PENNY FAIR PARADE MOST COLORFUL IN ITS HISTORY HARMAN PARK ENTRY LINES UP FOR PARADE 8 . A a CT NEE ki D FOR TRAFFIC SAFETY REE CHIL on the pool walls and floor. CROWDS THRONG AROUND BOOTHS AT CRA BUILDING Pye Gets Telephone Firm By M. McINTYRE HOOD Special London, England, Correspondent to The Oshawa Times. LONDON The huge televi- sion, radio and television com- pany of Pye Limited, of which the Pye Company (Canada) Limited, 'Control sold their 180,000 shares for shares, to the Pye Cempany than £100,000. Other large in- vestors, Mr. Stanley said, had also sold to Pye. These included Prudential, Co-operative Insur- ance and Royal London Mutual more | CAPSULE NEWS | Minister Said Much Improved TORONTO (CP ~ Transport Minister John Yaremko, con- fined to his home for seven weeks with an undisclosed ailment, is in considerably improved condition it was learned Wednesday. Mr. | CAT CLAWS BOY BRAMPTON (CP)--Glen Sav- age, four-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. William Savage of Bramp- ton, suffered severe gashes to his DREN FROM NORTH SIMCOE PLAYGROUND gmes § [SECOND SECTION OSHAWA, THURSDAY, JULY 28, 1960 PAGE THIRTEEN 1 . ers, hula-dancers, and dwarfs,| With their stove pipe rocket on Rotary Park Pool Opens Next Week One week from today, Oshawa floor and held up work as. no children will be able to watch concrete could be poured Satur- as the first jets of water are|day, hosed into the new Rotary Park| Painting of the pool this Satur- Swimming Pool, If the weather day will be the finishing touch holds out, that is. before its completion. The aqua On hand to fill the 225,000{marine paint to be used on the [gallon pool will be the Oshawa|pool is a special type. It can be Fire Department. It will be the|applied to the concrete two weeks only time this year that the after pouring, unlike the stand- Fire Department will be called ard rubber based paints which re- {upon to fill the 50 foot by 100|quire about # month. foot pool as the water will have " Be to be dramed only once every|FIVE DAYS TO DRY three years for the repainting of Five days of dry weather are necessary for the air to cure the {two coats of paint and then all PLASTERING WALLS is ready for the water to be The pool, which ranges in depth poured from three fcet six inches to nine] The same water will be used feet is being plastered today to over and over again, but every smooth the rough spots in the|eight hours ir will be completely concrete before the paint is ap- recirculated and purified through {plied Saturday. The plaster must|a filtration plant. Any water lost |dry a day before the paint can|through evaporation or overflow 'be sprayed over it. into the scum gutters will be re- Yesterday saw the pouring of placed by a make-up system. the 7800 square foot concrete, In the winter a special log apron surrounding the pool. Rain frame will be thrown into the last Friday washed away 10|water to prevent the surface from yards of concrete on the pool freezing over. GM Dealers | Hold Rally At Detroit General Motor dealers repres tnting 48 cities in the United| States and Canada concluded a | three-day meeting today with top General Motors executives in the summer session of the GM Presi- |dent's Dealer Advisory Coucil at Detroit, Factory - dealer policies and other matters of mutual interest |were discussed in the meetings, the purpose of which is to fac-| ililate the exchange and develop- ment of ideas on how better to serve retail customers. | Twelve GM dealers from Can- {adian cities and 38 dealers re- presenting both large and med- ium sized cities in the United] |States participated in the meet- ngs. GM executives at the meeting {included Frederic G. Donner, TE Bo Take Course dent and Edwin H. Walker, presi), SOEST, Germany,--Captain J. dent and general manager of GM | Edward Brown of Oshawa, Ont., of Canada. Limited. will be leaving Canada's NATO Members of the President's brigade in Germany this week, | Dealer Advisory Council Cana-|where he has served for the past dian Group present were: Hubert|two years, for employment in |Badani, Jr.. of Kam Motors Lim- Canada . ited, Fort William; George Per- Ia von of Z. Perron Automobiles ory Wifes the Royal Cana. Limited, St. Catharines; Walter gp oinoons Capt. Brown will T. Elliott of Elliott Motors (Bell-| ocionding a course at General ville) Limited, Belleville; Joseph fC é Botive a: | Motors of Canada, Oshawa, dur- W. Gillis of Scotia Chevrolet ing this summer. i CAPT. J. E. BROWN Soldier