THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, August 12, 1959 § City Re-opens Rotary Pool Close Tab Kept On Water See Film On Seaway Rotary pool, closed for about MOH Would Act Fast teria counts in the water. If At Kiwanis one week due to a high bacterialthere are any adverse results, count in the water, was re- AIR CADETS OFF FOR SUMMER CAMP Shown above are some of the | officers and airmen f the fu- above are: Ted McRae, Ken- 14 Oshawa and District Air | ture, a brief taste of Air | peth Gray, Ronald Smith, Jo- Cadets, from 151 Chadburn Force life. They will be given seph MacLellan, Neil Evans, courses in drill and physical Paul Higgins, Wayne Dittmar, Squadron, who will spend tWo | education, a brief flight in an foe on Barry Wal weeks at RCAF station Clin- | RCAF Dakota and tours to the ters, Lloyd Saunders, . James ton summer camp. They will | beach at Grand Bend. Some- | Nicholls age 6 mascot) and leave Oshawa Sunday, August | thing new has been added. This William Kelly * James Nieh- 16, at 6.47 am. There will be | year the boys will sleep in olls. the mascot, will not trav- about 400 Ontario and Que- | tents as there are large num- | ol with the "boys. bec Air Cadets at the camp. | bers of regular Air Force per- al This camp is to give Canada's | sonnel on the base. The boys Oshawa Times Photo. Jury Recommends Overpass At Scene Of Fatal Accident WHITBY (Staff) -- A coroner's|/highway. He said that he thought |three-quarters across the pass- est because ] jury, investigating a death re-jat the time that he had run into!ing lane when he was struck by official opening of the seaway. front fender of theja car. ing from a car-pedestrian col-|the right sion ¥ She said he may have been lision at Drew St. and Highway Watts' car. ; ; v hawa, has recommend- . |walking quickly but denied that op 2.0 overpass or an under- JURY RECOMMENDS 5 he could have been running. | PC Sel Holroyd, of the Whitby| Jean Wilson, e sort be constructed) 1 pe oh highway there. The|Detachment of the OPP, who in-|§t. Oshawa, 16, of Margaret per of working hours, the statis- said that she had The culmination of 40 years of planning, and five years of gigan- tic construction, was vividly por- trayed for members of the Osh- Kiwanis Club and their at the club's weekly luncheon meeting, Tuesday, with the showing of a splendid film, "The St. Lawrence Seaway." The program was specially ar- ranged by the club's committee of business and public. affairs, under the chairmanship of Kiwa- |nian Bill Marchand, with commit {tee member, Kiwanian Bill Hol- land, introducing the film and Kiwanian Ralph Vickery express- ing the appreciation of the mem bers, at the conclusion of the film, to the committee for arrang- ling the program and particularly |to Kiwanian Lorne Savery, who acted as projectionist for the film, which was supplied by the National Film Board. TELLS STORY The film told the story of the early planning of the St. Law- |rence Seaway and at the outset, showed the extent of its intended | service, from the head of Lake] {Superior to the Atlantic Ocean, in- | cluding brief shots of iron ore be- |ing transported from the head of |the lakes, along with coal from U.S. ports, to Canada's large steel industries. | The mammoth construction work involved, including the mov- ing of entire communities from along the banks of the St. Law- rence River, to make way for the new lakes to form part of the seaway route, the erection of] coffer dams, huge control dams| and hydro plants, large and im-| proved locks, all shown in natural color, served to provide a pro- gram that was of extreme inter- of the very recent In addition, the film showed | history being made, with the size lof the individual projects con- nected with the seaway, the num- |tics concerning the number of HAVE FUN AT CRA CAMP The enthusiastic splashing, above, shows the energy with which Oshawa boys attack the activities of the sponsored day camp being CRA | held on the Taunton Rd. E., | near the airport this week. | The boys are swimming in a creek which runs through the [ camp grounds. The two sup- | {| and Lorne Payne. opened Tuesday. Dr. C. C. Stewart, MOH, said that the duties of his department in connection with the pools are strictly inspectional. "We keep an extremely close, daily check on the acidity, chlorine and bac 21-Year-Old Fined $50 A careless driving conviction cost 21-year-old Donald Belko, 21 Gibbon street $50, and costs, in Magistrate's court Tuesday. The investigating officer, PC Ostler said he observed Belko and another boy drag down Sim- coe street from a traffic light on Rossland road. He continued to say he followed the car and blew the cruiser's siren to bring Belko to a stop. Belko admitted speeding and told the court he was a member of a drag club. He went on to say the club frowned on such careless practices as their motto was one of safety on the