3 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, June 14, 1960 GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN KIN CARNIVAL DESERVES SUPPORT With a bit of nudging the other day, we were able fo get Publicity Chairman Harold Reddick of the Oshawa "Kinsmen Club to admit that this year's Kin Carnival will be the biggest ever held by that live-wire group. Mr. Reddick's claim was supported by no less an authority than Art Stone Jr. the carnival chairman, who says this year's show will have many new attractions such as pony rides, Go Karts and a bargain booth where new articles will be sold at rummage sale prices, There will be a series of lucky draws, The show will be held for the first time at the spacious Kinsmen Stadium, and don't forget the date --June 17 and 18. The Kinsmen deserve help. Their philanthropies are well known. They ART SIUNE, JR. pledged $9,000 this year to the Oshawa General Hospital Fund. Last year they made a donation to the Retarded Children's School. In the past, they gave the city an ambulance, after donating the stadium that bears their name to the city. SAYS 400 PIGS DIED AT FARM Pigs may be a distasteful subject, but an interest ing story about them unfolded the other day in court up Brechin way. Magistrate Crawford Guest was on the bench and Bruce Affleck, of Oshawa acted for the Crown. John D. Laun, a 45-year-old Czechoslovakian who has been in Canada for five years, was fined $400 and costs, or $550. He was found guilty of wilfully neglect ing, or failing to provide suitable and adequate care for domestic animals (Section 387 of the Criminal Code, subsection IC). Laun is contemplating an appeal De Novo, which would ask for a new trial before a county judge, but to get back to the story of his trial-- He's owner-operator of John D. Laun Ltd, with head-quarters at Algo Farms near Brechin, Const. Harry Campbell (OPP) said he visited Laun's place last April 7 and counted 100 dead pigs in a deep trench (40-50 feet long) and that there seemed to be dead pigs underneath, Pigs were standing in a soupy mixture (muck, straw and pig manure) up to their bellies, he added, and the stench was so strong it could be detected from a nearby highway. There was no dry STRUCK AT STRIKE IN SAN DIEGO Unidentified Convair worker on picket line of engineers and architects association sirike at San Diego, Calif., was hit by a car Monday. He was not in- jured. The car--driven by a woman--stopped after the acci- | ert. The driver, an employee | on her way to work at the Atlas RCAF Recreation 'Hit Of The Party' By DAVE McINTOSH Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP)--Know how to play "Allah"? | RCAF pamphlet No. 76, a 118- page document issued by the au- 7 missile plant, another Convair division, did not participate in the strike. --AP Wirephoto. INTERPRETING THE NEWS By DAVID OANCIA Canadian Press Staff Writer Britain appears adopted an air of injured right- eousness as a result of last week's trade talks in Paris. British reaction this way: "We went to Paris prepared to start serious negotiations to achieve a long - term solution of the six and seven problem in Europe. Again we were rebuffed." The six-nation European Com- mon Market showed markedly little enthusiasm for suggestions Britain Rebuffed In Paris Meeting This will be the conference un- der the General Agreement of to have|Trade and Tariffs aimed at re- ducing trade barriers throughout| |the world. 5 | Behind the European problem | Observers sum m a rized the js a basic and fundamental dit | serland and Portugal -- have | ference of approach, The six -- France, Italy, Ger-| {many and the Benelux countries --are attempting to build a com-| munity. This involves an gree-| ment by members that they will | follow the rules to make it work. Their goals include the devel-| tariff, common commercial pol- icies to some extent and aboli- tion of trade barriers among the members. The seven -- Britain, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Austria, Swit- agreed to form a free trade area. This is a loose arrangement in which members have agreed to cut tariffs among themselves while maintaining their national tariff and trading policies for| outside nations. LITTLE ENTHUSIAS Paring Knife Found At Murder Site TORONTO (CP) -- Letters on| two towels found in a tru shipped from Toronto to Argen-| tia, Nfld, with the body of a woman could possibly lead to the identity of the woman, police said Monday. The towels were among 60 ar- ticles of women's and men's wearing apparel and bed cloth- ing stuffed in the trunk, The words "Huntley" and "Ker" were on