To n Mechanical, be hye Osha BIGGEST EVER Over 800 Children | Take Part In Parade Imagination ruled supreme|brought to mind the ancient Brit- The prize for the best unit in Wednesday night, in the make-|ons in war paint prior to Caesar's| the parade went to Fernhill Park, believe world of children when invasion of England. the Oshawa Community Recrea-| 7 tion Association held its annual| FINE SENSE OF BALANCE Penny Fair. The event, which at- tracted approximately 800 chil- dren, was the largest and most colorful in the history of the, Also seen among the denizens évent, {of the world of fantasy were cube Bevies of Indians, head-hunt-|Shaped men from outer space,| sense of balance carrying a tray | of fruit on her head. peopled imaginary lands atop|the launching pad, ready for a tractor driven floats, as children | quick blast-off. from 22 city play grounds vied in| A natural feed for the two stretching imaginations to pre-| ponies on the pony ride, was a | sent the most spectacular tab-|grass stuffed headless dummy |leau, | strung on a pole being carried to The Penny Fair is so named be-| the cannibal feast. cause rides and games cost only| Among games for children one penny to the children. |were, a penny toss for chocolate | The parade preceding the pars The game was to toss the | Penny Fair wended its way from| penny on the bar. If it remained the city parking lot atthe corner on the bar, the child had a treat, of William and Church Siruets 1 if it didn't, he spent a penny, the Fair at the rear of the CR building on Gibb street. |GOLF GAME POPULAR | The golf game seemed popular | MARDI GRAS. TOUCH |with young tyros bashfully try-| Other prize winners, | were Radio Park, Harman Park, : |Rundle Park and Lake Vista A young lady with a marvelous, park 45 Bloor St Wes Ave. in order, PRIZE WINNERS Following is the list of prize | winners: Camera -- Vickie Campbell, 296 Riclimond St. E. Baseball -- Vickie Wilura, 54 Sandra St. White shirt -- Mrs. C. Stovell, 211 Park Rd. S. Boy's shirt -- Mrs. E, Jones, China lighter and ash tray -- Mathews, 354 Kingsdale Set of four mugs -- Barry Me- Quaid, 833 Meyers St. Bubble Bath -- Josey W. Gatt, , 477 Cubert St. Voucher -- Barry Ash, 222 Ver- |dun Rd. Jewellery set -- Janice Walker, | The kaleidoscope of bright cos ing to knock a plastic ball up an|297 Verdun Rd. {Lunes i painted shildren inclined trough, and into a pail. | | s y side | them, added a Mardi Gras touch | to the parade. We recall the stern look on the face of a boy soldier| in a nondescript uniform guard-| {ng and equally nondescript added when for a pittance one [enemy. li irl - dres could tour the tunnel of night-| ld $yiph- ike gif) of Bins, dress. mares, and enter the chamber of : ni.gas| ; *| horrors, Inside one could with a flowing white veil, squat-| gy ynkén heads, hear the rustle ting on the Sigewalk TemOVHIE| of mysterious winds, and gasp at| jue Toes Pid Jittle Johnny fhe Spectacle of a dancing head- £ 5 | Jess r. |to meet her at the chocolate bar| ess. M0nsLe . | booth at 8 p.m. and, "don't forget PARADE WINNERS ferget to tell te other kids". | The parade, which | Snow White and her t dwarfs sharing the same float] ing, was one of the most colorful For the munificent sum of two) cents, a swami was prepared to read the occult to determine the| path of a wondering child. | A final touch of fantasy was| preceded | | Pumpkin-Eater, assorted| awa. In addition clowns. {mounted in transport A group of boys painted purple| there were hundreds of marching {and dressed in weed skirts,| children in costumes. and to the floats t| Crawford, 488 Eulalie. | with savage headhunters, Peter-|and elaborate ever seen in 'Osh-/mar, 585 Fernhil Brooch set -- Philip Wallace, | 124 Nonquon Rd. Necklace--Dwight Finley, 1398 270 Ashtray set -- Mrs. H. Middle- Simcoe St. N. Necklace -- J. Dorman, Simcoe St. N. ton, 645 Grierson St. Water Toy Bryan Huzar, see| 1337 Sharbot. Food Umbrella (yellow) -- Jim Food Umbrella (pink) P. Cronin, 269 Park Rd. S. Food Umbrella (white) -- Mrs, Lewington, 685 King St. W. Lavender Fragrance -- Mr. J. tribe - of the activities at the CRA Build-|Smith, 169 Montrave Ave. Coty perfume -- Randy Ditt- hill. Cologne -- C. Stovell, 211 Park trucks, (Rd. 8. Taleum --- John Adams, 266 Kaiser Crese. | JAMES R. ROSS, left, chair- man of the Whitby Public Utill ties Commission, talks over Hydro matters with H, L. Pringe, centre, engineer, and Dorse po mr i Harry C. Simpson, secretary- manager. --Ontario Hydro