TYRONE TURNER ELEVEN STUDENTS at the O'Neill Collegiate and Voca- tional. Institute obtained a first class honor average--75 percent--in the recent Grade 13 examinations. Seven of these students won Ontario scholarship valued at $400. Heward Gough, son of Mr. and Mrs. Larry Gough, 422 Simcoe street north, led all OCVI students with an aver- age of 93 percent and nine firsts. Carolyn Cooper, daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cooper, 103 Sutherland ave- nue, had an average of 88 percent and nine firsts. John Robertson, son of Mr. and ROSE MARIE KISS Mrs, John Robertson, 93 Hill- croft street, had an average of 84 percent and seven firsts. Robert Crothers,. son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Crothers, 311 Leslie street, had an aver- age of 84 percent and seven firsts. Mary Archer, niece of Mr, and Mrs. William Archer, 640 Carnegie avenue, had an average of 81 percent and six firsts. William Gordon, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Gor- don, 640 Hortop street, had an average of. 81 percent and sev- en firsts. Terrance Skelton, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Skelton, 290 Montrave avenue, had an average of 81 percent JOHN ROBERTSON NORMA ROWDEN and seven firsts. Lynda Thompson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Harvey Thompson, 619 Somerville avenue,...had | an average of 81 percent and seven firsts. Tyrone Turner, son of Mr. and Mrs. Garfield Turner, 713 Oshawa _ Boule- vard north, had an average of 79.5 percent and eight firsts. Rose Marie Kiss, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. John Kiss, 297 Seneca street, had an average of 75 percent and four firsts. Norma Row- den, daughtér of Mrs. Donald Rowden, 110 Hillcroft strect, had an average of 75 percent and five firsts. ROBERT CROTHERS LYNDA THOMPSON Brass Band Readies For Toronto Ex Whitby Brass Band is now in serious rehearsal for the Canadian National Ex- "hibition's Brass Band Con- test to be held on August 27. The band will be perform- ing in section two of the con- test against such opposition as Orillia, Silverthorne Le- gion Band, and Christ Church Reform Band, Chatham. Whitby are the present holders of their class trophy --the Boosey Hawkes Tro- phy. And they are out to make it two wins in a row. For most of this week and next week the band will be rehearsing down at the Cen- tennial Park Band Shell. The number they will perform at the contest will be "Three Songs Without Words" by Eric Ball. The Junior Band will, of course, be competing at the contest, They too are hoping for success. Roof Job Brings Pickets To 'Hill' OTTAWA (CP) -- Workers 3 'FRIVOLOUS' FACTORS Voters Moods Touchy In UK By CAROL KENNEDY | Prosperity may still be local- Status Issue For Secretary In. Manitoba WINNIPEG (CP) -- Maitland Steinkopf, Manitoba's provin- cial secretary, was served with ja writ Monday, three hours LONDON (CP) -- Could thejized in the industrial pockets/after the third session of the result of the British election this) fall be influenced by the| Fairlie predicts there are|vened, weather, a cricket match and a rather than widespread, but enough booming areas,to favor |27th Manitoba Legislature con- asking him to cause why he should sit as a couple of international crises?|a Tory win, and unemployment/member, It seemed almost frivolous at/has rarely been lower through-| This was revealed during the the time, but last spring when! Labor seemed certain to end 13 out the nation. Although both major opinion afternoon session by Premier Roblin as he spoke during sec- years of Tory rule in the fall) polis show a continuing trendjond reading of a bill, the intent contest, some pundits predicted|t9 the Tories, only one esti-|of which is to clarify Mr. Stein- the Conservatives could yet re-| mates that they might pull off a/kopf's position. turn to power if three things broke their way: --A hot summer to put the voters in contented holiday mood. --England winning the Test series against Australia. --Foreign crisis or two, far enough away not to alarm the! vacationers in their deck-| chairs, but sufficiently menac-| ing to make them feeling re-| lieved there was a Tory h on the levers of power. It is popularly believed the Tories) are more trusted in a crisis. Last week for the first time} an opinion poll estimated the Tories might win by 30 seats.