Oshawa Times (1958-), 11 Jan 1967, p. 28

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zee 28 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesdoy, Januery 11, 1967 "7+. - Master P To Form By JAMES NELSON jnine, his father moved his small] His writings often reveal re- OTTAWA (CP)--John A, Mac-| donald, Canada's first prime minister, was an exemplary young man who stuck to his job, never went about spreeing, and gained people's respect be- cause he did not drive fast horses. » At least, that was the recol- lection in the 1880s of a con- temporary who knew the earn- est young Kingston, Ont., law- yer long before he entered poli- tics, knit together the young Dominion of Canada in 1867, and died hallowed as the coun- try"s father and master politi- cian, Macdonald set up his own law practice at age 21. Al- though he had not attended col- lege he had worked under a a cheer, just for that. CARRIED MUSKET Jawyer for six years. He had his sights set early on success. Years later, the same .man olitician Worked Confederation family to Adolphustown, which markable prescience when 40 years earlier was the first/ viewed 100 or more years later. settlement of United Empire In a letter written in 1856, 11 Loyalists in Upper Canada, 28 years before Confederation, he miles west of Kingston. | wrote: But young John remained at, "The English-Canadian must school in Kingston, spending| make friends of the French. He only school holidays roaming|must respect their nationality, . barefoot' over the hills and be-/Treat them as a nation and side the lake at Adolphustown. they will act as a free people He later attributed his rugged|generally do. Call. them a fac- health to the sun, fresh air, and tion, and they become factious."" exercise of those vacations. And this, many years after And he picked up there, too,| Confederation: : the politician's knack of identi-| "A great opportunity was lost fying himself with whatever |in 1867 when the Dominion was part of the country he visited.| formed out of the several prov- "T remember well when I: ran/inces. This remarkable event in about this district: as a bare-|the history of the British Em- footed boy," he told an.election/pire passed almost without no- rally in Adolphustown--and won tice." The event of Macdonald's |birthday has been proclaimed |by the federal cabinet, for this He said himself, in later life,' year only, as a commemorative! THIS PHOTO of Sir John was to be known as Old Tomo;- that he had shouldered a mus-'day. But the proclamation said! A- Macdonald was taken at row, a politician who could tell ket at the age of 22 in 1837 dur- Jan. 11, 1967, would not be a an audience "'you'd rather have ! John A. drunk than George against the Family Compact.' Brown sober" and win elections Seven years later he was first) baker, who wants the date pro- after the humiliation of being elected to the legislature for|claimed a national annual holi- found out in a railway-party| Kingston City, and became re-|day, called this a "half-hearted| |ceiver-general in the cabinet! gesture." fund scandal. BORN IN GLASGOW t He was born 152 years ago, on| ministries he emerged as the) Jan. 11, 1815, in Glasgow, able leader of the Fathers of Confed-| to trace lineal descent from the/eration. They won agreement first chief of the Macdonald/in principle on union at Char-| clan, Donald, Lord of Kintyre|lottetown in 1864 and ultimately) and Islay, in the 18th century./Confederation itself in 1867 His father, Hugh Macdonald| brought together the provinces of Dornoch, Sutherlandshire,|of Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, | and his mother, Helen Shaw,Quebec and Ontario. | Macdonald of Badenooh, Inver-| ness, moved to Kingston in 1820| Prince Edward Island and Br after the death of their oldest/ish Columbia later joined, an son. it Young John Alexander was Was pushed across the conti- then a five-year-old boy with) nent. bayer leas "big expressive eyes and aj sunny disposition," a mop of | politician of his day with few if thickly-curled black hair, and a| any equals since, he is Canada's! world's best known paper for) |most-quoted statesman -- such hoys." To many of the old faith-| e ' ful it was like losing another|Senator said she was "relieved| jand delighted" when the jury! jruled in her favor Tuesday thrill of adventure. He went to the Royal Gram- remarks as: mar School in Kingston, study-) ing under a Dr. Wilson, a grad-|and a British subject I hope to uate of Oxford, and excelled in| die," and "Sir John A. Macdon-|it, was started as a penn y/| Fairfax County circuit court. mathematics. When he was.ald, cabinet maker." ' Warrant Out Of Bankrupt Firm's Head TORONTO (CP) -- A bench!miraculously left hospital the warrant was issued Tuesday for s: former president of the now-de-|s funet Racan Photo Copy Corp.,| soared to $26 in 1963 from $1 in : after he failed to appear for his 1962 after rumors it had devel-|in this way: "Fear God, honor |tentions," ) trial on charges of fraud, utter- oped a revolutionary copying|the Crown, shoot straight and|lawyer, Martin Morris, told the/resulting from a lack of