the towels. The body of the woman, a young peroxide blonde, was found in the trunk in Argentia June 7. It was shipped from here May 4. TORONTO (CP) -- A paring {RCAF personnel: '| Spacemen nk [ence here that that Britain and other members opment of a common external of the seven join the six to form As The Financial Times, which|knife was found Monday near appears to reflect official think-|the place where the slashed body thority of Air Vice-Marshal J.G Kerr, chief of RCAF personnel, tells you: "All players are told to get a crough position on the floor with their heads down. They are told to repeat after the leader line by line: 'With all my heart; with all my mind; I know that 1; stick out behind.' " Or how about "Royal Order of Siam'? OATS OF ALLEGIANCE Here are the instructions for [¥ht a "All are asked to kneel in a circle to be initiated into the Or- der of Siam. They are requested to repeat after the leader the oath of allegiance 'owa tagoo Siam.' They say it slowly at first then rapidly. One by one they realize that they are saying 'O goose I am." " pamphlet is eintitled "A guide to social recreation in the Roval Canadian Air Force." The pamphlet starts out with this introduction: "Every human being needs friendship with indi- viduals and groups, through which he gains a feeling of sig- nificance and belonging. . . . The pamphlet outlines of "belonging" by joining in the fun and games at RCAF station 3 Would Find World 'Mad' MONTREAL (CP) -- Dr. H. L. Keenleyside of Vietoria, pro- visional chairman of the national committee for the control of radiation hazards, said Monday it would be obvious to a visitor to earth from another planet that "the human race is predomin. antly insane." The former Canadian diplomat and one-time, United Nations ad. ministrator told the opening ses- sion of the committee's confer- "this insanity peculiarly affects the world's chosen or accepted leaders. . .." stranger explain the fact that as soon as we leave the innocence of childhood , . . we begin to plan ways of killing each other?" The committee has been set up to draw public attention to the dangers of radiation arising from both peaceful and military use of nuclear energy. URGES UN ACTION Canada, he said, should take a "How else could such a|TTC Subway Plan Change Rumor TORONTO (CP) -- The Globe and Mail says a secret meeting between Met r opolitan Toronto chairman Fred Gardiner and two Toronto Transit Commission offi- cials last week is expected to yield another change in the city's second subway plans. The newspaper said the results are expected to lead to the build- ing of a Spadina subway line and the routing of Bloor-Univer- b, It lists 38 types of activitier from stags ("organized, not » sozzle at the wet canteen") father and son nights ("for mar ried personnel"). NO PIE THROWING "Activities which make one dividual appear ridiculous he avoided (e.g, pie Recommended "get - quainted" games are: how many beans in a jar, ing how much the hostess guessing how many will be ent or guessing the gecupatiia of ridiculous pullable toy. tion, the members of ea must pull the toy from ing line to a turning back, then pass it to player." Then there's a real maker called "Rabbit." "All kneel on the floor in a cle. The leader asks each one turn if he knows how pla rabbit. When they admit do not, the leader rises and 'Well, I guess we can't then; no one knows how. "Finish with a bang pamphlet advises. "Do the party die slowly." sity subway trains downtown. It said a report to be placed before the five TTC commission- ers today will show Mr, Gardiner established at least 50-per-cent agreement between W. E. P. Duncan, TTC general manager of the east-west subway construc- tion, and Norman D. Wilson, chief subway consultant for the : ALWAYS GOOD FOOD BREAKFAST, LUNCH, DINNER HOTEL LANCASTER Monday, TTC Allan Lamport said he would ask for the dismissal or suspension of Mr. Duncan for his secret meeting with Mr. Gardiner. Mr. Gardiner did not appear concerned about the criticism. SCOTTISH CENTRE city, was founded in 1451. The University of Glasgow, in what now is Scotland's largest FRIGIDAIRE AIR CONDITIONING SALES & SERVICE Fred's Refrigeration RA 5-6335 stronger hand in the United Na- tions by insisting that disarma- ment and peace are the only real [01:3 R74 3 Ho) larger, looser European trad ing, says: |of Mrs. Margaret Bennett, 36, issues before a world threatened a ger, o s : | place for them to lie down. They were so crowded he could hardly count them, i Peter Heinemann, employed by Laun from last Feb. 10 to March 23, estimated 400 pigs died at Algo Farms