|has not yet impressed himself Just coincidence? Could be, yet| consider how that early predic-) - tion has worked out: Britain has had its most) golden weather since the fa- mous "election summer' of 1959, when the Tories were re- turned with a 100-majority land- slide. | England won't regain the} "Ashes" and apparently has) only a slim chance of tying the Test series. The Viet Nam and Cyprus'tic four months ago when thuse| erises, though calmly received) by most Britons, were serious enough to bring Prime Minister) Sir Alex Douglas-Home hurry- ing back twice to Downing Street from Scottish holidays. FOREIGN POLICY A FACTOR marginal still shows Labor as a fortable leading contender. Furthermore, even the poll most favorable to the Tories shows nearly a quarter of the electors still undecided how they will vote. Also, August is traditionally com- victory. The other} The question of the cabinet |minister's eligibility came to \light last spring just before the jlegislature prorogued. It in- volved a possible infraction of the Legislative Assembly Act in |View of work Mr. Steinkopf did jas an unpaid agent of the gov- ernment in arranging the pur- the most non-political month in|Chase, of property. the calendar. Opinions tabbed| The and|now may simply be reflecting a lotus-eating holiday mood that will grow more critical of party platforms by October. It is generally felt,. however, that if Sir Alex Douglas-Home forcefully on the nation si October, he has at least pull act forbids any person |who executes a contract for the crown involving the expenditure of public money to hold a seat. The writ was issued after a notice of motion was filed in Court of Queen's Bench by Roy St, George Stubbs, a Winnipeg lawyer. It is scheduled to be The notice of motion seeks an injunction of mandatory court neel 2 he became prime minister ie Aug. 27. the Tories into the semblanc of a working team. Labor Leader Harold Wilson, it is noted, has faded considerably from the once-sharp impact he made as challenger. Some commentators now give the Tories nearly an even chance of a fourth victory, and this would have seemed fantas- pundits were recalling 1959 and speculation what another long, hot summer might pull out of the electoral bag. RESORT TO GRUMBLES harder to restrain Mr. Steinkopf from sitting or participating di- rectly or indirectly in the pro- céedings of the Manitoba Legis- lature. , An affidavit filed by Mr. Stubbs with the notice of motion claims Mr. Steinkopf is ineligi- ble to become an MLA because he was a government contrac- tor or agent. psele es | WREN RECALLS | Mrs. Thomas Wren, 563 Crom- well avenue, Oshawa, wants to inform her friends in the Osh- Political commentator Henry|(CP)--The Royal Navy is to|Mr. Wren has recovered from Fairlie, writing in The Sunday/suspend commando-type landing Telegraph, predicts the Tories|exercises at this Dorset resort will win on 'oreign policv--their because visitors complain the fainting spell suffered Saturday lafternoon. The couple was on the way to th bus station t show| carrying picket signs protested the laying of a new copper roof on Parliament's West Block Monday. | Pickets representing Local 47, Sheet Metal Workers Interna- tional Union (CLC), claimed the contractor, National Roofing and Waterproofing Limited, was using non-union labor. The work, which is continuing without interruption, is beng done by members of the Cana- dian Construction Workers Un- ion, an affiliate of the National Council of Canadian Labor. The Sheet Metal Workers Un- lion said it established the '"'in- formational picket line" to pro- test the work going to a body Ohe SECOND SECTION Os OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, AUGUST 18, 1964 ann Times PAGE THIRTEEN 35 *§ ees Stanley E. Lovell and Mrs. Margaret Shaw re- quested the meeting. Both said it had to be held so that "We taxpayers, he wdted to know just what Oshawa chil- dren were gaining from money spent on education. Mr. Drynan commented. "I am very much afraid this could be misrepresented as some- thing it is not." payer, and as a representative| #4 | RUBBER PRODUCED IN | only 60° seconds -- Mix two liquids in a pop bottle, shake | well and in one minute a mass | of synthetic rubber 15 times the volume of the bottie leaps forth -- that's the recipe for one of the fascinating se- quences in the 40-minute Gen- eral Motors