high- ways. : Magistrate A. S. Mitchell said: "I am surprised a man of your intelligence and membership in a club of this kind can be upset bv a dare to drag." His Worship went on to relate to the court his experience with we will not hesitate to close the Dr. Stewart said that Summer- set pool, which is under his juris. diction, "has had good results consistent with our standards." James Henderson, manager of the privately-owned pool, out- lined safety measures including three showers and a foot-bath in the passageway to the pool, constant recirculation of water, automatic chlorination of water gud staff-conducted chlorine test- ng. Mr. Henderson said that the number of children allowed in the pool at one time is limited; {ive-minute whistle checks are used often, A spokesman for the city- owned pools said that the CRA had instructed the staff at the pools to remove children any time unsatisfactory chlorine tests occur. The spokesman said that auto- matic booster chlorinators have been added at both pools, new chlorine testing kits have been sent from the Ontario Depart- ment of Health, ers are operating at both sites, foot- baths, too, and supervisors have been instructed to tum away anyone with evidence of skin disease or open sores. Number of children allowed in the pools has been limited to 125 at Rotary and 150 at the Ritson Rd. pool. a drag club in Stratford. He said, "The police force give the boys guidance. The boys take it upon themselves to penalize their own club members. They have a de- merit system in practice and the members are punished accord- ervisors, in the foreground, are Grant Southwell ,at left, They are both from central staff of the CRA. --Oshawa Times Photo ingly. It has been successful and {the driving violation in the club |has greatly decreased." Mackenzie ORGAN MUSIC Nightly at the iring into the death |vestigated the accident, said that heen sitting in the same car. She 3 Frank x et 64, a General he found a skid mark, 121 feet(also said that the man walked Motors employee. {long leading back from thelout on the highway, crossed the | tons of rock and earth removed, the tons of cement poured, all serving to give an impressive Farms Here Not Used Full ideri nce, | Watts' car to the west. He said driving lane and was three-quar- A a aidering. the dance, the mark began 34 feet west of g . jh night, for 22/the west edge of Drew St. when he was struck they found no blame torak, said, was found = tached the driver of the car|15 feet to the east of the Watts'| WORE SHIRT involved. Poltorak was killed on|car. He said that the car suffer-| She said that she thought he the night of July 13 by a car ed about $400 damage. was wearing a brown shirt. driven by Byron Albert Watts,| Dorothy Howard, 17, of 242| The jury ruled death to be ac- 28, of Ottawa. |Conant St., Oshawa, told the jury|cidental and said they attached D E. G. Beatty, Oshawa path- that she and friends had been | no blame to the driver. ologist told the jury that Pol- [sitting in) a car parked in front| "We recommend an overpass torak had died of a broken neck |of a house at the corner of Drew jor underpass of some descrip- and ruptured spleen and dia-|St. and Fourth Ave., just a few tion at Drew St., because this is phragm [feet south of the Highway. Shela 60 mph Away, * said the 0 y id that she/|said that she saw Poltorak walk jury's report. : eo Coady aa in Watts' [out on the highway, cross the) Dr. F. A. Cuddy, Whitby cor- car as they proceeded from To-|centre line 'and then get about'oner, conducted the inquest. Be '= AT COUNTIES COUNCIL sad tat she ook "up frm Reeve Scores Tender Award running across the highway in| (Staff) front of the car. She said the| driver braked and swerved tof the left but the pedestrian was Watts said that he had been driving about 50 or 55 mph when he saw a man appear from the south edge, running out on the highway in front of his car. He said that he had time only to| COBOURG the left. |Counties roads commission had|the system handled by K. S. SAW MAN ° {handled tenders for a heating Cooper Ltd. His car hit the man at abou the centre of the highway, he said, and the body flew ahead of the car. His car had spun around to face the west in the centre boulevard. Siior sunlor | Frank Lawless, another motor- ist, also said he saw the man run|tender {United Counties council Tuesday.