during his tenure. The defence contended Heinemann was a "biased" witness because he had been fired, but Heinemann denied this. Asked by the defence why he remained in the em- ploy of Mr. Laun from last Nov. 1 to April 19, when he knew there was "an abnormal death rate" among the pigs at Algo, Crown Witness Dr. Rex Groves, a Sunder= land veterinarian, replied: : "I was always hopeful that things would get better. I would prescribe medicines and they would be pur- chased, but only for a time. I would protest about dampness and overcrowding and asked that further purchases of pigs be stopped--once again my instruc tions would be followed, but only for a time." Staff Inspector A. E. Jennings of the SPCA said he daw "a lot of pigs in black muck crowded into pens and when they scattered I found a dead hog." Laun, in his defence, said dirt floors as used at the farm were better because they helped the structural growth of the pigs more than did cement ones. He said he had been "imbued with the principles of pig raising in Czechoslovakia". He admitted he was not too well tequainted with Canadian methods, but he couldn't see where the pigs were suffering. * Crown Attorney Affleck brought out a point during the testimony of D. J. Perdue, a senior inspector with the health of animals branch, Department of Agricul~ ture, Ottawa. Perdue said he refused Laun a licence to feed garbage to his pigs; otherwise, he thought the health of these animals was "generally good". _ "Are you a veterinarian?" asked Mr. Affleck. "No, I am not," replied Mr. Perdue. "Would you, therefore, contradict the evidence of Dr. Groves, a veterinarian, when he said the health of these pigs was not good?" "No, I would not," replied Mr. Perdue promptly. A GRIM LESSON IN CIVIL DEFENCE Two Oshawa sisters won't forget their recent 17- day vacation trip to the Island of Hilo, Hawaii. They were there May 23 when tidal waves hit, killing more than 32. They are the Misses Loretta and Roberta Gates, daughters of Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Gates, of 798 Simcoe street north. They escaped unhurt, but the sisters had some tense moments, especially when they were evacuated from the Naniloa Hotel (in the path of the tempest) to the Volcano House, half mile inland. Loretta says every detail was so well handled by the state and county civil defence agencies and the Red Cross they didn't realize the disaster was so great until later. They saw little panic or confusion (despite the car- nage and destruction outside) as they waited in the lobby of the Volcano House for the brunt of the third wave. Loretta has an editorial from The Honolulu Adver- tiser that tells part of the story in these paragraphs. "Civil defence agencies turned in per- haps the finest piece of work in their his- tory in alarming the islands against the ing group. As a result the conference spent much of its time discuss- KIDDIES CHEER AS SCHOOL BURNS ing ways of offsetting short-term difficulties. | The unmistakable outcome of the conference, however, was| far - reaching. The six, in effect,| ; 3H ; told Britain once more than she| chial gschool "cheered like must either take the plunge as| mad" Monday when they a full member of the European| Were forced to leave because community or watch from the] of a fire in an adjoining sidelines. building. Flames licked around out- BASIS DIFFERENCES side the classroom windows, It is hardly likely that there but damage was confined to will be any further overtures) ¢he next-door building, owned from the seven in the near fu-| p Th t bi 4 of talks| by the school and not in use. ure. The next big round of talks . : on world trade generally and the BE Mg Ah i a division of western europe into as the school burned." rival trading blocs wili come this . fall in Geneva. | Brooke Claxton Dies In Ottawa TORONTO (CP) -- Pupils attending evening classes at the D'Arcy St. Hebrew Paro- able Brooke Claxton died Monday [forces in Canada. after struggling months against] Rt. Hon C.. D. Howe, former cancer which he did not allow to minister of trade and commerce, keep him out of public service. |said: He was 61. "During our days at Ottawa I For the last three years he had regarded him as one of Canada's executive and unpaid chairman| C, M of the arts - promoting Canada minister: Council, working in both until he Liberal MP for Montreal St.