en- ing and conspiracy involving al- machine. ing the Upper Canada rebellion) public holiday. Opposition leader Diefen-| hree years later. | Then through a succession of; Famed Boy Paper Dies By RONALD THOMSON LONDON (AP) -- Boy's Own Paper, founded 88 years ago for clean-living youngsters expected a|to go out and run the British Empire, died today, a victim of} a generation that cares more Under his prime sinistorship, tt. he Canadian Pacific railway Robert A sadly declining readership Besides being the foremost) prought the end of what its pub- jlishers called "possibly the "A British subject I was born) pit of the Empire itself. | B. 0. P., as boys always knew weekly in 1879 by the Religious Tract Society, promising "pure| f and entertaining reading." ihe-¢ wholesome adventure. There build things hutches and canoes. and Prime Minister ame day." ummer of 1965. Its stock |outlook on life. B.O.P. summed up its values! Jkeep clean." | jury. Napanee, Ont., Mrs. RFK Wins Court Battle FAIRFAX, Va. (AP) -- Mrs.| that later died, The wife of the Horsebreeder Nicholas Zemoj! Washington, D,C., brought bluish. | il action, contending Mrs.| Examination showed the skin For Arr t | It was strong on cold baths| Kennedy illegally took posses-|Was loaded with melanin, a pig- es jand porridge, Christianity and/sion of his thoroughbred, Pande, (ment produced by the body to The case resulted from an in-/Produce skin color. was plenty of advice on how to|Cident in October, 1963, when; Further experiments showed such as rabbit}/Mrs. Kennedy came upon ajlack of copper in a patient's | i ""horse in distress" in what she/diet inhibited the production of | Such men as King George V|Said was a rotting chicken coop./melanin, and in some cases Stanley |She ordered her groom to take|caused an {Baldwin admitted with pride|in the emaciated, starving horse} the arrest of E. Y. Rabbiah,| Racan went bankrupt in the|that B.O.P. helped to mold their|and get it proper attention. The] horse died five days later. in 1860 Dr. in- Greiner, 53, an 10 years, |subject." F. Kennedy has won} New York' says, in| condition. horseowner |zymes, which transfer energy. ~~. © when he was 45. : --CP Wirephoto Specialist Develops Theory For Schizophrenia Therapy | VANCOUVER (CP) | Anthony |ternal medicine. specialist, says he has developed a theory that could lead to chemical treat- ment of schizophrenia. 77" * © A member of the medical staff at Riverview mental hos- pital, he said in a report Tues- day that he has developed a hy- pothesis which knits most cur- {rent theories. Dr. Greiner said the idea of |schizophrenia being a metabolic jdisease is not a new one, but has been talked of for eight to "My hypothesis merely ties together all the theories. on the If his hypothesis stands in- dismissal of a $30,000 damage|¥estigation, it could have a ma- suit involving a starving horse|Jor significance on treatment of |schizophrenia, one of the most |common mental illnesses, The Hungarian-born §special- ist started his research after examining three schizophrenic patients whose skins had turned improved mental Further research led Dr. |Greiner to theorize that schizo- 'Maybe she had the best in-|phrenia is caused or abetted by! Zemo's|a shortage of nervous energy he , Dsigned For Experiment signe or X Tl en TORONTO (CP) -- Ontario OTTAWA (CP) -- Canada's)launched into an elliptical polar be a obey Ag ag sil third space satellite, the ISIS-A,jorbit: 270 miles at its nearest)' "Wesiey Cadman of Courtland, will carry space sounders for 13| point to earth and 1,890 miles\,+ near Woodstock, owner of different experiments, the De-/at its farthest. lan equipment company, said --o Research Board said FIRST 2 DID LESS WORK 'there probably is more equip- uesda. Al i ment-buying this winter than in : 7 Alouette I, launched in 1962,| i : The 485-pound satellite will be ;. conducting four experiments|@2y winter in 10 years. launched late this year or ear-|snq Alouette Il carries five. George Demeyere, chairman ly next year by a 92-foot Thor-| The t ei of the Ontario Flue Cured To- Delta racket from the U.S. test) yy siheraate S$ are: der tobacco. Growers Marketing range in California. | study ae oneeohers bases great| Board said kiln-building is pro- The full-scale_ model - of the: distances. a" + [sreasing at the fattest January neat mer refer to the' 2, 4 special radio receiver for|for avian tobacco. : joint U.S.-Canada program of|measuring the low frequency Acreage for 1967 will not be international satellites for ionos-| signals generated by lightning set for chou two months but pheric studies--has successfully ashes and other natural phe-/some growers are predicting a nomena. jtetal of about 150,000 acres, up completed vibration tests at.the| if Li : 'he! 3. Detectors of energetic Par-i98 per cent from the 117,700 Goddard space flight centre ticles such as cosmic rays and grown last year and higher than near Washington. radiation in the Van Allen belts.