Photo y Band PUC At Whitby Here Bug. 4 Formed In 1903 Insurance. Mr. Stanley has now ord face and head when attacked bYtolasmobile Limited, Halifax, of Ajax, Ontario, is the Canadian subsidiary, has broken into a new field of manufacturing. After a bitter financial battle with a consortium of seven large tele phone equipment manufacturers, it has secured control of the Telephone Manufacturing Com- pany. The battle for control of this company, familiarly known as issued a blanket offer of 15 shil- lings and three pence for the re- |maining TEMCO shares. The |clectrical firms' holding company f has slightly over 13 per cent of the stock Mr. Stanley proposes to use the "FEMCO company to end what has been practically a closed shop Yaremko, also provincial ary, is 'well on the road to re- covery' a family source said. CELEBRATING BIRTHDAYS TEMCO, was spectacular enough in the design and manufacture of to merit major attention on the telephone equipment, and to give financial pages of the national press of Britain. Victory was achieved when Charles Stanley, chairman of - the board of Pye, Limited, was able to announce that he had bought more than 50 per cent of the £900,000 ordin- ary capital shares of TEMCO COMPETING BIDS * The battle started when Mr. Stanley made a take offer-bid, in the form of an exchange of shares in his own company, for the TEMCO holdi His bid was worth an equivalent of 12 shil- 1 sixpence for each MCO share. The seven major electrical companies of Britain, through the Combined Telephone Holdings, jumped into the bid- ding and offered 13 shill and rire pence for each MCO share Mr, Stanley did not into direct competitior with the con- sortium, but through a London banking firm, quietly went about buying 21! the TEMCO shares of- fered on the market. There were substantial offerings as the price on the stock exchange went up to 16 shillings and three pence a share. After a week or so of this buying, Mr. Stanley was able to announce that the battle was over, that he had secured" the majority of the TEMCO shares enter CHURCH SOLD SHARES One of the chief factors in his victory wa the Church of England Comm ners, former ly the Jarges! owners of TEMCO » the post office department the benefit of any reduced costs of | production of telephone equip- ment. This has up to now been] solely in the hands of the big seven companies, which have a total capital of £500 million. He has submitted his proposals for the development of his new tele- phone equipment industry to the President of the Board of Trade. In the city of London, financial experts look for the Pye Com- pany to cut a wide swathe in this line of manufacturing Civic Holiday Postal Service Postmaster Norman J. Moran has announced that the service given by the Oshawa post office on Civic Holiday, Aug. 1, will be somewhat curtailed. Special deliveries will We made as usual but there will be no let tér carrier, parcel post or rural mail deliveries. 'Mails will be received and despatched as usual but there will be only one com-| plete collection from the street letter boxes. This collection will be made at the regular Saturday| {afternoon collection time. | The public lobby will be open from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. but wicket service, with the exception of money order and savings ban! business, will be given only be ilween 8 am, and 10 am. Congratulations and best wishes to the following resi- dents of Oshawa and district who are celebrating birthdays today Janet Russell, 99 Pontiac avenue: Christine Popek, 312 Baldwin street; Russel Wig- gans, 197 Clarke street; Ron- ald Joseph Hayward, 211 Wilson south; Mrs. G. Ferguson, 184 Hillcroft street; Marie Wladyka, 359 Ritson road south; Jeanette Kowal- ski, 250 Chadburn street; Mrs. S Coyston Hillcroft street, Mrs. Norma Thornton, 142 Division street, Mrs R. Parkinson, 767 Cambridge avenue; Emily Kinarz, 635 Perry crescent; Tommy Me- Afee, RR 2; Bowmanville; Lynda Calvert, RR 1, Osh- awa; Jimmy and Joanne Crowiey (twins)," 752 Glen- forest street; Mrs. J. Tyrk- alg, 244 Clarke street; Ed- ward Edgar, Box 97, Brooke lin; Jack Laverty, 47 Glad- stone avenue; Barbara Ross, Port Whithy: Kenneth Wasi- luk, 217 Conant street; Doris Simpson Trull's road north, Courl ce The first five persans to in- form The Oshawa Times of their birthdays each day will receive double tickets to The Regent Theatre, good for a four-week period. The current attraction js 'Masters of the Congo Jungie" roa: 125 