Needy Kiddies Enjoy Wonderful Holiday At Oshawa Army Cadet Enjoying Camp. Life In Canadian Rockies National Cadet Camp, Banff -- As a reward for all around effi- ciency in his army cadet training, Capt. J. D. Cross, of 50 Andrew St., Oshawa, Ont., is having the time of his life at the National Cadet Camp in the heart of thé Canadian Rockies. As a representative from 11th Army (Ontario Regt.) Cadet Corps, he is one of 150 boys from many parts of the Dominion now shar- ing the thrills of a "tourist holiday" camp being held by cadet authori- ties from July 22 to August 12. Training at the special camp is about 60 per cent "recreational" with the remainder adjusted to fit the scenic surroundings. Things like map-reading, first-aid, signal- ling, and even drill, as well as other military activities take on another flavor when carried out amid forests and mountains. During the course of their stay at the model tented camp at the foot of towering Cascade Moun- tain every cadet will visit such places as Lake Louise, Moraine Lake in the Valley of Ten Peaks, Johnson's Canyon, Yoho Valley, Norquay Mountain chair-lift, and Lake Minnewanka. Swimming in the Cave and Basin and Upper Hot Springs, visits to Banff Springs Hotel, boating, fishing and moun- tain climbing are listed in the special attractions. As in past years companies of cadets will move out into a bivouac camp for several days where bush- craft, fishing, and outdoor life will be taught by game wardens of the park staff. Father, Son Listed Among Crash Victims Buffalo, N. ¥. (CP)-- Three per- sons -- two of them from Inger- soll, Ont. -- were injured Saturday when a four-passenger plane crash ed in a field in suburban Cheekto- waga. . Hospital attendants listed the in- jured as: Stanley MacMillan Sr., 45, In- gersoll, who suffered lacerations and a possible head injury. His condition was reported to be fair. Stanley MacMillan, Jr., 23, also of Ingersoll, suffered lacerations. He was treated and then released from hospital. Arnold Collier, 40, of Buffalo, suffered possible fractures and in- ternal injuries. Collier, owner and ilot of the aircraft, was said to e in fair condition. Army Fires Commander Of Arsenal Washington (CP) -- The army Sunday relieved Brig. Gen. David J. Crawford from his command of the Detroit Tank Arsenal and re- primanded him for accepting fa- vors from contracting companies and using government material for personal purposes. An announcement said that Army Becretary Frank Pace had taken the action after a report from the army inspector general showed Crawford had "violated army re- gulations and had not met the high standards required of an army officer." Crawford will be replaced in the Detroit arsenal command by Brig. Gen: Carroll H. Dietrich. Racial Hate Pamphlets By Air Mail Detroit (AP) -- A small private plane, disregarding zooming fight- ers that sought to trace it, strewed race hate handbills over an area | near Detroit's tank arsenal yester- | day. The plane and its pilot were sought today by state police. The federal Bureau of Investigation al- s0 was investigating the case. But just what action could be taken against the pilot or distri- butor, aside from distributing hand bills from the air without a per- mit, was not clear. The plane made two flights over the arsenal area, on the northeast section of Detroit. Each time, it dropped approximately 1000 of the handbills. The leaflets, mimeographed on typewriter -sized paper of a poor grade, appeared anti -semitic in tone. One showed a bearded -man b a long black coat kicking ncle Sam off a cliff. After the first flight, police called air force officials at nearby Selfridge field. Three training planes, one an F-51 Mustang, were sent to observe. As the small plane made its se- cond flight above five hours later, they swooped past it, seeking to note its licence number. The slow- er craft ignored the passes, and since a number of planes were in the area, the army pilots lost track of it. Want to buy, sell or trade? -- A classified ad and the deal is made. SWEET BLOSSOM HONEY COMB & EXTRACTED No. 1 White SPECIAL QUALITY 'H.F. Anderson 272 Ritson Rd. North DIAL 5-3094 Parade Hails Liberation Of Negroes Windsor (CP) -- Thousands of people lined the length of Quellette avenue Sunday to see one of Can- ada's most colourful parades. Negroes and white persons marched the length of the street as the parade marched in celebration of the emancipation of the Negro. The were 17 bands of all sorts, along with crack drill teams, scores of drum majorettes, boy scouts, and brilliantly uniformed lodge groups tramped the two miles to Jackson park. Sarnia made a major contribu- tion with several bands, and with them marched other groups from Ann Arbor, Flint, Dearborn, and Pontiac, Mich. Most elements of the parade came from Detroit, dressed in brilliant satins and velvets, some of them in the gaudy costumes of lodge dress. 