|capacity and in dedication." Lawrence-St. George from 1940 to| Gen, Alfred E. Gruenther, 1954, he drafted Canada's family |chairman of the American Red allowance legislation, was the Cross and chief of staff in NATO country's first minister of na-|mjlitary headquarters in 1951-53 OTTAWA (CP)--The indefatig-|the creator of modern defence) tional health and welfare and for ang NATO supreme commander | "There is no use disguising the| fact that for the time being the! six and the seven continue to| talk to each other in different languages. | "The unwillingness of the six to consider anything but interim measures at this stage in spite] of the evident, if newly found,| flexibility of the seven lessens) the likelihood that any more dra-| matic gesture on the part of this country would have any immed- iate effect. "The chances are that an ac-| tual offer by this country to Join the Common Market, given a satisfactory solution for the other members of the seven and the more enthusiasm than they ex-| hibited for the vague proposal gotiations." | combined the roles of insurance most brilliant cabinet ministers." | 78 Drury, former defence|?" i "Canada has lost an outstand-|' was taken to hospital Saturday. |ing citizen--outstanding both in|: i felence the Job in hich he Was asse and a real frend." In the latter job he was re- COURAGEOUS, ENERGETIC sponsible for the post-war de- Liberal Leader Lester B. Pear- fence buildup of the Canadian son summed up Mr, Claxton's forces, spurred in 1950 by the out- outstanding qualities as sincer- break of the Korean War. |ity, courage and energy. the last 7% years of his political |i 1953.56, said "Canada and the|} career was minister of national | hole free world have lost a real! It LIFE INSURANCE POST He retired from political life in 1954, to become Canadian head |of Metropolitan Life Insurance| Company, with which his family Mr. Claxton, who had a reputa-| tion for putting in a long work-| ing day, had been too ill for| weeks to go to his Ottawa office. | But he had his work sent home, refusing to recognize that cancer was an impediment to his work. Funeral services will be held] Wednesday at 2:30 p.m. in Christ Church Cathedral here, A memo- "It never occurred to him to| slow down, let alone give up, in| any good cause. . , . Canada can| ill spare men of his calibre." Very Rev. Georges - Henri Canada Council who presided during Mr. Claxton's illness and is expected to continue to do sof until a successor is appointed, said of his colleague: "His colleagues alone know to what extent he was the achiev- ing power of the council." Mr. Claxton was born Aug. 23, 1898, in Montreal, At 17, he left has been associated since 1885, |Levesque, vice-chairman of the| ROASTED, CANNED MR. AND MRS. TEODORE ROZE was found Friday. Police said they believe it is he weapon with which the Tor- onto woman was slain, A was missing when the body was discovered in a parking lot in suburban Scarborough. Police also found an eight-inch white plastic hair clasp and in a nearby ditch an almost empty small bottle of liquor, Meanwhile police drew atten- tion to a starting similarity be- tween the slaying of Mrs. Ben nett and the unsolved killing of Mrs. Elizabeth Kirby, 45, in High Park last June 26. | Both women were killed during | He suggested exchanges of ra-| dio and television programs and| the fostering of travel between black shoe belonging to Mrs. (Canada and '"'our potential adver- | | Bennett also was found. The shoe |sary--Russia." | Dr. Keenleyside said one of the main sources of danger from {radiation is the problem of using [radioactive materials for what may be termed civil purposes. *'There is in Canada very little and mandatory control over the use of many of the "|artificial sources of radiation. "In many parts of the country there is an inadequate check on the maintenance of x-ray ma- chines. Leaky apparatus in hos- Commonwealth problem, would|a full moon and on a Friday, |Pitals and doctors' offices may almost certainly have been|Both were separated from their endanger not only patients and greeted by the six with little husbands and both were believed |2ttending physicians, but other intoxicated when slain. [persons in neighboring rooms and Police described the assailant powerful man, | fd even people passing by on the that there should be general me-|in each case as a sadistic and street," he said, He said no one really knows how great are the dangers created by nuclear testing. NU-WAY TONIGHT |by extinction. I Reau Va | ley RUG & CARPET SALES | Broadloom wall to wall, Rugs, Carpets, Stair Runners. "IT'S A FACT! You can have e vacation for Whitby « Breokiin Phone. MO 8-3304 Installation by our own mechanic RA 8-4631 174 Mary Street Did You Know , . . In the main Dining Room ef the GENOSHA HOTEL you con have o Full-course Dinner for ONLY 95e. ITT UTR Tad 7 