4 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, July 24, 1702 NEW HOSPITAL SIGN New marking the site of the new Ajax and Picker- ing General Hospital looks members of the hospi- tal's planning committee, checking reports From left Thomp- Orono Pool May Instruct Adult Class By MRS. KEN GAMSBY ORONO -- Unit No. 3 meeting was held at the home of Mrs. McConkey. A call to.worship by Mrs..£02an opened the meeting, Mrs. Wood gave the de- votional, Roll call showed 6 pre- sent. A treat was enjoyed by 14 members of Unit 7 at the home of Mrs. M. H. Staples. The de- votional, led by Mrs. N. Porter and assisted by Mrs. Robert Al- lin, was enhanced by the beauti- ful surroundings Mrs. Haze! Farrow kindly con- sented to be in charge of placing flowers in the church for the month of August. It was decided to try for a speaker al the next meeting Sept. 4 ADULT SWIMMING Wednesday evening at the Orono Swimming pool has been set aside for adult swimming only and adults are encouraged to use the pool at this time This period is gaining in pop- ularity but many more could be accommodated at this time. Consideration is also being given to setting up a course for adult swimming lessons, This: how- ever, is only in the discussion stage at this time ADD ETENSION -- Kilrit Furniture Manufactur- ing, located in Orono, has com- sign soil test Robert over- | | son, hospital board chairman; | George Robinson and Eiwin Smyth, Other committee members were absent for the picture - taking. The hospita! building fund has received | more than $350,000 in pledges and donations pleted an extension to their fac- tory just east of the Village. This industry has been in op- eration in Orono for a year an a half and has, with the recent addition, doubled its manufact- uring floor space, in order to keep pace with expanding pro- duction and sales The original plant had 2400 squaresquare feet of floor space, but has been increased with the addition to 5100 square feet, The additional space is being 'used for storage and assembling of their products. The addition was started in. April and completed in May. Kilrit Furniture Manufacturing owned and operated by Messrs. Helmut Kellemeier and Rudy Ritz who located their plant in Orono in late 1959. Prior to this they operated a plant in Toronto where they featured up- holstered chairs for offices and hotels is Eight are now employed at the plant which started out with only two employees in the early part of 1960 BRUCE'S MONUMENT EDINBURGH, Scotland (CP) Nearly £8,000 has been donated by Scotsmen al home and abroad to the Robert the Bruce memorial fund, launched last year. It is proposed to build a monument of the old Scottish King mounted on a_ charger near Bannockburn, where his army defeated the English in 1314 HANDY SAVINGS Postal savings banks, estab- lished in 1867, now operate in 1,500 post offices throughout Canada. | 'DEAR MR. KHRUSHCHEV' Paul Miller, president of the Gannett newspapers, and Walker Stone, editor-in-chief of the Scripps-Howard news- papers, have heen friends from college days in Okla- homa, 35 years ago, and pro- fessional rivals since. To- gether with other representa- tives of the American So- clety of Newspaper Editors, | they interviewed Premier Khrushchev in Moscow July 13. and, together, they went to Berlin this week and joined in this letter to Premier Khrushchev. i BERLIN (AP) -- An open letter from Berlin, July 24, 1962, to: His excellency, Khrushchev Chairman, council of minis- ters Moscow, U.S.S.R. Dear Mr. Chairman: A little more than a week ago, with a-group of 10 other United Church Holds Picnic At Caesarea By MRS. OLGA HILL BLACKSTOCK -- The United Church pienic was held recent- ly in the Community Park, Cae- sarea, with a good attendance. Following were sports win- ners RUNNING RACES Senior primary girls, Mrs Kenneth Lee, teacher -- Linda McLaughlin, Heather Dorrell Senior primary boys, Donna McLaughlin, teacher Grant |McLaughlin, Gordie Malcolm. Primary girls, Mrs. Neil Werry, teacher -- Marilyn Duff, Leslie Wright. Primary boys,' Mrs Lloyd Wright, teacher -- David Lar- mer, Michael Wheeler. Kindergarten, Mrs. Ross Duff, teacher -- Larry Werry. Kindergarten, Mrs- Jean Mc- Laughlin, teacher Barbara Wheeler Five-year-olds, Mrs. J. Bon netta, teacher -- Elaine Wright, Janice. McLaughlin