22 Hour Day Not Enough To Hold Line Hong Kong (AP) -- ..' poor Yuan Kai-li, the model Shanghai steel worker inside Communist China, This is how he "deviated," how he "'got alienated from the masses' --and how his work fell irom grade "A" to *"C." The story is from the Shanghai Liberation Daily, party mouthpiece just received here. Yuan was a good technician. He | was credited with helping bring production by May, 1950, to double its previous total. The Communist party glorified Yuan. It sent him to the national congress of model workers and combat heroes in Peining. With the ideas he got there; he needled production up some more. Then he became a member of his trade union's executive com- mittee, production committee, the management committee's propa- ganda officer for the party and vice - director of the committee for elimination of counter - revol- untionaries. All this was inside the factory. Outside, he became the worker's representative at the people's con- ference the representative to a new municipal centre committee, the vice - chairman of the consulta- tive council of the new municipal centre and the prople's representa- tive of his residential district. He attended an average of 12 meetings a week. These required three to 10 hours each. In addi- tion he did his 12hour night shift. Last winter he complained that his extra-curricular duties were taking up "all my own time and one - third of my factory time." Yuan finally reached such a point of exhaustion that the party cadre at the mill had to give him "five glucose injections per month to keep me going." Last December his work fell to "C." At last report, Yuan was in un- certain health, full of glucose, half asleep but still on his feet and carrying on a 22 - hour schedule. Pakistan Asks For Mediation In Kashmir Row Wellington, N. Z. (AP) -- Nias Niak, a secretary at the Pakistan legation, said tonight P kiston has asked Australia and New Zealand to mediate the dispute with India over Kashmir, He said Australian Prime Min- ister Robert G. Menzies offered to mediate July 18 and Pakistan ac- cepted the offer but India refused. | grade CHRASTIAN SCIENCE CHURCH "Truth" was the subject of the Lesson Sermon which was read in the First Church of Christ, Scientist, 64 Colborne St. E., on Sunday. The Golden Text was "We have a strong city; salvation will God appoint for walls and bul- warks, Open ye the gates, that the righteous nation that keepeth the truth may enter in." (Isaiah 26: 12). Selections from the Bible in- cluded the following from Isaiah 25:1, "O Lord thou art my God; I will exalt thee, I will praise thy name; for thou hast done .wonder- ful things; thy counsels of old are 'Employment yEmplyoment Service, OSHAWA Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETT WHITBY VOL. 10--No. 177 OSHAWA-WHITBY, MONDOY, JULY 30, 1951 PAGE THREE Holidays Cut Crowds At Lakeview The great exodus from Oshawa due to the beginning of plant holi- days on Saturday showed its effect on lakeshore activities. = Where normally there would be from one to a half-dozen large groups en- joying the beautiful sunshine and breezes in picnic activities at Lake- view Park, on Saturday there were merely a few score people in small groups scattered over the far-flung tree-shaded lawns. Children laughed and shouted, as they always do, on the swings and roundabouts, A young Air Force couple on holiday, both in uniform, took to the air with the same aban- don as the youngest swingsters. swerved over blue waters in a more than casual manner. Perhaps their mild excitement was occasioned by sight of a creamy-hulled sailing yacht gliding in to a fair landing in Oshawa harbor. As the trim 66-foot, Diesel- powered craft slid up to the mole, we grabbed the bow line thrown ashore, whipped our own special brand of bowline on to it, and help- ed make fast to the bollards. One of the passengers, an amiable sort, told us that "South Wind" of Niagara had been designed and partly built by her skipper, John Conroy, well known in the Border Cities, He had brought the two- master form St. Catharines on Sat- urday, with three crew-guests on board, and was hoping to take her on to the Bay of Quinte yesterday. Supercargo was Bing, an alert- looking golden retriever, said to be a good sailor, who bounded ashore, making friends quickly and loped Bong the dock to stretch his canine egs. 