The temperature climbed into the 70s and that was enough to encourage these Carmelite nuns in Oklahoma City to get outdoors yester- day for baseball. That's Sister Paulette about to swing the bat. Sister Stephanie is the catcher. some SISTERS 'SWING' INTO SPRING The scene is the playground of the Villa Teresa Roman Catholic elementary school. --AP Wirephoto B-B Commission Scored | WorsT OF UX. For Interviewing MPs OTTAWA (CP) -- The royal commission on bilingualism and biculturalism came under oppo- sition fire again in the Com- mons today--this time for in- terviewing MPs about their po- litical careers and problems. _ First public word. of the "B-B" Parliament Hill survey) came when Nicholas Mandziuk (PC--Marquette) asked Prime Minister Pearson whether he was aware it was under way. Mr. Pearson said no, adding} that if the commission planned to question MPs he hoped there|from Ottawa and Carleton un |versities, armed with a long) Mr. Mandziuk said Jater out-jquestionnaire, to interview all! side the House that many MPs,|265 members eventually. would be no exceptions. TANK TALK but not- himself, have been questioned recently by the com- mission for one to two hours. Many of the questions were purely political and outside the commission's terms of refer-| ence, It was learned that the. re- search department of the royal] commission began about three weeks ago to de-| termine the "social and _politi- cal problems of MPs. its survey behavior" and language! The plan was to send students} i- WILL PLAY OFF LONDON (AP)--Two terri- ble soccer teams agreed to- day to play one another to de- termine the dubious honor of being the worst club in Brit- ain. The teams are Wimborne St. Giles in County Dorset and the Hillington tire and battery works at Poole, Dorset. Nearing the close of its mast depressing season, the Wimborne St. Giles boys chal- lenged any club in the country to match its horrible record. Wimborne has played 16 | games and lost 16. Its oppo- | nents have scored 151 goals | against Wimborne's 11. Pictures, Documents Sought For Regimenta By CAPT. IAN McNAB With the Ontario Regiment's} Centenary celebrations just year away, a concentrated ef- fort is being made to establish a Regimental Museum. Towards this end, Lt. Col. R. B. Smith has presented the Regiment with a nominal roll of the First Contingent which left Oshawa on August 20, 1914 for Valcartier Quebec. Col. Smith, who held the rank of. Captain at that time, was the Contingent's Com- manding Officer. Other officers on the list were Lt. C. G. Cowan, Cannington; | Lt. E. D. Wallace, Port Perry; Lt. Walter Proctor, Beaverton and Lt. Robert Wallace, Can-| nington. Our old friend Bill Cooper, a one-time familiar fig- ure around the old Post Office, was the senior NCO. Col. Smith has also presented a set of collar badges of the 6th Canadian Railway troops in which he served during the First) World War. The commanding of-| ficer of the Railway Troops was Col. A. Earchman who at one time was a Captain. with the On- tario Regiment. Col, Smith's| nominal roll and collar badges) will find their way into the Regimental Museum, In respect to the Museum, if anyone has any pictures or documents of value, from a regimental historical point of] view, it would be appreciated if} they could be contributed to the cause In fact any other memora- bilia of historic significance; would be appreciated. Major) Wm. Clarke, the Regimental! historian would like to hear! from anyone who has anything) to offer. He may be reached at 728-8321 on Monday or Thursday evenings after 8.00 p.m Monday, April 5 is slated as the date of the first meeting of The: Ontario Regiment Pistol Club to be held in the Men's Canteen. Membership, open to any member of the Regiment, is $5.00. The next scheduled stag party) in the Men's Canteen is April 23) when pictures of this weekend's Meaford shoot will be shown This party is reserved for mem bers of the Regiment only. Colonel Paynter will be the Inspecting Officer for the Ux- bridge High School Cadet Corps on April 12 and the Pickering High School. on May 21 The Military Ball scheduled) for May 7 is only six weeks) away. Tickets will 'be available} in each Mess on Monday, April ceive notification of their avail-| | lenge, 1 Museum ability. The Officers' Mess will hold a High Tea on Saturday, April 10.| The Mess Committee has prom-) ised good food with all the trimmings and good music for dancing. A call to Sgt, Davies) at 8-8321 will make sure that! your name is on the attendance ist, | All members of the Men's) Mess must pick up their messi cards this month. Cards may be} purchased in the canteen during regular hours for $2.00. Cpl. Jeffery, the President of the Men's Canteen has an- nounced that a very limited number of tickets are available) for the next canteen dance to be held on Saturday, April 17. There is to be a dinner served! and door prizes to be won. Answering Wimborne St. Giles, the Hillington club proudly pointed to its punk performance. Hillington has played 27 games and lost them all. Its opponents have scored 279 goals and Hillington but 57. Accepting Hillington's chal- chairman Jack Hib- berd of Wimborne said: "Their record is bad enough to make it a good game." When the two teams meet, at a date and place to be de- cided later, Hillington may have a slight edge in awful- ness, for it lost a game to British Oxygen of Southamp- | ton 25-0, Buying or Selling! GUIDE REALTY LTD. @ LLOYD CORSON, President © DICK YOUNG Vice-President? @ LUCAS PEACOCK Sec-Trees. 