Three-vear-olds and under, Mrs. Ralph Larmer, teacher -- Jackie Gunter Junior boys. Neil Malcolm and Mrs. Ernest Swain, teachers -- Dennis Romeril, Donald Wright. Junior girls, Mrs. D. Dorrell, teacher -- Joan Horton, Carol Wotten. Intermediate girls, Mrs. J. Carnaghan, teacher Eliza- beth Thompson, Joan Wottten. Intermediate boys, Dalton Dorrell, teacher -- Bob Kyte, Brian Mountjoy. Senior mixed Kyte, teacher Laughlin. There was a prize for each child too young to race. A pea- nut scramble for. pre-school children, also one for primary department VARIETY RACES HELD Bunny Hop, primary girls -- Linda McLaughlin, Heather Dor rel} Marshmallow boys Grant Richard Gunter Wheelbarrow boys Dennis Thompson, Three legged race, Junior girls -- Joan Horton, Gail Bon- netta Plate Nikita S. Harold Mc- class, Donna race, primary ie McLaughlin, race, Romeril, junior Bill race, Intermediate girls Elizabeth Thompson, Nancy Dorrell Sack race, Intermediate boys -- Bob Kyte, Glen Bonnetta Balloon race, Seniors -- Lyn- da Kyte, 'David Kyte. American newspaper men, we sat with you in the Kremlin and listened attentively to your views on how to solve the problem of Berlin in a way which you believed would contribute to the hap- piness and security of the German people and ease the tensions between the U.S.S.R. and the United States and its allies. Neither of us had been in Berlin for several years. We did not know how Berliners felt. On coming here after leaving the cordial hospitality of the Soviet Union, it seemed logical to ask the people of Berlin, both East and West, whether they agreed with your ideas and welcomed your proposals. This is a report to you, our host in Moscow, as well as to our newspaper readers in America, on what we heard --and saw. First, let it be emphasized | that we did not talk with | Mayor Willy Brandt nor any officials of West Berlin. Nor did we talk with Herr UI- | bricht or any officials of East Berlin or East/Germany. But | for the better part of two | days we roamed the streets | of both West and East Ber- | lin, ranging both sides of the wall that has been erected to | | divide this great city, and | talked with Germans willing | to talk. INTERVIEW ALL TYPES Using several different in- | terpreters, we talked with people of such varied occupa- tions, as manual workers, clerks, students, lawyers, sec- refaries, businessmen, border | guards, nurses, housewives, | and of course taxi drivers | who seem to be the common | denominator of public opin- | ion in all countries whatever the social system. For these conversations we | took along the official Soviet Union transcript of our Krem- | lin interview, and we read | from that document the state- ments and suggestions you made. We told these people that we believe an accurate sum- | mary of your ideas and pro- | posals can be expressed this way: 1. The last. vestiges of the | war which ended 17 years ago | should be wiped out by a peace treaty. 2. The Soviet Union pro- | poses to sign such a treaty Women vs Men In Pontypool Baseball Tilt By MRS. H. M. RICHARDSON PONTY POOL The Com- munity Field Day was enjoyed by everyone in attendance. Prizes were given for the best decorated bicycle and tricycle and races for the children There was a ball game, women versus men, The women won the game by 28 to 8 A darice in the LOL hall at night completed the day. The UCW met inthe church with 10 members: present. A spe- cial meeting was called to finish up the business after the garden} party and serving the dinner to the Christmas Tree Growers As-| sociation. There will be no more meetings until September. Sunday School has been closed for the months of July and Aug- ust. The children received their} pins and badges at a special! service. Mrs. Martha Loshaw, Frank-| \ford, is spending the summer} ith her two daughters, Mrs.