on - birthdays will ived only between the hours -of 8 a.m. and 10 a.m, a cat here Wednesday. Forty N.S.; Leonard C. Harland of Har- three stitches were needed 10, 4" Automobile Limited, Lach-|iate and Vocational Institute dur- close his wounds which included a pierced eye lid and loss of part of one ear. RECOVERY MONEY PRINCEVILLE, Que. (CP) Provincial police have recovered all but about $150 of the $19,500 stolen in a holdup of a Banque Canadienne Nationale branch last Friday, bank manager Paul Du- four said Wednesday. The five men who staged the robbery in | this quiet village 50 miles south- lwest of Quebec City are still at {large, but police are following a {fresh lead. BARREL EXPLODES MONTREAL (CP) A barrel containing calcium carbide ex- ploded on a dock Wednesday. No one was injured and firemen quickly put out the flames. The {bzrrel was part of the cargo of the freighter Federal Express, sunk after a collision in the har bor May 5. Her cargo is being |removed by divers and the ship grey sand 1,800 feet into the air Lesage said today agreement has is to be broken up and pulled fromcher resting place TO LEAVE JAMBOREE COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. | (CP)--Canada's 350-member con- tingent to the fifth national boy scout jamboree will leave for home in four groups after the jamboree closes Thursday night The biggest group, 288, will spend Monday touring Chicago leaving Monday night and arriving in Toronto Tuesday morning. FROM TV: | BIRMINGHAM, England (Reu- ters)--A 10-year-old boy initiated a younger boy into his 'gang' 75,000 Italians were camping out agreed upon. by branding him on the face with a red-hot iron, a juvenile court was told Wednesday. The prose cutor - said the older boy might have gotten the idea from tele-/during the last two weeks. Only bridge between downtown Ottawa|Arthur) that use of RCAF planes "torture white men. ine, Montreal, Que.: Harry' T.|108 the years 1939 -1945, gradua- Hoy of Parkway Pontiac Limited, ting with an honor matriculation. Montreal, Que.: David H. Law- Between 1946 and 1950, he was a son of Empress Motors Limited, student at the University of Tor- Victoria, B.C.; James A, Orr of onto, and graduated with a degree Orr Automobiles Limited, Kit-|i? mechanical science. chener: John W. Pink of Pink] He worked as a civil engineer, Buick-Vauxhall Limited, Toronto: ard was a member of the 1lth Albert. E, Stedelbauer of Central Armoured (Ontario Regiment) Chevrolet Oldsmobile (London) (Militia) until October 1954, when He attended the Oshawa Colleg-} | Ltd., London, Ont. and Merril E. Wolfe of Edmonton Motors Lim- ! ited, Edmonton, Alta, NASSER TO CUBA ALEXANDRIA (Reuters)-- President Gamel Abdel Nasser of the United Arab Republic an- nounced here Wednesday night he will visit Cuba and Mexico |e was commissioned in the reg. | | For more than half a century | The Tommy Dorsey Orchestra) ine town of Whitby has had a |is coming to the Jubilee Pavilion public utilities commission. This | at Lakeview Park, Thursday, Commission same ity, being i | A a ehas 3 when water and light com- | Aug. 4. The 16:piece orchestral ~ = loners were appointed, after | will be starring Warren Coving- ratepayers had endorsed a |ton, former star on the Arthur municipal bylaw. The 57-year his- | Godfrey nd Jackie Gleason|tory of .this commission reveals | shows, on he trombore. ._._ |the public spirited citizens who | This is the band's first tour into|} ave directed the affairs of the [Ontario this year. If the Oshawa | ytility to make certain that resi- dents had modern water and elec- |the forward-thinking attitude of] Whitby (Power was furnished to indus. tries, commercial establishments |and a few residents. However, in {ensuing years the Seymour Light and Power Company handled most of the electric power growth |in the town. became a Hydro municipality in 1925 when the | Whitby PUC took over the local | franchise of the Seymour Power v army. Since this time he|engagement is a success other } x served in Toronto until being| ome bands will be coming to Sted lo Germany in 1953. [the city, if not, this will be the| | Capt. Brown is married to the|last big band to visit Oshawa in former Miss Marion Leigh of|a long time, Owen McCrohan, Oshawa. They have two children manager of the Jubilee Pavilion, | Bonnie aged 7, and John aged 3.