|cations. The only He said that call. Coincidentally, | | - | tions. s f the out from the right side of | Warden Garnett Rostiulbaral Ravin Now pn FE oo 'Manager For Show Set The Oshawa Horticultural So. County Home ciety annual show will be held] oopoURG (Staff) Saturday, August 15. It was origi-/ warden of the United C nally scheduled for August 29. Ip R Bothwell, Fraserville, was Yrresth President Lloyd Johnston said|appointed superintendent of the| pression the change was necessary due t0/home for the aged at a special city activities that would conflict one-day session of the counties) on the original date. council held Tuesday. His duties The annual exhibition for the will begin August 17 at a salary 5 Junior Garden Club will be held of $4200 per annum. [Plerwise. at a later date. Previously it was| The appointment of a matron | held with the parent society. {will be made at a later date by| However, leaders, Mrs. ,|Mr. Bothwell and the board of Weeks and Mrs, Earle Sandford, [T1anagement In the meantime, | suggest it would be better |supervision and |made to avoid any charges of | unfairness. | Former ounties, | man of the road that mentioned it that he Aq but he whole procedure very unfair. to/Mr. and Mrs. William Duncan, | separate them to allow thie jun- who tendered their resignations jors to participate in full num- bers. The annual show will be under, chairman Albert Maskell. The .. 1 ondation of the board of|Was warden of the United Coun- at the home to assist Mr. Bothwell until October 15. | prize list includes classes fori, ooment that the name of|ties in 1942, Sowers, vegetables and arrange: 'the home be changed from the ments. It will be held in the auditor- Le Atel» Tiitey EDITOR LEARNS ium of the E. A. Lovell school, on| pr "pred Blackwell was ap-| Centre street, and will be open nointed medical officer for the| TO LIKE TEA to the public from 6 pm. to 9 home, to be assisted by Drs. p.m. |W. E. Page and J. F. Leeson. ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP)-- Doctors' fees will be at the rate| Peter Stephens, a British of $10 an hour; $6 per patient for] magazine editor, had to come COMING EVENTS |annual check up, and $5 per| 5000 miles to learn to like ' {single call. | tea. g BINGO -- Bathe Park, Eulalie Avenue,| The charge for accommodation | "I never really cared for every Thursday 2 p.m. Regulars. Share at the home was increased to $75| it at home," he said. "But the Wealth. Specials nd Jaekoots, 12/Per month. : { I've tried ice tea here and rn - Shuster Diieial opening, of y he ney find it quite good. wing at Golden Plow ge wi "I must say thou, NOVEL BINGO {take place Wednesday, Oct. 7 at| can't say ues wat 1 THURSDAY EVENING, 8 PM. [2 pm, it was announced by| other of your drinks which ot ST. GEORGE'S HALL | Reeve Charles Johnston. It is| I've tried for the first time (Albert and Jackson Sts) [hoped lo have Nae iinister| --root beer and buttermilk." Je ning ce or s, 29, is in St, Games $6, $12, $20 mony. Reeve Johnston said that] oes, 20.16 in § Thi May be doubled or tripled [the wing had been accepted from| an editor of a children' $130 JACKPOT INCLUDED the architects but that all, final| aries fo Lone 5 iag- Door Prize $15 'costs were not yet available. | : ters across the passing lane down. --Criticism specifications named a specific apply the brakes and swerve 0/of the way in which the United heating system, which was also|suddenly there was a smash. t [system for the counties' munici-| The reeve contended that no| William Brown was fined $10 {pal garage was voiced by Reeve | specific heating system should and costs and will be required to ¢ Charles Johnston of Cobourg to have been named in the specifi-|lundergo a re-examin requirement|operator's permit the successful|should have been the BTU rat- bidder, K. S, Cooper Itd., pre-|ing. He said an outside consult-|James A. Harry, Foxboro, who [by his father. Someday the farm |parts. pared the specifications for the|ing engineer should have been|failed to stop at the intersection] the|engaged to write the specifica- Rickard|-- |and specifications should be pre- {pared with care and under closer every effort Since the contract had been t, there was nothing the coun- |cil could do about it, said Reeve hnst; idered the| Before the moraing session op- as of August 1, will remain on|®€d, Warden Rickard expressed the sorrow of all members on| iE learning of the death of Cobourg The council also accepted the|taX collector, Roy Dodge, who and factual story of what is today regarded as one of the greatest |engineering feats, accom- |plished through the co-operation lof two great countries, Canada and the United States. Two Drivers Are Convicted |from Ontario farmers don't use their land to its fullest advantage. Bridgwater, England. Michael is spending Two drivers were convicted in |magistrate's court Tuesday of | failing to stop at a traffic signal. The first case concern-| ed William Brown, RR 1, Osh- awa, who was involved in an| accident at the corner of Ritson| |road and Athol street July 17. | | Counsel Terence Kelly asked| {that the witnesses be excluded {from the court. Both witnesses | aid Brown didn't stop at the cor- ner. | Samuel Brown, no relation to the accused, stated dramatically, "I saw him (Brown) coming and It {made me so mad, my car was smashed to pieces." ation for an The second case Athol and Albert streets. rry was fined $20 and