16 SIMCOE ST. $., OSHAWA PHONE 723-1121 GARDEN GUIDE THE OSHAWA TIMES, Serurder Aas 2, 1963 | 7 SS Blooming Time, Maturity Important Points To Note Natures does not permit much clashing 0 color but we can get more interesting and more beautiful blending if we halp by planning. SUPPORT Nothing is quite so forlorn and untidy as an otherwise beautiful garden, marred by unpainted stakes of various heights and broken and twisted foliage tied to them. But tall, tender stemmed flowers like delphinium, peonies and many of the bigger annuals are bound to be injured in high winds and rains, unless they are support- ed. The experienced gardeners, however, supplies this support before it is needed, sometimes using uniform painted stakes and sometimes more natural brush from tree prunings around which the flowers grow naturally and create their own support. | With perennials like peonies and delphiniums this support is put in place while the. plants are still less than a foot high. -- how big a zinnia or tomato|With the peony the surround- plant will be when fully. grown|ing stakes can be joined with} before we plan the bed or row|some plastic coated clothes line} in which to put it. If we don't!wire, which comes in variou we may find tiny things like/colors. This is taken right alyssim, portulaca and ver-|around the outside of the plant benas, completely hidden by|or bed at a height of about 12-18 giant marigolds or dahlias, orjinches with one or two strands lettuce crowded out by corn.|criss-crossing through the cen- And we may have a jungle onj|tre of the plant. With delphin- our hands instead of tidy and/iums the best procedure, where In planning a garden, a seed catalogue, and a good govern- nent bulletin or two, will be indispensable. Newspaper col- umnists who are usually hard up 'or something new to write about at this season, like to poke un at the seed catalogues. They ike to pretend that the pic- tures are exaggerated, but they know as any gardner with a year's experience will confirm, that the pictures never do justice to the real color of the flowers and, no photo, or even painting, can depict the freshness of peas or corn as they come right from the gar- den at the door. In the catalogue, there are two or three points which one should note and remember. These are heights of plants when full grown, colors, and time of blooming, if it is a flower garden we are planning, or with vegetables, maturity, which is just another way of saying "when ready to eat'. We should have a good idea of beautiful garden. ithe flowers are alloweed to Time of blooming and matur-|/8TOW naturally is to insert some ity are important points be-|bruch firmly in the ground right cause when we know these, then|¥p Close and allow the plant to we can plan to have something|grow through. always in bloom and a succes-| In a week or so this suppor sion of 'the freshest vegetables|and also that around the peon- coming along for the table. It\ies will be completely hidden by is also a good thing to know/foliage. whether a. certain flower or) If stakes are stained green or vegetable we would like to try|brown and are more or less i shardy enough for our particu-| uniform in height they too will lar corner of Canada, or whe-|become inconspicuous, and if ther it will like our kind of soil,jall support is placed before it or slope. It is well, too, to take|is really needed and the plants into consideration the color of|tied loosely, they will come ker's $15,000-a-year. government job hinges on whether there is or isn't an unwritten law pro- hibiting civil servants from cirt- icizing government policy. ior actuary with the federal in- surance department when he called a press conference March 1 at the Parliamentary Press Gallery and blasted the Canada Pension Plan as intru- sion of big government into pri- eral days later and then in- formed by letter that he was tions were disfiguring damage, of our enthusiasm for plants, out good money and poor, and we forget to give) - them support or the water that they should have almost daily until they get established. Is it any wonder that som~ of these the flowers we plan to grow.