'South Wind's" arrival in port "made the day" for lakeshore loll- ers, us included. Picture Is Better Here According to Oshawa's employ- ment figures,there is now almost complete equality between the sexes --at least in unemployment. On Fri- day there were 672 unplaced men and 671 unplaced female appli- cants, "The over-all picture is just as good, or possibly even better than the similar figures for last year, owing to population increase," said Norman Hodgson, acting manager of the local office of the National this marn- ing. He estimated that about 25 per cent of the unplaced men were those affected by the recent loy- offs at the foundries. At last week- end there were 125 unfilled vacan- cies for males and 11 for females. Mr, Hodgson pointed out that with plants on vacation labor re- quirements for the next two weeks were extremely low. A Immediately vacations ended the situation would change. In July last year there were 465 unplaced men and 680 unplaced fe- males with 251 and 39 vacancies re- spectively. Allowance For Margaret On Birthday London (Reuters) -- Princess Margaret, the girl whe likes to have her own way, will get her independence and $18,000 yearly income from the government next month when she turns 21. On her birthday, Aug. 21, the King's younger daughter will be- gin receiving the sum voted to her by the government plus a legacy of $60,000 left several years ago by Mrs. Ronnie Greenville, society hostess and friend of the royal family, who died in 1942, The Princess plans to celebrate her birthday at Balmoral Castle, Scotland. She was born there, and the Scots have always considered her one of their own. Up till now, the vivacious young Princess has had an allowance from her father. Alexander Elected Head West Ad Men Banff, Alta. (CP)--H. L. Alek- ander, advertising manager of the Victoria Daily Colonist and Victori Daily Times, Saturday was elected president of the Western Daily Newspaper Advertising Managers Association at the annual conven- | tion here. He succeeds Hugh Ma- | hon, advertising manager of the | Lethbridge Herald. : The new executive will include: Vice-president, Len Roper, * Cal- gary Herald; secretary-treasurer, John Toogood, Vancouver Sun. St. Clair McCabe, general man- ager of the Thomson Dailies and president of the Eastern Daily Newspaper Advertising Man~gels faithfulness and thruth." Association, was chairman of the | Judging committee. Even the white gulls dipped and |, Happy Holiday Centre for Many Children A centre of great activity during the months of July and August Rotary Cottage, 'west of Lakeview Park on the lakeshore, is the medium for providing a healthful holiday for the children who are "he wards of the Children's Aid Society of Oshawa and Ontario County. Under the direction of a capable house mother, the children gain additional health. Oshawa Rotary Club, $4. The was pletely renovated and repainted this spring by the ~Times-Gazette Staff Photo. CRA Shell Ballets August Attraction The holiday month of August will] see two of CRA's now familiar bal- let-fantasy presentations at the Mc- Laughlin Bandshell, and those many people who seek relief from the heat and humidity of the hottest month of the year in the pleasant sur- roundings of Memorial Park can look forward to youngsters from the Oshawa playgrounds displaying their undoubted talent in music, dance and mime. Next Friday, August 3, Norma Vincent, well-known as a director of the Children's Theatre of the Air, will present a ballet version of the familiar fairy story "Hansel and Gretel", while probably on Au- gust 29 (the original date of August 17 has been changed to avoid a clash with the Oshawa Fair) an- other director of the Children's Theatre of the Air and of the Osh- awa Little Theatre, Sarah Quin, will present something new in a ballet version of Robert Browning's verse-story for children, "The Pied Piper of Hamelin." Both these presentations will of course be produced by CRA Super- visor of Arts, Joan Lambert, and she will also have a hand in the presentation of the third "Neigh- borhood Varieties" on August 24. To enable advantage to be taken of ths delicate lighting effects at the McLaughlin Bandshell, curtain time for Friday night's show has been set at 9 p.m, when against a background of forest and sugar- candy house, Ann Hoffman and Sherry Rabhme in the lead roles of Hansel and Gretel will lead a cast of some 30-odd Oshawa youngsters in the intricate ballet routines which will tell the familiar fairy story. In the cast are Arlene McCristall, Dallas Kunkel, Beth Travell, Gail Pearce, Joan-Ann Weeks, Eleanor Parkhill, Diane Mowbray, Jean Martin, Judy Brittain, Carolyn Pas- coe, Ruth Jackson, Carol Virgin, Linda Fursey, Frances Zayette, Harold Huntley, Bern Godfrey, Con- nie Littman, Carol Gibbs, Kather- ine Gibbens, Linda Bellingham, Mary-Ann - Zeddic, Carol Zeddic, Betty Baxter, Diane Haas, Jeanette Dryew, Betty-Ann Allman, Sharon Williams, Patsy-Lynn Campbell, Virginia McGarry, Mary La Rush, Ann La Rush, Lorraine Norsworthy, Marilyn Norsworthy, Joanne Bell, Maureen Low, Evelyn Lodge and Tony Liskowski. As the "Hansel and Gretel" cast get down this week to final re- hearsals for their big night, Friday, preliminary rehearsals will be be- ginning for the "Pied Piper of Hamelin", and youngsters who want to take part are asked to contact Joan Lambert at CRA at any time. 4 Wild West Is Big Thrill At Harmony The Wild West came to Oshawa | Thursday and some scores of Har- mony youngsters got a big thrill as young cowboys and Indians lassooed steers (boy on bicycle riding round baseball diamond) hitched mounts to basketball standard, used water guns to deadly effect in putting out rows of lighted candles and en- gaged in Indian dances. Even the prizes donated by Har- mony Neighborhood Association had a Wild West flavor with Indian hats, guns and sheriff's badges go- ing to the winners. Judges were Mrs. Readman and Miss Marilyn Black and priass went as follows: -- Lassooing Contest: Wilfred Walk- house and Jack Hoskin. Best Cowboy: Jerry Challice. Best Indian: David McGill Pony Express. Jack Hoskin, Gar- ry Hoskin, Bob Reynolds. Girls' Races: Mary Lambert, Mar- ilyn Brockman, Susie Brockman. Local Pipers Win Award At Buffalo The Caverfeidh Pipe Band of Scarborough, Ontario, of which Hugh McInnis of Oshawa is pipe- major, and which includes four Oshawa pipers in its ranks, won the highest honors at the Buffalo Gordon Highland Games at Ken- more Stadium on Saturday. Competing in the "B" class, this band won first place, which made it eligible to compete also in the "A" class, the major competition of the day. It also won first place in this class, beating the Argyle and Sutherland Highlanders band of Hamilton, which placed second and the 48th Highlanders Band of Toronto, which was third. Oshawa members of the band are Pipe-Major Hugh McInnis, Guy Wilson, Earl Jackson, Neil McRae and George Bell. Fill Out Pensions Applications Pets Shown At N. Oshawa Playground Kittens dressed up for the occa- sion and riding contentedly in deco- rated doll carriages, colorful chick- ens, turtles, pedigree dogs and just some youngsters' beloved mutts were the centre of admiring in- terest at North Oshawa playground Tuesday, when the youngster of the playground staged a Pet Show. Organized by CRA Supervisor Doris Kapelluch with the help of the lgdies from No: Oshawa, the show was a big success: even the long suffering pets seemed to en- joy it as much as their youthful owners. Winners were: Smallest pet--Bob Brown's turtle, Largest pet--John Fice's dog. Longest ears -- Ron Tomlinson's rabbits, Shortest tail -- Bert Alexander's dog. Short ears--Stan Moffat's chick- ens. Longest tail -- Bonnie Garron's dog. Youngest pets -- Two-month-old kittens owned by Bob Tomlinson. Most unusual and colorful pets-- Stan Moffatt's chickens. Longest fur--Roy Knights' grey Persian. Oldest pet--Ron Robertson's 14- year-old dog. Curliest fur--Lloyd Lee's dog. Cutest dog--Bonnie Garron. Cutest cat--Sylvia Rundle. Fattest dog--Ron Robertson. Fattest cat--Ron Roberson. . Whitest fur -- Rob Tomlinson's cat. Most colorful eyes--Stan Moffat's chicken, Funniest pet--Bob Brown's turtle. Most whiskers--Ron Tomlinson's rabbits. Blackest cat -- Carolin McCor- mick. Best name -- Sylvia Rundle's "Buttercup." Best dressed pets Rundle's kittens. Lightning Hits House Memory Gone Sarnia (CP)-- The memory of a 55 - year - old Camlachie township woman today remains a blackout regarding a bolt of lightning that struck her farm home near here Friday. The bolt left her eight hours in a semi-conscious state. Mrs. Malcolm suffered no ap- parent injury from the blaze, al- though it scorched the walls of the kitchen where she was working. Her 12-year-old daughter Carol said she saw the kitchen light up with a ball of flame when the bolt struck. A doctor ordered Mrs. MacFar- lane to bed for 10 days. She suf- fered extreme shock, he said. One Accident Mars Weekend With 10 of its major plants and industries out on holiday Oshawa started taking on the appearance of a "ghost city" over the weekend. Ambulancemen had one of their quietest weekends of the summer with only one accident yesterday. Paint shops reported good sales as many workers decided to take advantage of the vacation and good weather to paint their homes. Statistics from the local office of the National Employment Service showed that 10 leading plants -- in- cluding General Motors -- are on vacation and that many shops and stores are also closing for a Week or more. Sylvia | * One of