costs. of {Ha [ [ Reeve D. R. Dingwall, chair-| commission, | sai that he had been under the counties road engineer George Totten had pre- pared the specifications, and that| it was not until Reeve Johnston| learned | | ; | | | J. A. PEGG GETS DIPLOMA A graduate of Pickering Dis- trict High School, Joseph An- drew Pegg of Claremont has received his diploma from Gen- eral Motors Institute, following a four year course in co-oper- | ative engineering at General | Motors Institute, Flint, Mich. | He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Milton Pegg and is well known throughout the Picker- ing area. PLAN $10,000 GIFT TORONTO (CP)--A contribu- tion of $10,000 to the New Bruns- wick Fishermen's Disaster Fund was approved in principle Tues- {day by the Metropolitan Toronto |executive committee. Provincial {legislation is needed before the |contribution' can be made, |and historian, and Edwin O. Rei- part of an exchange visit under the auspices of the Junior Farm- ers Association of Ontario, the Ontario Department of Agricul- ture and the Young Farmers As- sociation of England. Under the scheme four young farmers from England visit On- tario and four from Ontario visit England. |ON FARM HERE The boys live with the farm families that they visit for a {period of four or five days, while on the tour. Michael has been at the farm of Robert Carruthers, Scugog St., Bowmanville, since last Thurs- day and Tuesday he went to the farm of Beverly . Gray, RR 1 Port Hope. He will stay there {for three days before moving on to a farm in Leeds County. He lives on a 500 acre mixed involved farm in England which is owned than ill be his own and he is very interested in studying various methods of farming both in Eng- land and here in Canada. "I like Canada, especially the # friendly informality of the peo- ple," he said. He stated that in England the This was the opinion of Michael : Hill, 25, a visiting junior farmer Somerset, eight | weeks fouring Ontario farms as | © 500 lambs, UK. Junior Farmer Asserts Michael's father has a dairy herd of 50 shires and Holsteins. Ayrshires and 150 other | dairy cattle comprised of Ayr-|made Canada. LONDON (CP)--*Smuts forged |South Africa. Gandhi called up |India. Mackenzie King, alas, | Thus the weekly magazine The | In addition to this there are|Spectator starts its review of the . some 350 breeding ewes, about 300 Landrace hogs A : ' which in turn produce some 400|the former Canadian prime min- © baconer pigs per year, 1500 lay- ing hens and 1500 young chick- ens. Michael said that he felt there was more labor used on British farms than in Ontario. NINE LABORERS On his farm there are nine laborers while he said the aver- ~ age Canadian farm of the same size would only have one or two. "Although we are fully mech- : anized in England your machines {farmers utilized their available {farm land to a greater extent their Canadian counter-| | "Of course. they have to do this as there is such a.shortage| (of land in England that every acre is valuable and must be put| to the greatest possible use to en- sure maximum productivity." On his own farm in the UK| MICHAEL HILL here are better utilized to elim- inate manual labor." Michael believes that British farmers have a weather advan- tage over their Canadian oppo- site numbers in that they have more rainfull during the sum- mer. "This enables better utilization [of pasture lands." He said that the size of farms in Britain and Ontario are ap- proximately the same. In addition to his present tour Michael has also toured Ger- many, inspecting their farming methods in that country. Bridgwater is located about 150 miles south-west of London on |the west coast and 40 miles south of Bristol. Chinese Students In Warm Debate By FORBES RHUDE Canadian Press Staff Writer GENEVA PARK, Lake Couci-| ¢ [ching (CP)--Spirited differences | of opinion between students of China featured Tuesday night's session of the conference of the Canadian Institute on Public Af- fairs. Y. P. Mei, Chinese philosopher schauer, director of the Harvard- yenching institute, both took the view that China could have had another way to modernization than through communism. Dr. Reischauer expressed some fear that the Communist regi- mentation of life may destroy Chinese culture. WHAT OTHER METHOD? Han Suyin, medical doctor and novelist of Singapore, said: "What other way is there for China? I don't say there is no other way, but what is it? What is the use of saying what might have been? We are living in the land of what is today." Dr. Han spoke from the floor when some of her earlier opin- ions were combatted by the two main speakers. With considerable drama she recalled that she had once been a student of Dr. Mei and still re- garded him as her teacher. "But, she saia, "I have been first volume of Professor R. Mac- | Gregor Dawson's biography of ister. The review, by Ronald