| olin Richardson and: Mrs. Wil- |fred Richardson. | Paul Cavenaugh started | work as despatcher for the CPR! jin Toronto this week. | Jake McClaren is barbering in| | Oshawa five days a week and at, home here in the evenings. Mrs. Elsie Richardson, Osh- awa, spent the weekend with her daughter, Mrs. James Wil- to} p lis and family. = |marria Morris Pollard, Waubashene, |visited with his sister Zetta and! ibrother Ambrose on the week-! lend. | There was a presentation in \the LOL hall on Friday night) jin honor of Roy Bowen and his! |bride, They were presented with |a chesterfield suite. | Congratulations are in order jfor Peter Millar and his bride.) |Miss Foster, on their recent! ge. Miss Foster gradu-| jated from the school of nurses} lat Peterborough Civic Hospital) this summer. | Stanford Staples, Orono, was lealling on old friends in the vil-| i \lage on Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs, Neal Finney and |\family have moved from Ome- imee into the house owned by | Gordon Frederick | Mr. and Mrs. William Rennie spent Tuesday in Peterborough Soviet Peace Plan Snubbed By Berlin with the government of Fast Germany and you are hopeful that it will be signed or acquiesced to by the United States, Britain and France. 3. Such a treaty should es- tablish what is now known as West Berlin as what you call a "free city." 4. Such a solution must, in your view, include the with- drawal of U.S., U.K, and French troops from West Ber- lin. 5. The people of Berlin would then feel more secure, more confident of the future, | and be happier. 6. Unless all this occurs, West Berlin will 'wither on the vine." 'OPINIONS INTERESTING Mr. Chairman' we hope you will be interested in the opin- ions of the people with whom we talked. We were. When we read your state- ment that the Germans of Berlin would be "much more at ease' and enjoy "'pros- pects for future development" if a peace treaty were signed and Western troops with- | drawn, we could hardly finish before the person being inter- viewed would exclaim "'nein." This means the same as the Russian "nyet." When we asked if they would sleep easier if Allied troops withdrew from Berlin, they said: "Nein. In 30 days Russia would gobble up Berlin." When we asked if a peace treaty would reassure them, a West Berlin policeman at the wall said, '"'you Ameri- cans of all people should know how little is the meaning of such promises." Berliners, with the bitter first-hand experience of two dictatorships -- Hitler's and Stalin's -- behind them say they are not fooled by propo- sitions for a Soviet style "peace." They say they can see for themselves what this "peace" means for their own relatives just 'a few blocks away in East Berlin. In their conver- sations with us they left no doubt that they fear the same fate if the American soldiers and their allies quit the city. | These are no longer "occupa- tion" troops in the minds of the Berliners with whom we talked but rather "our pro- tectors."' |. ALL SAY NEIN We talked with a Lutheran nun, standing on the West | side of the wall waving at a window a block away from which she hoped a friend in the east side was watching. We talked with a middle-aged housewife, teetering tearfully on a parapet, waving and hoping her aged mother would see her half a block across the wall. These and all the others said | "nein." We talked with a woman more than 70 years old in East Berlin--and she was per- haps the most vehement of all in insisting that there must be no yielding, else all hope for her and Germany's remaining freedom be lost. Mr. Chairman, we wonder if you have ever seen. the wall? visage it otherwise. The wall takes many forms. The 26 miles tween East and West Berlin is a continuous barricade of houses with bricked-in win- dows, garden walls with bro- ken glass scattered on top, barbed wire, guarded stretches of canal where flee- ing East Berliners have been shot by East Berlin guards. For long stretches jagged bar- riers of iron and steel back up heavy masonry. Spotlights rake wide areas at night. Let us particularly describe one section, that in the wed- ding district of northern East | Berlin. There blocks of East Ger- man apartment buildings face west on a street dividing East and West Berlin. When resi- dents saw that East Berlin was to be fenced in, some of them escaped by jumping from second- and third-storey windows into mats held by West German firemen. Those apartment houses then were ordered evacuated. For blocks, the windows of every building were sealed with bricks and concrete. Some persons desperately leaped from seven storey roofs. There are wreaths and mark- ers where East Berliners crashed to their deaths on the sidewalks. Finally, barbed wire was strung on the roofs. Truly, Mr, Chairman, have