the first of Oshawa's old folks to fill in an application form for | Suffers Thrombosis the new Government old age pensions scheme was Donald Ma:hias Foote, of 10 Bimcoe Street. A familiar figure around town, erect and 'While In Boat pink-faced "Dan" is aged 81 year.. Watching him fill in the long yellow | form is Miss Elsie Stevens who was celebrating her 67th birthday on | Saturday when the picture was taken, For 58 years a resident of Osh- awa, she lives at 190 Celina Street. Not eligible for the current pensions scheme she hopes to receive a pension when the 1ext group -- from 65 to 69 -- are being considered. Dan Foote caustically commented "I hope to live long enough to see the benefits of this." In receipt of a small pension from the railroad company for which he worked for 47 years, he was formerly not eligible for an old age pension. His wife died last year. "I first came to Oshawa 52 years beautiful soot hole you have ever seen," said Dan. "Actually I could still work for the railways if they let me. All I was doing was seeing that other people worked. Guess that's why I had to retire." In company with all the other | folks in town over 70 years of age, | Dan will probably be collecting his first pension of $40 a month next iago and then it was the most | January. Peterhorough -- Francis Everett Peck, 56, of Highland Creek, died of coronary thrombosis while boat- ing in the Lake Scugog district Sunday afternoon. Provincial po- lice detachment at Lindsay investi- gated. Mr. Peck was notified missing from his boat at around 1 p.m. Later, Albert James, Cannon Rd. Humber Bay, and George Malloy, Gulfview Ave., Toronto, found the body floating in the lake. Mr. Peck was visiting the dis- trict with other members of his family,+ Lakeview Rotary Cottage Is Being Operated By Children's Aid weeks' holiday. PY A tiny dog and a new-found "Mom" greet children wh» | | are the unfortunate victims of broken homes when they a: rive at the "Rotary Cottage" in Lakeview Park to spend tw. Oil Terminal Is Planned For Port Hope Port Hope.--This lakeshore town figures in plans recently completed for a petroleum pipeline connect and Hamilton, Three companies -- British Amer- ican, Shell and MecColl-Frontenac --are participating in the venture. The main 10-inch pipeline, 400 miles long, will have terminals at Cornwall, Prescott, Brockville, Kingston, Belleville, Port Hope, To- ronto, Clarkson and Hamilton.. Having a designed initial capa- acity of 40,000 barrels daily, the line will transport finished products from the three firms' refineries at Montreal. Construction is expected to start soon, but depends on the availability of steel. Most of the crude oil purchased to feed the Montreal refineries goes to Montreal by pipeline from Port- land, Me, where ocean tankers un- load. Crown Lists Nasty Words For the Court Cobourg -- Robert and Kenneth Hill, Oshawa, brothers, were found not guilty Friday by Magistrate R. B. Baxter on a charge of contribut- ing to the delinquency of a 10- year-old Toronto girl. However both pleaded guilty to being drunk and each was fined $10 and costs and Robert Hill was fined $10 and costs for having liquor in an illegal place. The case was heard with the public excluded. The two accused, with a Toronto woman and her child, drove from Toronto on June 30 with the in- tention of going to visit the ac- cused's relatives in Brighton. They got as far a Welcome where, as the result of the complaint of a service station proprietor, police picked the passengers up and took them to the county jail at Cobourg where Robert and Ken Hill were locked up. The taxi driver testified that he didn't know there was any liquor in the car until the three adults started to press him to have a drink. He refused but the woman and the Hill brothers passed the bottle around among themselves and proceeded to become noisy and profane. They interfered with his driving and he pulled up at a ser- vice station at Welcome where, he said, the two accused got out and started to fight. Later provincial police came and took the mother and child and the two men to Cobourg. LIST OF PROFANE WORDS Provincial Constable H. Wool- dridge and Frank Clough of Co- bourg testified that the language of the Hills in the police cruiser was highly profane and that some force had to be used to get them into the county jail. Crown Attor- ney Harry Deyman filed a list of the profane words in order that it would not be necessary to utter them in court. The accused admitted being un- der the influence of liquor and said they could not recall using the language related by the police or the taxi driver. Magistrate Baxter in dismissing the charge said that the drinking and swearing in