of Canada sci- Treat Boy, 7, GM Previews For Injuries A seven-year-old Oshawa boy) was treated for a scraped elbow Monday evening after being struck by a car driven by Mark} F. Wilcox, 144 Annis street. Lyle McKeen, .159 Keewatin street, was treated by his doc- tor after the Grandview street accident. No further details are available. A three-car collision at the in- tersection of Church and Wil- liam street west Monday eve- ning, caused-a-total of $95 dam- age. The drivers were: Howard Snider, 151 Brock street east; George Reid, 66 Bond street west; and Edwin Sones, 118 Hazelwood street (RR 3, Osh- Mrs. Th May Run Mrs. Christine Thomas, for-| mer mayor of Oshawa, may run this year for the Board of Edu- cation. She said today: "I have not as yet decided what I am going to do. I will know for sure in'a \couple of months." Mr. and Mrs. Thomas return- ed in May from a six-months tour of Africa. Mrs. Thomas said: "We have spent the sum-) mer visiting friends and enjoy- ing ourselves. We have not had time to make definite decisions about our future." Mr. Thomas was defeated in the 1963 Provincial election by Albert V. Walker, PC. He had held the seat for the NDP party since 1949. CELEBRATING BIRTHDAYS Congratulations and best wishes to the following resi- dent of Oshawa and dis- trict who is celebrating his birthday today: Denise Ovenden, Bowmanville. RR 3, CARS HIT Gerald Smith of Oshawa and William Tummons of Peterbor- ough were drivers of veh'cles which collided Saturday near Dover's Hill in the Haliburton area, An estimated $800 damage inat recognized by the CLC, was caused in the accident. Our Foreign 407, Foreign | By DON HANRIGHT | OTTAWA (CP) -- Canadian' ldirect investment in industries jabroad reached an estimated |$2,619,000,000 at the end of 1961. | However, close to 40 per cent lof this foreign investment was made by Canadian corporations under the effective control of Americans and other non - resi- dents. The figures are included in the latest review of the Cana- dian international investment position, made by the bureau of, statistics. ' Not included in the tally of foreign investment abroad are two large blocks of Canadian |money: 1. Nearly $6,000,000,000 that Canadian banks and insurance companies must hold in other countries to cover their Mabili- ties there. 2. Another $3,000,000,000 ex- cluded because it has no real significance in the Canadian 'balance of payments. This |money includes, for example, |the foreign holdings of some Canadian corporations which are owned abroad and do all ' | LULWORTH COVE, England|awa Horticultural Society thatltheir business abroad. a INVESTMENT JUMPED |. Between 1954 and 1961, foreign direct investment the rose Investment Controlled cent of the investment was in the United States, or approxi- 000 000 to $288,000,000, while direct Canadian outlays in industries excluding the U.S.--rose from $132,000,000 to $329,000,000. Canadian direct investment in mon Market at the end of 1961 totalled $60,000,000. This in- cluded about $28,000,000 in France, $16,000,000 in West Ger- many, $12,000,000 in Italy, $2,- 00,000 in Belgium and Luxem- bourg and about $2,000,000 in The Netherlands. This investment increased during 1961 by about $15,000,- many rose by some $6,000,000 while that in France and Italy up about $4,000,000 each. Of the $1,000,000,000 increase in foreign investments since the end of 1954, Canadian - con- trolled companies and Canadian individuals have put up about $400,000,000 and the rest has come largely from American .|controlled corporations in Can- ada Foreign control of Canadian hand strengthened by the psy-)beach has turned into a mock/join a tour of Society members|by $1,000,000,000 to. $2,619,000,-\direct investment abroad rose chological effect of the two re- cent crises--and on prosperity. « | battlefield at the height of the holiday season. headed for a Toronto 'outing when the attack occurred. | 000. Of this total, about 67 per from 27 per cent at the end of 1054 to @ per cent in 1961, Investment in Britain rose in the same period from $119,000,- in the rest of the Americas--| @ the six-nation European Com-| | 000. Investment in West Ger-| The manufacturing of synthe- tic rubber in just 60 seconds will be featured in Previews of Progress; the world-famous sci- ence show sponsored by General Motors of Canada which will appear at the Oshawa Fair August 20, 21 and 22, And to make the feat even more amazing, the demonstra- tor will use just two bottles, a bottle opener and-a--cork!