to see it to believe it. We hope you will come and have a look. Sincerely yours, Paul Miller and Stone. Walker WILL PROBATED from an apartment | It is impossible to en- | between be- | you | The: Travellers, a Cana dian folk singing group, will return home late this week New Institute Seeks Information On Sea DARTMOUTH, N.S. (CP) Canada's first oceanographic in- | stitute swings into operation this lyear, collecting scientific infor- | mation about the sea The Bedford Institute of {Oceanography won't be offi 'cially opened until Oct. 25 but advance groups of surveyors and scientists began moving in jearly in July Built at a cost of $4,200,000 on ithe shore of Bedford Basin near here, the institute is under di 'rection of Dr. William N. Eng- jlish, connected with ocean re search since 1951. : Under Dr. English will be 1140 ocean ographers, hydro- igraphers, fisheries researc h scientists, underwater geologists jand engineers. The number will |be increased to 300 by 1965. Operating from __ specially jequipped ships, teams of. scien- |tists and surveyors will explore the continental shelves off the east coast and probe the sea bottom in the Arctic. They will look for untapped mineral resources buried in: bot- jtom silt, examine the chemical makeup of sea water to deter mine its effect on fish and plant life and chart hitherto vaguely 30 Cubs Take | Weekend Trip MAPLE GROVE -- Sorry we omitted last week to report that the accompanists for the anni- versary services were Mrs. Ed- gar Wright for the Enniskillen Quartet. and for Mrs, David Weldon of Oshawa and the Sun- day School, Mr. James Cryder- }man. Mr. and Mrs. E. R, Freeman St. Catharines, Mr. and Mrs Leslie Jackson, Bowmanville were last Thursday supper guests with Mr. and Mrs. H, G. Freeman Mr. and Mrs Lloyd Snowden, M Betty Lou, spent a few day's the first of this week jwith the former's son and wife jand family, Rev. and Mrs./ /Stanley Snowden at their cot- tage, Baptiste Lake. Mrs. L. C. Snowden, attended |\the decoration day services at {Zion on Sunday iby her sister Mrs. Sam Dewell, FOLK SINGING GROUP TOURS RUSSIA following a month - long con- | flowers cert tour of Russja. They are shown being presented with by -an_ unidentified audince member during a con- cert in Moscow. The singers, left to right: Jerry Gray, Si- mona Johnston, Jack Lander, Ray Woodley and Sid Dolgay. 'Snake Bounty Suggested | By Singer known currents and far-north-| Docking and maintenance fa- TORONTO (CP) Vernon ern shorelines. : jcilities are provided for an\singer, Liberal member of the The 1959 international Confer-|eventual fleet of 10 ships. The jegislature, has suggested a ence on Laws of the Sea decided| hydrographic ships Baffin, Max- government bounty on Massa- that mineral resources of con-\well and Kapuskasing are al-\sauga rattlesnakes similar to tinental shelves--the sea bed) ready at work in Eastern Cana-|the $25 bounty on wolves. out to where the water reaches\dian and northern waters and a|. Suggesting a payment of as 100 fathoms--belong to adjacent fourth, the Hudson, is being)high a: $50 a snake, the mem- countries. built at Saint John, N.B. ber for York South said the rat- This gave Canada, with al-| The research staff is being tlers "have been hurting the most 60,000 miles of coastline,|recruited now and will join the|tourist trade and are a menace an increase of one-seventh its|institute in the fall. Hydrograph-|to the community." total land area, a potentiallyjers and technical surveyors are' 10-year-old Michigan girl important region for mineralialready on the job died last week, a day after she research. The institute is operated by, "45 bitten by a Massasauga Dr. English says the charting|the marine sciences branch of rattler 12 miles northeast of of currents and density layers|the mines and technical sur- Penetanguishene asad cana in the ocean will aid in Can-\veys department. The branch i be pe ink ander iad ada's defence. A layer of water|was created April 1 to combine Ss re r _ : ae ; ne ar of different density or tempera-|previously separate ocean study at edad tig td sll ha bite ture than the water above or be-' divisions. tal Oe ot Ou tates low frequently disrupts sonar . 