|the record' of 123,800 acres in The satellite, heavier by 165 74: A detector of particles with) 1969, lower energies, such as elec- , pounds thaif*its two predeces- ee _ The 150,000 acres would yield sors, Alouettes I and II, vil Oh ten tae she a °F about 270,000,000 pounds, based | 5. A detector which identifies|" the 1,800-pounds-per-acre av- |types of charged particles in the /erage in recent years. The fed- | vicinity of the satellite, such as 3 2 'mas Said 250,000,000 pounds are protons and oxygen and helium | weeded from the 1967 crop be- Teachers Merit Pay Proposed fons. cane of fi i | ' ' cause of high demand for cig- | 6. An electrostatic study to arettes from Canada from TORONTO (CP) -- Barry|measure the temperature and abroad |Lowes, chairman of the Metro- | number of electrons near the |" pare jeral department of agriculture} Canadian Space Satellite | Record Planting Anticipated By Ontario Tobacco Farmers Growers are getting record prices for their 1966 crop. Up to Monday night they had re- ceived an average of 72.11 cents a pound, compared with the previous peak for 65.96 cents a pound for the 1965 crop. Mr. Demeyere said the main worry of growers in 1967 is in- sufficient labor to harvest the big crop expected. Farmers are adding equipment to try to cut down the need for workers, Growers also are_worried that demand for Canadian tobacco may be reduced if Rhodesia is * again permitted to ship tobacco to Britain, Mr. Demeyere said. A board delegation will. go to Britain next month to seek an agreement to export tobacco ce for two or more years, he said. NAME CATCHES ON PROVIDENCE, RJ. (AP)-- Buses of the Rhode Island pub- lie transport authority are to be known in future as Rhode Runners, The contest - winning name was thought of by a sur- geon. {politan Toronto school board, | spacecraft. | | Tuesday night urged a city-/ 7, Another study to measure! wide salary scale for teachers, |the temperature and density of| with provisions for merit pay. |ions. | 8. A radio beacon to supply) fF "We must and we can, to-| gether with teachers, devise g|information about ionospheric; irregularities. | system that will reward ability, | S An ian tt | . An instrument to measure that will enable us to keep thelterrestial and extra -« terrestial| outstanding teacher in the/radio noise in the outer atmos-| classroom rather than force! phere. | him into an administrative! 10. A sounder to study the ow of education, was delivering his|sheath or ionization on the an-| inaugural. speech. tennas, | OVER 40 YEARS EXPERIENCE! Take advantage of 4#! 24 hour ser- vice; and radio dispatched trucks always on the ready to serve you, Fuel Oil Budget Plan available. McLAUGHLIN role." jionosphere at six specific fre-| Mr. Lowes, immediate past) quencies. f) COAL& 110 president of the Toronto board] 11. A study of the plasma) SUPPLIES 3-3481 KING ST. W. NOW IS THE TIME TO CONVERT AND CALL It is fun... and very economical to 'shop at GLECOFF'S EVEN DAD WILL ENJOY SHOPPING AT GLECOFF'S YOU CAN SHOP BY PHONE TOO IF YOU WISH, | | | | most $300,000. Mr. Justice Patrick Hartt of the Ontario Supreme Court also ordered Rabbiah's $30,000 cash bail forfeited and set Jan 30 for his trial. Rabbiah's lawyer, Edwar q| Marzec, said his client was in Nassau, Bahamas, recuperating from an illness. Rabblah, 42, and co-accused, Kenneth Lennie, 59, of Toronto, were committed for trial Sept. 12. Mr. Marzec produced an af- ftidavit from New York neurolo- gist Maurice Bender to say that he had treated Rabbiah in a} New York hospital for para-) plegia in December last year) and that Rabbiah was not fit to) stand trial that date. Date of| the affidavit was Dec, 5. Crown Counsel Clay Powell! said Rabbiah's preliminary) hearing had twice been ad-| journed because he had to enter hospital for treatment. | He said that ~vwhen Rabbiah's| original bail of $100,000 was re- duced to $30,000 July 27 "he Parties Tie In Election NASSAU, Bahamas (AP)-- Both major'parties were in a surprise deadlock today for con- trol of the Bahamas House of Assembly. The Progressive Liberal party captured four new seats on New Providence Island and four in the out-islands for a total of 18, the same number won by the incumbent United Bahamanian party. The vote count remains unofficial. The United Bahamian party had run the British Crown colony's internal government with a 24-to-8 majority over the Progressive Liberals in a 33- member' House, raised to 38 re- cently by a new constitution. Labor and Independent parties! each won a seat in Tuesday's) balloting. The deadlock created a show- down between Sir Roland Sy- monette, premier .of the' Baha- mas, who retained his United Bahamian party House seat, and Lynden Pindling, the Pro- gressive Liberal party Negro leader. Pindling would have be- come premier had his party! won control in its campaign on issues of gambling corruption in government and black power. | Pindling, a British-educated| lawyer, and his party contended in the campaign that govern-| ment officials had been reached by foreign racketeers in connec-; tion with the Bahamas' newest resort industry--gambling ca- sinos. The government and the United Bahamian party vigor- ously denied the opposition claims. 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