0 Jo The most popular home AE Here is your answer to today's away from living area. A large and just 43.57 monthly . . . when you do it through Colonial Factory Built Homes olonial we have ever offered! high building costs. The snug cottage roof and interesting front elevation of this modern suburban home presents a gracious welcome to our guests. hree comfortable bedrooms and bath open off the hall, eactory BUILT, HOMES family-size kitchen with rial service also will be held for McGill University and gave up a ig living-dining area, vestibule him Thursday at St. Matthias | commission to enlist in the ranks a breakfast nook--big living 9 area, ¥ and tidal wave--yet at least 32 died at Hilo. i loset. Got th ait no longer to inen closet. Gol . then wait n Latvians Catch "Hundreds courted death by ignoring repeated warnings of sirens, police cars and radios. "The warning system functioned with- out a hitch, beginning hours before the first wave struck. "At Hilo the sirens sounded five times between 8:30 p.m. and 9 p.m., a good 3% hours before the waves arrived. "We thought there would be another one close to midnight to give up a few minutes to get out, "said one waterfront resident, alive today because a wave de- posited him safely in a tree. "Many residents of low-lying areas stuck to their homes despite warnings to evacuate, "Off Waikiki, people dashed into the exposed reef between waves to grab stranded fish. "The CD job was sugerb--too bad much of it was wasted on peo who chose to ignore the warnings." Anglican Church, Montreal. The capital was flooded with tributes from political, military, business and bther colleagues. Prime Minister Diefenbaker said in a statement that Mr. Claxton earned the respect of (Commons m em bers whatever their political views. Former prime minister - Louis lof the 10th Canadian Siege Bat- |tery which was going overseas. He won the Distinguished Con- |duct Medal. | TAUGHT LAW | He graduated from McGill in 1921 with honors in law. He {practised law and later taught it at McGill. St. Laurent said Mr. Claxton's| Three years after his election Lamprey In Lake! SOUTHAMPTON, Ont. (CP)-- River after dark Three Latvian-Canadians are do-|the bottom. | ing their part in the campaign| The Rozes trap the lampreys to rid the Great Lakes of the| in weirs, many of which are lamprey eel--and they're doing it' home - made from willow] at a profit. | branches. Mr Roze says it usu-| In a little farmhouse east of , staying close to]] death closes one of the most out-| standing careers of public service to Canada in his generation 'His services commenced with the armed forces during the First World War and came to an end while he was still the very active and efficient president of the Canada Council. CRITIC'S TRIBUTE Defence Minister Pearkes, who was the sition's< chief de- fence critic while Mr. Claxton was defence minister, said Mr. |Claxton always will be considered! to the Commons in 1940, he was |appointed parliamentary assist- ant to Prime Minister Mackenzie ning, and became a member of the select "kitchen cabinet" group, | He was appointed minister of {national health and welfare, a {new ministry which he built from scratch, on Oct. 13, 1944, and be- came defence minister on Dec. (12, 1946 | He married the former Helen |Galt Savage of Montreal in 1925. {They had three children, two of Denny's Dam near this Lake Huron community, Mr. and Mrs. | ally takes two days to make one| weir. When the lampreys are caught, Teodore Roze and their helper, | they are roasted four hours at Ivans Janis, process thé eels 400 degrees. Then they are they trap in the lake, then sell| pressed out, cut into pieces and| them for food. canned. Mr. Roze says many of| Department of lands and for-|the pound tins find their way into ests officials are delighted. Ev-| Toronto homes. ery lamprey caught reduces the| Heaviest catch for one day by future toll among game fish. In| the three was 800 lampreys, Last|| Lake Huron the eels have been|year's catch was 6,000 and the|| blamed for killing off most of the Rozes had already surpassed lake trout and many other spe-| that figure with a few weeks still cies 'of fish. to go. Trapping at Denny's Dam For spawning the lampreys starts in April and ends about them survive, ) The eels move up the Saugeen! son is ever. like water at 50 to 60 degrees. mid-June when the spawning sea- || your lot? , build. ; Colonial factory-built package The Glengarry -- 40x26' 996 sq. ft. of living area Colonial makes it possible you fo own your owm home at tremendous savings. 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