|through even a heavy wind or Determining Of CS Rights Will Settle Kroeker Fate OTTAWA (CP)--John Kroe-jmissal, Mr. Kroeker said it has never been made clear to him that public servants shouldn't make public statements on gov- ernment policy. NOT FORBIDDEN While senior officers in his department had cautioned him not to, he had never been for- bidden to speak out against the government plan. Patrick Fahey, Mr. Kroeker's lawyer, told the appeal board he has made an_ exhaustive study of the Civil Service Act and other government docu- ments. Nowhere has he found a reference to any law which says public servants. can't make public statements on any issues. If there is such a law, it would be contrary to the Bill of Rights which guarantees freedom of speech to all Cana- Mr. Kroeker, 33, was a sen- vate enterprise. He was placed on leave sev- being dismissed because his ac- incompatible with his job as a civil servant. Appearing before a Civil Serv- ice Commission board here/dians. Thursday to appeal | his dis-' Government counsel T. B. |Smith said it was hard to be- rain storm without serious and/lieve that a man es intelligent jas Mr. Kroeker isn't aware of \the unwritten law. It was the foundation of the Canadian system of government that governments-of-the-day as- sume responsibility for the acts of the permanent civii service. How could they do so if they jcould not rely on the discretion and loyalty of the public serv- ice? A board decision is expected within two weeks. GIVE 'Em CHANCE | It's really too bad that so} many of us seem to loose some shbrubs and trees after we have purchased them but before| we get them planted. We pay for roses, shrubbery, trees and vines, then plant them in holes that are too small, in soil that is too hard 'Wpeneeermsnriggty things fail to produce either nt JAMES | ma el O'MALLEY ! foliage, bloom or fruit that so} Construction Ltd. attracted us the first time we| 723-7122, saw them illustrated in cata-| jg @ Homes @ Additions 4 logues or magazines? There is| 1° Offices @ Remodeling no secret of planting or trans-| planting either trees or petun-| ce aiaaadaaiaiaall ias. They need moisture, good soil firmly pressed around the roots and if big, support to keep the wind from whipping them about and letting air in around their roots. | The Holmes family got rid of tepid showers, staggered bath days and cold water wash days when they installed the Cascade 40 electric water heater. You Wouldn't Have A House Without Doors... efficient, custom Canada's Finest . GO MODERN CALL A better way to keep warm is with clean, safe, - designed Electric Home Heat. @ SAFE @ CLEAN @ ECONOMICAL Mr. & Mrs. Woodrow Holmes of Winchester, Ontario, say this about the Cascade 40 superfast electric water heater: Cascade 40 is clean..No flue is needed so it can be located in any convenient place in your home. There is a ten year "We used to have problems with our old water heater. When I wanted to take a bath, the water just wasn't as hot as it should have been. Cascade 40 solved that problem. It's giving us great guarantee on the your home. You can too. "CASCADE 40 SOLVEDALL OUR HOT WATER PROBLEMS" I can do everything in one day." Have an approved Cascade 40 electric water heater installed in WHEN BUYING OR SELLING PROPERTY ... LOOK TO SCHOFIELD-AKER ®@ Residential © Commercial @ Industrial pnts, MORTGAGES HOURS Ist end 2nd, Arrenged 9 AM, til 9 P.M, end Purchased SAT. till 3 P.M. EASY , SAFE, PARKING et rear of 360 King St. EAST - END --A LITTLE CHARMER-- $12,500 --very modern 4 room bungalow, situated on very desirable landscaped lot 51 x 147. Ideal for young couple starting, or older couple desiring quiet, economical living. laisitlead CLOSE TO ST. HEDWIGS $12,700 --- 5 room brick bungalow with private drive, Lot size 41 x 110. Consists of living room, dining room, lovely kitchen and 2 bedrooms, Home has been, well maintained and is @ good buy on to-day's market. Gesicas ro Oe Oe EAST-END--$14,500.00 5. room brick bungalow on a hedged lot 45 x 136. 3 bedrooms; kitchen and living room. nstairs has been, used as on aparte ment at one time, would need some fixing, t could be quite desirable. Vendor anxious to sell becouse of illness. flameless, safe, tank. NORTH-EAST MOVE IN AND START LIVING Lovely 5 room bungalow with basement garage: | l clean, nicely decorated 3 bedroom home. You will 'eee we tae wood kitchen. Basement is divided into Recreation Room com- plete with bar, laundry room and extra bedroom er den, Sui NORTH * WEST Luxury Home at @ price you can afford. 8 room bungalow featur- ing 20' family room, living room with natural fireplace, separate dining room 10 x 12, laundy room off spacious kitchen, 3 bright bedrooms, basement garage. Lot size 52' x 145', Less than $5,000 down---call real soon or it will be gone. . satisfaction." "I do a big washing at least once a week ,With our old water heater I .never had enough hot water left on washdays to do the din- ner dishes. Now, with Cascade 40, The Cascade 40 turers. APPROVED heater is. an approved product de- veloped through the combined re- search and resources of Ontario Hydro and the electrical manufac- electric water your hydro FOLEY PLUMBING 319 COLLEGE AVENUE SERVICE MADE US DO IT NOW! List your home with us ond get TOP DOL- LAR. AT YOUR SERVICE Charles Chayter 723-2265 Reg Aker 725-0201 Bill MeFeeters 728-1726 Maible Boudreou 728-2233 Margaret Lee 723-2894 Neil Campbell 725--1015 Irene Brown 725-3867 Steve Mecko 728-5868 Marg. Hall 723-1358 Allen Thompson 728-2870 lewin Cruikshenks 728-5205 Bill Johnston 728-1066 We hove SPOT CASH_ ond Term Buyers. @FREE AP ED. DRUMM PRAISAL 725.9345 @NO OBLh . LIGATION and HEATING LID. 723-1191 @ DEPENDABLE -- call -- 728-4611 | | | METTE PLUMBING CO. LTD. "Over a Quarter Century of Service" SCHOFIELD-AKER LIMITED 360 KING WEST 723-2265 (See additional Listings Advertised Daily in Classified Section) 728-9491 50 PRINCE ST. -- OSHAWA | 23 CELINA ST. | : Sans Samat arama § and all mess members will re-|