the presence of the child came very close to meet- ing with the degree of guilt neces- sary for a conviction, and while it was not as willful as it might have been under other circumstances, |the accused had been careless of the effect their actions and pro- fanity might have on the child. Sunday Sport Out At Wasaga Beach Wasaga Beach, Ont. (CP) There will be no Sunday sport at this Georgian Bay summer resort. Citizens of Sunnidale township -- which includes this village -- Sa- turday voted 656 to 72 against it. --y ing Montreal with Ottawa, Toronto | "If it was not for this hom-, these youngsters just would not g: a holiday at all," said the "Mom . who is Mrs, Ellen Willmore, matre at the cottage. Run by the Ch: drens' Aid Society, the cottag~ building is looked after by the Osh - awa Rotary Club. OPEN TWO MONTHS For two months of each year-- July and August--batches of chil- dren arrive at the cottage. Afte: two weeks of life in the open, b, the water's edge, and plenty of fooc they depart immeasurably better i. health and spirits. . "Some of these poor kids neve: even knew where their next mee was coming from," said Mrs. Will- more to a reporter from The Times- Gazette yesterday. She explaine: that some of the youngsters cam from the Oshawa home while other came from all over the province. "Rotary does a wonderful job herc for us," went on "Mom." The build ing was formerly a Red Cros structure but has been taken ove: by the Rotary for the past tw years. Members have put new roof- ing, have painted the building anc in the past few months have fixec up new shutters for the verandah and built a deep root cellar, SIX TO SIXTEEN YEARS Average number of children at the cottage is 24 and their age: range from six years to 16. There are separate wings of the cottage for boys and girls. Each entrant is met by "Tiny", a friendly pomeran- ian-cum-Pekinese who is the camp pet. Each child is his personal friend and he is kept on the trot all day long by proud youngsters _ who vie for the honor of taking his leash. Owing to the pollution danger the youngsters (and Tiny) are not allowed to bathe in the lake but occasionally they all troop off to a swimming pool where the little dog tries valiantly to keep up with the children, For five days of the week the holi- day-makers join in the CRA active ities but on Saturday and Sundays they remain in the cottage grounds to play on the swings, in the sand- pits and at various ball games, A stout fence prevents any danger of them falling into the lake. PROUD OF TITLE Frequently pausing to answer cries of "Mom"--a title of which she is very proud--Mrs. Willmore took the reporter on an inspection of the cottage. One of the chief items in keeping children happy and health is food, and plenty of it. The Larder at Rotary Cottage is pack- ed with the finest of foods for the society believes in only the most wholesome. Presiding over the kitchen and the three meals a day is a woman who has the most suitable name for a cook--Mrs. Fudge. Night supervisor is Mrs. Kennedy while Mrs. Pritchard acts as seamstress and Miss Taylor is a useful parte time helper.. "We don't have to give these youngsters any medical examina- tions on the 'before and after' lines," said Mrs, Willmore drawing attention to the laughter and shout- ing going on in the garden. "Just one look at them shows the tre- mendous improvement this holiday brings about in them. I don' know where they put all the food-- you should just see what they put away. ROTARIANS WONDERFUL "And as for the Rotarians they are really wonderful and I and the other people in the society can't speak too highly of them. We think they are wonderful." Mute evidence of the tragedy and folly underlying many cases of broken marriages and homes was shown yesterday by two little six year old twins made happy by a "Mom" for two weeks--and 'a dog to lead around. Bob Gray is chairman of the Committee which is the committees Rotary Club's Parks and Property that looks after the cottage. Other members are Messrs: Stan Ever- son, Bill Karn, Alex Storie} George Ansley, Ken Braithwaite, Harold Washington, A. W. Armstrong, Wes Dempsey, Harry Brooks and Ed Rose. Property chairman during the time the improvements were carried out was Bill Karn. DROWNED IN CANAL Thorold (CP) -- Donato Dipardo, 29, an Italian immigrant in this country only 'nine months, was drowned in the Welland ship canal Saturday night. He was climbing a ladder from the shore to the deck of a ship when it lurched and Di- pardo fell into the water between the ship and the canal wall. from AUG. 16a ONTARIO ST. We Will Be CLOSED for STAFF HOLIDAYS (Inclusive) . Re-Opening Aug. 13th NEW SERVICE CLEANERS 6 to 11th PHONE 5-5733