--This experiment is just one of the lonstrated and explained in the 40-minute Previews stage show. In the manufacturing of syn- thetic rubber by the fastest process of its kind known to science, the lecturer merely pours the contents of the small bottle, a catalyst which is basi- cally a sodium compound, into the pop bottle, which contains a mixture of carbon and hydro- gen atoms. He then corks the pop bottle carefully and shakes the mixture. After the pop bottle is shaken for approximately one minute, the cork flies out with a loud |many scientific principles dem-} To Be Seen "pop" and a dirigible -.shaped blob of rubber -- 12 to 15 times the volume of the bottle con- taining it -- literally jumps out of the bottle. | This novel experiment ih or- }ganic chemistry, which illus- by scientists to find new ways to make things, has been seen by thousands of people in Can- ada,_It-is just -one--of many sequences which make up the 40-minute stage show. Previews of Progress, which is presented by a two-man team, tells the story of industrial pro- gress in a free economy. The presentation is non-commercial and is narrated in non-technical language. Admission is free to all those attending the Oshawa Fair. Designed to stimulate inter- est in science and engineering-- two fields in which there is an acute shortage of trained tech- nicians -- Previews has been acclaimed by educators 'and civic and fraternal organiza- tions. Registration Under Way Registration for the fall and winter seasons at the Simcoe Hall Boys' Club (Eastview) has started and' forms may be ob- tained from the club, at the cor- ner of Eulalie avenue and Cen- tral Park boulevard south. Membership in the club is open to all girls and boys up to and including 17. The fully- rounded program will com- mence Sept. 8. The 1964-65 memberships are now available and those wishing to join the club may do-so by completing the registration form and returning it to the club along with the fee of $1 between the hours of 2 - 4 p.m, and 7 - 9 p.m. commencing Monday, Aug. |24. Volunteers will be on hand to register the children for the 1964-65 season, and will be under the direction of Mrs. C. C. Me- Gibbon. This year children will be able to participate in recrea- tional swimming periods which wll be held on Fridays after school and evenings, Saturday mornings, and on Saturday afternoons. To participate in these sessions the children will be required to hold a swimming pool pass, which is also obtain- able at the club. Application forms for swim- {ming instruction for both chil- dren and adults are also now available, and registration for |these groups also commence on | Aug. 24. 7) Hurls No-Hitter For North-West Pitcher Jeff Stapleton tossed a perfect game. as North-West trounced South-East 26-0 in an Oshawa Legion Tyke League baseball playoff game here 'at Alexandra Park last night. Victory gave the winners a 1-0 lead in the best 2-out-of-3 semi- final series. Second game is slated for Eastview Park tomor- row night at 6.15 o'clock. Stapleton fanned 15 batters in his no-hit effort and also had one of North-West's 15 hits. Peter Murdoch had a perfect night at the plate for the win- ners with two walks and two homers. Jim Miller had two hits, including a home run. South-East made 'ten errors, while the winners had only two miscues. Drunk Charge To Be Heard A charge of being drunk in charge of an auto against John Marchin, 12 Lindsay avenue, Toronto, was adjourned until Sept. 18 in Oshawa Magistrate's Court Monday. The same charge against Rob- ert R. Black, 241 Mary street, will be heard Aug. 24, Charges of being drunk in charge of ah auto and driving while his licence was under sus- pension against James French, 422 Nevis street, will be heard ence show, Previews of Prog- gress which will be on dis- play at the Oshawa Fair. The admission-free stage show demonstrates the wonders of science in non-technical t2rms before thousands of Canadian student and adults each year. |trates the continuing research) | OPEN FAIR Ald. Cecil Bint and Mr. R. Francis, Warden of Ontario County will officially open the Oshawa Fair on Thursday, August 20. The official open- ing ceremonies will take place in Alexandra Park at 8.00 p.m. The