Bryden, See you tonight in the Starlite. AIR CONDITIONED says it can be argued that King |was the most successful of the |three statesmen, but that unlike Smuts and Gandhi he did not suc- ceed in imposing a "'certain great- ness, the splendors and agonies of a coherent national idea.", King husbanded a "thinly-col- onized, 2,000-mile strip of sub- Arctic farm and forest into one of the worlds industrial powers, FOUR SEASONS TRAVEL KING ST E., OSHAWA, ONT RA. 8.6201 kept peace with a French minor- ity as 'fiercely sectarian as In- dia's Moslems, as tenaciously | rooted as the Boers," and ad- vised the: British Crown longer than any prime minister since Sir Robert Walpole. But Canada, the review says, remains a country in search of its identity, an "indeterminate ag- gregate, innocent alike of agony GOOD FOOD AIR-CONDITIONED DINING ROOM HOTEL LANCASTER or splendor, groping toward self- consciousness." Of King's policies Bryden says. "With deliberately grey oratory (they said he never spoke a memorable phrase in case he 'needed to contradict it later) he lulled Canada into twilight sleep, and tiptoed about clearing the way for history to take its course." of your students in the Chinese government. Some of them have died of overwork in this cause which Prof. Reischauer thinks | rather physical. "They are working so that peo- ple may rise from the level of cattle to that of human beings. . , "I find the regime harsh and wish what it is doing could be done in some other way. But I ask you how else, and you go on and on condemning but you don't show any other way." POINTS TO INDIA Dr. Mei, who left China in 1949 and now is professor of oriental studies at the State University of Towa, replied: "How about India? Many other countries also are making honest efforts. If it hadn't been for the Japanese aggression China might now be well on the way to mod- CAR WHEELS SET STRAW ON FIRE COBOURG (Staff) -- Four thousand bales of hay were saved Tuesday night by the prompt action of the Cobourg fire department. Hans Otto Knapp, a tenant on the farm owned by Cliff Baptist, a mile west of Co bourg on the south side of No. 2 Highway, parked his car on some straw between a straw stack and the barn containing 4000 bales of hay. When he went to start his car about 9.30 p.m., friction from the spinning wheels set the straw afire. The flames quickly spread to the stack and enveloped the car. Fire Chief Ken Baird and his men were unable to save the car, but did save the barn and its contents. The car, valued at $500, was a total loss. It was not insured. ernization without communism. Because you are hungry you don't have to be poisoned." U.S. EMPLOYMENT HIGH WASHINGTON (AP) Em- E. B. Jolliffe, Toronto lawyer (ployment in the United States hit who was born in China, asked|another record high in July. The whether communism in China| number of jobs rose about 250,000 hadn't taken on considerable as-|while unemployment declined by pects which are indigenous to China. Dr. Mei and Dr. Reischauer disagreed with this view. not indigenous to China, back to China and found many came to her like a strong hu cane from the West. nearly the same amount. The la- bor department reported July employment at a record 67,504, 1000, up 252,000 from June amd an Communism, Dr. Mei said, is|increase of 2,415,000 over July| but last rr clined fo 3,744,000 in July, This "Ywas 1,560,000 less than July, 1956. year. Unemployment de- Colt With 2 Stomachs HARE OPTICAL JOHN A. OVENS Optometrist 8 BOND ST EAST = HOURS -- 9 AM. -- 6 P.M. WED. UNTIL 12:30 P.M. SAT. UNTIL 2:30 P.M. PHONE RA 3-4811 For am appointment In Alberta CALGARY (CP)--A colt with two stomachs, one in its neck, was born recently on the farm of John Hamilton of nearby De Winton. The animal would have starved to death had Mr. Hamilton not brought it to Calgary where an operation was performed by Dr. Morris Hanson who removed the extra stomach. Normal in every other way at birth, the colt nursed as it should. The difficulty was that the milk GET THE BEST For Less At MODERN UPHOLSTERING 9262 SIMCOE ST. N. OSHAWA RA 8-6451 or RA 3-4131 never got past the stomach in the neck and the colt was slowly dying of starvation. Dr. Hanson performed the sur- gery. The stomach had hung sus- pended from the colt's throat and held about a gallon of milk. It was a bypass to the normal stomach. An incision extending from the colt's jawbone to the breast bone was made. The stomach was re- moved, the extra channel was tied off and the normal passage was put into operation. Now the little roan colt is get- ting its food as it should and has every prospect of growing up a normal animal. Dr. Hanson said he never saw or heard of an abnormality sim- ilar to the one on which he had] operated. | | SPEE-DEE WINDOW CLEANERS Windows cleaned, Floors washed and waxed. We Specialize in Office and Factory Work FOR FREE. ESTIMATE nA " val