8 A second oceanographic insti-|and an office would have to be and underwater radar used t0/tyte is to be. built on the west set up to determine which detect submarines. "0; i . TG Ch Bares: One practical problem-- the coast in 196 snakes to pay for. oceanographers hope to solve is| whether Great Lakes freighters| can be operated in the Gulf of| St. Lawrence. It hasn't been determined whether these ships, designed for the short waves of the lakes, can withstand the! heavier and longer seas of the gulf. Dr. English says the forma- ,tion and dissipation of ice in the gulf will be studied along with lits effect on the weather. The institute would deal only jwith ocean research off the coast and in the Arctic at first but small deep - ocean probes would be carried out later. DESIGN EQUIPMENT Ninety per cent of the time ocean research doesn't pay. off} in immediate commercial prof- Dr. English says, but it's necessary to provide scientific} information for future exploita-) tion of undersea resources and} fisheries: Engineers he ADDED ! Most Challenging Story of Faith Ever Told! "SEA WIFE" IN COLOR with RICHARD BURTON JOAN COLLINS NOW PLAYING! 7 BING CROSBY JANE WYMAN "JUST FOR YOU" IN TECHNICOLOR WITH ETHEL MERMAN ap,' 20th tole ace Bs DAYNE XS) | MANSFIELD we 4 A i Will Success Spoil : Rock Hunter? were required to} design new and better, equip-| ment for oceanographic re-| search and theorists were needed to make sure informa- tion was put to good use. | The institute, with its 70,000) square feet of office and labor-| atory space, has machine shops to build equipment. designed by the engineers. accompanied) © |Hampton, and who was a din-| iner guest with Mrs. and Bob. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence White and Mr. Elwyn White are at their cottage at Twin Lakes. Miss Margaret Campbell, Cal- gary is spending a few holidays with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. lA. J. Campbell. Around 30 Cubs itheir leaders and jand family spent at Presquile Point Mr. and Mrs. Charles Green- ham and Miss Carol Greenham spent a few days this week with relatives in Michigan. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Burgess and family are spending their jholidays at the cottage on Twin Lake. with their wives the weekend TonneRab/ / In the tradition of "LADY VANISHES" "NIGHT TRAIN TO MUNICH "THE 3rd MAN" EVERYBODY and |; Snowden | = LAKE ROSSEAU | MUSKOKA, ONT, | A dreom vocation | on beautiful Loke Rosseau. Splendid meols ond | eccommedotion ot « | wide range of rates | --$56.00 weekly ond up. Write for folders. CANADA'S UNIQUE MANSION RESORT 1:00 3:10 5:20 7:30 DON GALLINGER, Monaging Director 9:45 former National Hockey League Player with "Boston Bruins" if Complete Co-operation With Trove! Agents | PANAY'SION An AAA, ATRO Recommended Resort Ne Releaned thee by Deluxe 2 UNITED OB ARTISTS DREAM PLAN Harum RAY DANTON "ADDED FEATURE THE "THE GEORGERAFT MIGHTY STORY" URSUS" IN_ COLOR 1926-36 CARS Telephone Teronte $44-2722 AIR CONDITIONED FOR COMFORT PHONE 723-2843 TUE., WED. ONLY ! BOX OFFICE OPENS AT 8:15 SHOW STARTS AT DUSK! " "FIVE FINGERS" ADMITTED FREE FREE AUGUSTA, Me. (AP)--Nor- man B. Woolworth left the bulk of his multi-million dollar estate} to his widow. Pauline, and three children. Woolworth's will, dis-| Ining for the different plantations|P95ins of an estate estimated al| There are a number of cot-/$13,364,704 before taxes, was} tages a miner ea Rage Ag filed in probate court Monday. { s g w. ae. 4 ' water landed on the road aby oO wale pl go sine sirag. mosh gothebebictines } Rider disqualified if |\drawing water from the well on family, Woolworth they stopped to take a drink. |the corner that never seems to died in New York June 19 at| (CP Wirephoto)-|go dry. the age of 60 jalong with Mrs. Mangan and 'Mrs. Goldberg. All available help are busy trimming Christmas trees these |hot days, There are nearly 100 {people leaving here every mor- OTEPHEN BOYD DOLORES HART Cink uaSeoPe nm Ry Oe LU ONE FOR THE ROAD LAST TIMES TODAY WALT DISNEY'S "BIG RED" IN TECHNICOLOR THORNTON RD. AT HIGHWAY 401 . . . PHONE 723-4972 CHILDREN under 12 FREE! ALWAYS 'A COLOR CARTOON winner of the Canadian 100 mile bicycling championship tried to grab a mouthful on | the fly but. most of the | An Italia club supporter dampens his favorite during a 100-mile bicycle race in To- onto. Rider Egidio Bolzon, cents store were