Fair itself will begin at 5.00 p.m. and the exhibit build- ings' will be, open at 6.00 p.m. Driver Gets Seven Days Alfred J. Breeden's problem was that after eating a salmon sandwich he thought he was in Kinsale, just west of Brocklin. When in fact he was asleep in his car on Simcoe street north with the law trying to awaken The 55-year-old RR 1, Brooklin man was jailed for seven days in Oshawa Magistrate's Court Monday after being convicted for being drunk in charge of his auto. Crown Attorney Bruce Affleck said that Aug. 15 Gerald Stir- ling, Quebec street, stopped Breeden's car and took his keys away because "he was plainly drunk"', When Stirling went back to the scene with a police officer Breeden was asleep on the auto's front seat and the pair' had difficulty awakening him. "He said he thought he was in Kinsale," Mr, Affleck said, "TJ was more sick than any- thing else," - testified Breeden. 'Tt had eaten a salmon sand- wich and it didn't agree with "an "The court can't have too much faith in the sandwich," commented Magistrate H. W. Aug, 31, Jermyn. Collie, 3, Re-united -- With Owner It was a dog's life for a three- year-old collie named Laddie Monday as he sat tied to a bench outside Oshawa Magis- trate's Court. Mainly because his last owner, William Fillion, 199 Ritson road south, a father of eight, was inside court, charged with stealing him, then re-naming him, Lassie. But an hour later Fillion was acquitted of the charge and Laddie was re-united with Mrs. Helen Harvey, 134 Bloor street east, the complainant. Both Fillion and Mrs. Harvey testified before Magistrate H. W. Jermyn that the dog re- sponded with warmth and affec- tion when called either Lassie or Laddie. Mrs. Harvey testified that after locking the dog inside a porch the next day, July 30, she found the door lock broken and the dog gone. Following a fe wwecks of an- guished advertising, Mrs. Har- vey said she received a phone call which led to her son, Joseph, 16, going down to Fil- lion's home. Joseph told her, Mrs. Harvey continued, that Fillion's dog was Laddie--now renamed Las- sie--and Fillion refused to hand over the mutt. "When I went down there he = | (Laddie-Lassie) jumped all over me , . . but he was oh so thin," Mrs. Harvey testified. Dog Control Officer Matt |Muller said that July 16 Fillion bought a dog licence "'but it was for another collie, very similar, but with longer hair and a different-colored coat." During a visit to Fillion's home Aug. 10, "I saw another dog there. The first one growled at me... this one didn't," Mr. Muller said. Mrs. William Haight, a neigh- bor of Fillion's, said the accused had a collie "but it went away for a while and came back either July 28 or 29 and I had it taken to Mr, Fillion's." told the magistrate that he 'examined the dog care- fully when it reappeared at his home and he noted it had an injury to its left ear, "the same as mine. "T never really doubted it was my dog until Mrs. Harvey showed up, thex I started to have my doubts." John Greer, counsel for Fil- lion, said his client was "willing to give the dog back to. her." In dismissing the charge Mag- istrate Jermyn "He has been very honest with the court and I certainly don't think there was any intent to steal." May Attempt Lake Swim Oshawa's marathon swimmer "Bob" Branch did not qualify for the CNE swim because of illness, but his coach, George Mudd, stated he may attempt the Lake Ontario crossing dur- ing the first week of September. Mr. Mudd stated, "Bob has been swimming daily. He is in top physical condition and there is no reason why he can not make the Lake. Bob is down to 215 pounds." Bob will be training for the next few months in preparation for next year's swims such as Lake St. John, Atlantic City, the CNE and others, mately $1,747,000,000. This is an| *~ increase since 1954 of $516,000,- : Members~of the 1964 Ontar- io Regiment Student Militia carry out elementary Armor ed Training on tanks at the regiment's training facilities STUDENT MILITIA IN at the Oshawa Airport. The regiment is now. back to a full Armored Corps training program. The students above are all graduates of the five- TRAINING AT AIR A R week course recently com- pleted. They will now become members of "'C" Squadron of the Ontario Regiment. The eS RT students studied 'Elementary Tank Driving, Gunnery and Radio Communications. --Oshawa Times Photo