 3 ih ---- B of M Currency Guide wherever you go. This pocket-sized guide gives you, at a glance, the dollar equivalents of eleven European Wiha TW Aga HATH Gi MEAGHER'S 5 KING ST. WEST RA 3-3425 China and the only one not turned wer to commissions, Chinese "remier Chou En-lai has backed vay from his claim to the south- n slope but still wants to share he summit with Nepal. He con- tended that htere is no dispute. currencies. ..and it's yours for the asking at any B of M branch. . yours in " for the asking I ula FOR CARRYING THOSE DOLLARS There's no safer method of car- rying those dollars you will be converting "over there" than by Travellers Cheques sold by the B of M. Unless, of course, you are planning a lengthy stay and need a large sum of money. In that case, a B of M Travellers Letter of Credit is your best bet. Either way, your money will be completely safefromlossor theft. BEFORE YOU GO... Drop in to your nearest B of M branch. Our people can be help- ful to you in numerous ways in planning your trip and they'll be glad to outline the services that will be willingly offered you at the B of M offices in Londonand Paris. £750 BL : ok tees ia | [9647 0 54 SIMCOE NORTH Tuesday and Wednesday Only! Sensational Meat Features LEAN TENDER Ih. c CLUB STEAKS Ib. 29. SLICED J ns.$1 Breakfast BACON ib. 2 B. West End Office, London, 9 Waterloo Place, sw. For Full Information Inquire at . . OSHAWA WOOD PRODUCTS LIMITED Paris ler NH 0.2 MiLLION CURADIANS BANK oF MONTREAL Canadas Fino Bank Downtown Showroom 84 Simcoe St. S.--RA 8-1617 Main Office and Showroom Courtice--RA 8-1611 LEAN MINCED BEEF THIN SLICED PORK LIVER B 20 Simcoe St. North: Ottawa Branly 3 JAMES MCANSH, Manager Shopping Centre Branch, King Street West: Osluwa Shepp NORMAN McALPINE, Manager HUGH HUSTLER, Manages JAMES BELL, Manager COLIN SUTHFRLAND, Manager 9 Telephones To Serve You Ajax Branch: Bowmanville Branch: Whitby Branch: Bowmanville--MA 3-2130 Ajax--ZEnith 2-9600 Called For By PM fie Trad Last year, the report said, the future. OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Minis- work towards a heads-of-govern-| United Nations fay fgets . ociety of Canada in a sympo- Bank Teller Wins three-city 3,250 - mile round of 4. An East-West summit. con-|sity were made in the light of| ing here in conjunction with the tted Canada to support an ultimate goai, but the path to it day The most dramatic was his mille 24 E. W. R. Steacie, president of the ing tions of-governmen! meeting to set toi meetin | the province-wide safe driving yrontreal, and Rev. D. L. Thom- in The program was outlined in lliance. Guelp | gra a Boadway of Orillia tied for sec-|to receive a diploma as an honor- ime minister charted this [ ) prime ; Grecneastle and to the annual] In Winnipeg he said the West| The three youths will go on to |address the gathering. g forei ministers 1 Sirough thelr gn ] Paris summit conference failed| Canadian title carries with it a/Canada opened a two-day con- ; S $1,000 scholarship. tailed program for NATO's next|are the 10-nation disarmament| Within five years, eight eoun- cation. The Canadian Association erry ; i E socia f Pr f ern powers should try to estab- forts to achieve scientific agree- Czechoslovakia and East dian Association of Professors o Russia to ease tensions heigh- tests, an essential part of a nu-|0nS. The Canadian Association for of that conference should not be{Greencastle Canada's support for of getting NATO consultations, footing as Canada-U.S. consulta-| Beset By Border Trouble . Sh Fr er LRAOIL ~ruLL visSiON" putes. Some of the reasons that kept dom in the middle of a bitter bor- be incurred--apply even more| trying to ignore it. { Parliament have called for Nepal dispute between Nepal and its gi- gomething that can be solved is one of neutrality and a pub- It is based on a desire not to India and its sympathies seem to DISAPPOINTED BY NEHRU pression of the 1959 Tibetan re- Friend Says frogman who disappeared four cruiser for 'the Americans" artist and author who lives in| allegations that Crabb is alive torial to publish the following | helped to identify his body at $5,000 to spy on the Soviet cruiser | ganin on a state visit to Britain wanted to know what effect the and whether there was any dan- Downtown Showroom Open Friday Until 9:00 p.m. bution is $1,000,000--in rubles. Canada contributes $2,000,000. By JAMES NELSON d be a lesson in the past.