|said. i | Only 500 tickets will be sold so that everyone will have a seat. | tric systems. Company. One of the red letter Stretching from the shores of days in the commission's history Lake Ontario beyond Highway 2, Was the opening of the present this picturesque, historic town|PUC building in 1949 by the late which celebrated its centennial Robert H. Saunders, chairman of as an incorporated municipality Ontario Hydro. This building is in 1955. was dne of -the first|@ fine addition to one of Whitby's municipalities in Ontario to be main business thoroughfares. lighted by electricity. A private] The growth «and development next March. CRATERS EXPLODE Sicily (Reuters) Both craters of Etna volcano were exploding every 10 minutes and shootng vapors and throughout Wednesday, the experts at Vulcanological Institute said SAUD'S GIRL AMMAN, Jordan One of daughters King Saud of Saudi Arabia has been Killed and two of his other daugh- ters injured in a car crash, Mecca radio announced Wednes- day night. The accident occurred when the royal car and a private car crashed. The radio said King Saud pardened the drivers. 3 EARTH TREMORS TERNI, Italy (Reuters)--Some KILLED (Reuters)-- the of in tents ana huts around Terni today following more than ,200 earth tremors which have shaken the town 60 miles north of Rome {tants were in their homes. The Arthur Murray Dancing | Studios will be putting on an | exhibition of all the latest dances {during the intermission, The Dorsey Orchestra, which is {a Decca recording orchestra, is managed by the Willar Alexander { Corporation. pn Army May Help In Forest Fires OTTAWA (CP) armed \orees Agreement On Bridge Costs OTTAWA (CP)--Premiecr Jean been reached in principle on how the federal, Ontario and Quebec) governments will share construc-| |tion costs of a new Ottawa River| bridge between Hull and the cap-| ital. Mr. Lesage said the arrange-| ment was worked out between Premiel Frost of Ontario, and|the Federal Works Minister Walker|fires--is being and himself in private negotia- government, Resources Minister tions earlier this week. {Alvin Hamilton said Wednesday| The Quebec preier said that|in the Commons. | during a private meeting with Mr.. He said the military is inter- Walker today agreement on the ested in co-operating in such a principle of cost-sharing among|pian on which he and Defence the three governments was| Minister Pearkes had been work- ing for a year. There had been in- be an-{formal meetings with Ontario, nounced Sept. 8. |Quebec and New Brunswick. The new bridge is designed to] Mr. Hamilton said in reply to| replace a railfauto interprovincial| Douglas Fisher (CCF -- Port A new role for [the hting forest He said details will vision westerns in which Indians| 10.000 of Terni's 85000 inhabi- and downtown Hull, one of three|to water-bomb fires is part of they (bridges linking the cities, Iplap- under consideration. g considered by the" steam generating electric plant was acquired in 1904 by the water and light commissioners. MANY STORES OFFER BARGAINS It's dollar days in Oshawa this weekend. Many Oshawa stores are featuring special bargains tod a y, tomorrow, and Saturday. Dollar days will be held both downtown and at-the Oshawa Shopping Centre on these three days. Dollar days are an annual event, giving Oshawa and district shoppers an extra- ordinary opportunity to pur- chase all types of gopds at greatly reduced prices. All local merchants taking part in this unusual city-wide sale will be advertising their par- ticipation in The Oshawa Times on each of the three days on which the sale is be- ing held. They will also be carrying Dollar Day pennants in their windows and through- ouf their stores. | taking place in Whitby are indi- {cated by the number of custom. ers, which now totals 3700, and | the load, which is over 11,000 kilo. watts. There is a staff of 35 to serve the customers of the utility. Much of this growth has taken place in the past five years, be- cause in the centennial year there were just 2085 Hydro customers. The population of Whitby is now approximately 12,000. The community leaders are confident that the town will con. tinue to grow and prosper as {more people come to this lovely area and additional industries are 2iiracted by its strategic loca- ion. . FLOODS HIT POLAND WARSAW (Reuters) -- Polish authorities appealed to the public Wednesday to join the fight to build river defences against the country's worst flood disaster in more than 20 years. The appeal |came as the rain-swollen Vistula {and Oder Rivers spilled over |their banks into towns, villages {and farmlands in many parts of 'south Poland,