|hopes to be a co-sponsor of a| program helped 102 countries and Canadian Press Staff Writer The NATO powers should United Stater proposal before the territories. "The task of the university to- day" was discussed by the Royal ter Diefenbaker plans to report ment meeting similar to the one| Tue prime minister's speeches) to the Commons today on his held in Paris in December, 1957.|at Winnipeg and DePauw Univer-| sium that led the weighty agenda S f D - E of the society's three-day meet- weekend consultations and ference dedicated to real nego- his conversations with President speech making, having com- tiation and consultation, is the Eisenhower in Washington Friv| aie ve vent Conference of Learned Societies. TORONTO (CP)--Bob Young Symposium speakers were Dr. ar'y start on the slow hard/is slow and hard. A start must sugestion that the NATO powers y L ingt ed h eary : : € : ond hoon (19, of Leamington, edged out 80)... nv "poco Wi Council: D climb back to a mew summit be made now, in careful prepara- begin now to plan a second heads-| ther contestants Saturday to win |? ation F esearch Counc ; r.| |Leon Lortie of the University of| speeches Sunday in Green-| : {n goals and revitalize the con-|, iti | » ; Mug Ind., and Saturday in TWO MAJOR SPEECHES sultative machinery of the West- epmpstition: here, {son of McGill University. Winnipeg, and in press confer- Ted Woods of Guelph and Dave| prime Minister Diefenbaker is eriday in Washington, the two major speeches, at a De enses Friday in Washing Pauw University convocation in LITTLE TIME LEFT ond place. |ary fellow of the Royal Society e for the future: 8 | > | tonight at a banquet, He is to| sale Ty NATO powers, working banquet of the Royal Architec- has no. much time "to build the Regina to compete in the na- ] h ' tural Institute of Canada in Win-|kind ot earth we want." The tional driving finals July 4. The The Engineering Institute of and ambassadors, should start RIPE. sun 0 | E immediately to consider a de-| In the immediate future, there and "that's past. ference today on engineering edu- p : Young, a bank teller, began . 10 years. conference re-opening in Geneva tries outside te Iron Curtain and ariving three years ago. In eo recions of BRtension 25d «| On dg i i | 1 -- 3) > 2. At the same time, the West-lon Tuesday and continuing ef Gen finals he scored 509 out of a pos-| lish business-like relations with ment on the detection of nuclear| many--would have nuclear weap- sible 565 points. The tests in.| Education also opened sessions. |clude written examinations, road MILLION ADULT STUDENTS tened by the failure of the Paris|clear tests ban. tiroughout his tour, one theme|and obstacle courses. ? summit conference. The failure] Mr. Diefenbaker reiterated in|was recurrent. It is the necessity a source of recriminations but'an "open skies" policy. Canada|and ultimately East-West consul- |tations, on the same effective Tiny Kingdom Of Nepal Now at Oshawa Wood P roducts By HENRY S. BRADSHER (serving the strongest condemna- | KATMANDU, Nepal (AP)--Forition. Many important Nepalis Nepal with a remoteness that en-| Prime Minister Nehru's failure to| abled it to ignore the world's dis-| condemn China. Now geography has placed this|India quiet--nothing concrete to| little Himalayan mountain king-|be gained, Chinese antagonism to der dispute between India and|strongly to Nepal. Red China. Officially, Nepal is! Important opposition leaders in A vagueness of geography has also created a smaller border ant northern neighbor, China. Of- ficially, Nepal plays it down as without too much trouble. Premier B.P. Koirala's policy licly unruffled, unemotional ap- proach to border trouble. offend either India or China. But Nepal's strongest ties are with go against the Chinese Commu- nists. There is a strong fecling high circles here that the Chir volt were naked imperialism de Crabb Killed LONDON (AP)--A friend of Cmdr. Lionel Crabb, the British years ago, said Sunday that Crabb was spying on a Soviet when he vanished. | Sir Francis Rose, 50-year-old | Paris: said he had broken a four- | year silence because of recent and serving in the Soviet Navy. Rose asked The Sunday Pic-| statement: "I know that Crabb is dead. I Chichester three years ago." Rose said Crabb was to be paid | Ordzhonikidze which brought Ni-| kita Khrushchev and Nikolai Bul- in April 1956. "The Americans apparently cruiser's atomic engines would have on currents, tides and fish, ger from radioactivity," said Rose. | WORKING WITH CANADIANS IN EVERY WALK OF LIFE SINCE 1817 SHER ~

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy