' SPECIAL 4 » | Indiscriminate Slaughter Of Game In } arshes | Rotary Club Speaker | - Appeals For Workers To Assist Boy Scouts "More. than money the Boy Scout Movement in Canada today needs men with faith in the fu- ture who are willing to give of thelr time to discharge their re- sponsibility to democracy by as- sisting in Scouting's program efor the training of the youth of today as the citizens of tomorrow," de- clareq Robert A. Johnston of Mimi- co, regional commissioner for Cen- tral Ontario, in his address at the Oshawa Rotary Club luncheon yes- terddy. : The service club held its week- ly meeting inthe council hall at Camp Samac where the members enjoyed a delicious meal served by the members of the Women's Aux- iliary of the Boy Scouts under the direction of Mrs. William Corbett. Among the guests were Byron S. Edmondson, president of the Osh- awa Local Boy Scout Association; A. G. Storie and T. K. Creighton, honorary presidents; District Com- missioner Ed. Aker. Immediate Past President Harry Rigg, Bob Coppin and Bob MacMillan, vice- presidents; John E. Gillett, secre- tary; Executive Commissioner Stanley Richardson; and A. S. Hill, Lucas Peacock, L. W. Currell and George R. McLaughlin, mem- bers of the Scout executive com- mittee. FINE WORK IN OSHAWA In extending a welcome to the service club members, President Edmondson 'said that Scouting had been a very worthwhile en- deavour in Oshawa during the past niné months. During that time 4,763 boys had used the facilities of Camp Samac for a total of 23,- 818 days. Oshawa, he said, is re- taining its tradition with a total ef 51 per cent. of the boys of Scout and Cub age in the community tak- ing part in Scout activities. This, he felt, indicates that Scouting is doing something tangible to bene- {it the community. Mr. Johnston recalled that when Lord Baden Powell returned to Bng- land he found distressing conditions. He therefore drew upon his store of knowledge and with a sure un- derstanding of boys drafted the Boy Scout program which enables the youth to learn by doing while 'he plays. The effect of the pro- gram has been that the boy when kept busy has no time to get into trouble. Since its inception the Scout Movement has grown by leaps and bounds until today it has over 5,000,000 members in all the free countries of the world. DEMANDS RESPONSIBILITY Scouting places responsibility up- on the individual. The acceptance of this responsibility is the founda- tion stone of demdcracy. This training must start th the boy and continue into manhood if he is to be an integral part of the community life and every member of the movement, whether Cub or Scout must share in the respon- sibility. There are no underprivileged in Scouting, Mr.- Robertson empliasiz- ed saying that a Scout is judg- ed solely on his attitude there be- ing no barrier of color, race or creed. His promise to keep the Scout Law means that a boy will learn the principles of democracy and will be a good citizen and a good neighbour. Scouting, he said, ensures that the type of man Can- ada needs to insure its future will be developed. The Scout program is one which has been carried out with little money as each member of the movement does his part cheerful- ly and willingly. It is a volunteer movement with much of the train- ing being done by unpaid teaders. In Canada today there are less _ than 60 professional Scouters while there are over 10,000 volunteer workers and leaders. The appreciation of the club to the speaker was voiced by Presi- dent Everett Lovell who also voic- ed the appreciation of the mem- bership to Mrs. Corbett of the ladies auxiliary. Mr. Robertson was in- troduced by Commis- sioner Stanley Richardson. Slips Off Pier Boy, 7, Drowns At Cobourg Cobourg--Jimmy Niles, 7, son of Mr. and Mrs. Eric Niles of Co- bourg, was the season's first drown- ing victim here when he slipped off the pier yesterday afternoon. Where the fatality occurred the pier is in poor repair and dragging operations were hampered by crevices in the broken. and sunken concrete. Police and citizens dragged all afternoon without result. The boy's 'cries for help as he clung to a broken pier of concrete were heard by eight-year-old Bob- by Brown. Bobby ran out and grabbed at the other boy's arm, but he slipped from his grasp and sank. The larg@st consumer of nickel for plating purposes is the auto- motive industry. - Coming Events WEATHER PERMITTING THERE will be a public showing of films, Thursday evening, August 16, after Band Concert, McLaughlin Band Shell, Auspices Oshawa Film Coun- cil. Special showing of Grey Cup finals 1950. ! {Tuestf) PRAYER MEETING this. Wednesday night, Free Meth- odist Church, 8 p.m. Everyone welcome, (Tues, tf) a .| walked out of the Looking At Britain BY M. McINTYRE HOOD Article No. 8 Pittenweem, Fife, Scotland, August 13 (By Airmail) -- A two hours' train journey in which we covered a distance of 49 miles has brought us from the busy streets of the Scottish capital to the little fishing village of Pittenweem, one of Scotland's ancient royal bor- oughs which has not yet been caught up in the tide of modern progress. It has a small harbor, a fleet of fishing boats and a popu- lation of some 1,600. It looks as if it had stood still through the centuries since it was first estab- lished, and is one of the most quaint villages it has ever been our privilege of seeing in a ¥fe- time of travelling. We have come to Pittenweem to stay with friends for a few days, and to make it the centre for ex- cursions to some of the other in- teresting places in what is known as the Kingdom of Fife. Here life goes on at a leisurely pace. There is absolutely. nothing in the way of modern places of entertainment. The only excitement it affords is the daily auction sale of the. fish stone piers, do not know how ong ago these AD piers were built, MM. M. HOOD but they bear all marks: of antiquity. The harbor lights look to be of ancient vinte age. And up from the harbor the village rises in a series of terraces, on which the old stone houses with their red roofs form a perfect amphitheatre from which the in- habitants can look out on the sea and down to the harbor, watching for the fishing . boats returning with their daily haul. TYPICAL EAST COAST. DAY It was a cold, raw day in Edin- burgh today, with drizzles of rain, a typical east coast day. And even although this is the middle of August, and the folks back home in Oshawa are probably sweltering in the heat, we are mighty glad we brought with us some long woollen underwear, such as we might wear in midwinter at home, to help keep out the penetrating cold. We left Edinburgh at five o'clock, and the train journey, which took us over the Forth Bridge into Fife, and then right around .the coast, through Aberdour, Nurntisland, Kirkaldy and other towns which will be familiar to most of our Scottish readers, was full of in- terest. Across the Forth we could see the eminence of North Ber- wick Law and the Bass Rock off the shore. The train stopped at every little station. And every one of them was a joy to behold, with their glorious flower beds and ornamentation, carried out by zealous stationmasters. The roses were at their best in many of the beds. Others were a colorful mass of snapdragons. Some of the beds were' strictly formal, and laid out in neat floral patterns. It seemed as if they were competing with each other in the effort to pre- sent a delightful picture to travel- lers, We sat' in one of the small com- partments, each designed to hold eight people, There -were three other occupants, two young men and a young woman, all of whom boarded the train at Edinburgh. We sat there together for two hours and not one of the five of us spoke a single word to each other, except, of -course, that my wife and I chatted about the in- teresting things we saw on the way. The other three looked straight ahead, as if each of them was the only. individwal in the compartment. Here was Scottish reserve carried out to the highest degree, and when they reached their destinations, they got up and compartment without one of them having spoken a single word during the two hour journey. Never before have we ex- perienced this traditional reserve practised so completely and ef- fectively. RUGGED NATURE UTILIZED After dinner, we had a walk down around the old harbor, then up a path leading around the hill- side to a point from which we could look down on the village bathing pool, an artificially created pool carved out of the rocky shore, The whole coast line is a mass de rugged rocks. But at this point, tif rocks have been cleared away anirs in the royal household and sandy beac afforded man a chuckle' to created. A cement breakwater hdons. " a small section of been built out for some distanhe into the sea, and within it is tt0 bathing pool. On the hillside aboy gowns in public or not. The terraced seats have been built time she wore one she was that spectators can look down /eréd by many but greeted by the pool below. It was a uniq raised eyebrows of those who 1 sticklers to convention. sources of a forbidding nature /0cal residents tried-hard to pass y We occasion as a normal one, large crowds gathered at the slovtion yesterday to watch the ar- over the village. A few lights 1 of those who came to take in the celebration. ong the important personages |agrive was F. that ancient and roPrnton Heath, carrying an im- home 'ssive package which turned out and be. a birthday cake, two feet toss, 18 inches deep, iced with conception of using natural create something of utility to villagers and their visitors. Now night has fallen twinkling out at .sed, and we ready to lay the typewriter asi Tomorrow we plan a trip to Andrew's, borough which. is the Golf, of a great university magnificent cathedral, And will tell you something of that our next article. p fe pink frosting and pdles. THE DAILY TIMES.GAZETT Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle * WHITBY VOL. 10--No. 195 OSHAWA-WHITBY, TUESDAY, AUGUST 21, 7951 CRA Troupe Entertains At Bathe Park A large crowd of adults and chil- dren alike spent a highly enjoyable evening in Bathe Park last night as talented youngsters of the CRA "Travelling Troupe". danced and sang joyfully on their makeshift platform. All the entertainers were veterans of "Showboat CRA," which was "presented at the McLaughlin Bandshell early in July. After a few introductory remarks by Mistress of Ceremonies Saundra Collis, Patty Halliday, 7, and Mary McGarry, 8, opened the review with a routine tapped to the snappy tune of "Sleepy Time Gal." They were accompanied at the piano by Mrs. Noreen Osier. Sharply contrasting with this was twelve-year-old Vir- ginia McGarry's slow, dreamy, sen- timental "Over the Rainbow," after which Paul Fleck operated the background music for a lively tap dance by Joan Tarrant, 15. Extremely popular, especially with the younger members of the audi- ence, was the duologue between ventriloquist Jim Bell, 13, and his puppet Elmer. In rapid succession came a number by Eileen McGarry, 14, and Sylvia Sawyer, 14, a vocal by seven-year-old Billy Ellegette, and a tap-.routine by one of Osh- awa's best dapcing team, Andie and Charlie Horchik, 14. The "Travelling Troupe" was un- der the direction of Joan Lambert, and will give three more perfor- mances: tonight at 7:30 at Bathe Park, Wednesday, August 22, at Victory, and {Thursday night at Connaught. Will Build New Pool At Samac The already excellent appoint- ments of Camp Samac the pride of the Oshawa Local Boy Scout Association, are to be amplified. At the meeting of the Oshawa Ro- tary Club, in the council hall at the camp yesterday, Executive Commissioner Stanley Richardson announced that, through the kind- ness of Col. R. S. McLaughlin, don- or of the camp, a new swimming pool is to be built. The pool will be 165 feet long and 50 feet wide. It will have two wings each 30 by 40 feet. One of the wings will be for paddling and the other for diving. The pool will vary in depth from about three feet at bne end to 10 or 11 feet at the other. The new swimming pool will be built on high ground to the west of the council hall with the water from thesOshawa Creek being used to fill it. : During the present summer the water program at the camp has been curtailed due to the silting up of the pond behind the dam. Dahlia Plant Running Wild In Color Way A pie-bald dahlia owned by Mrs. R. J. Andrews of 216 Burk Street, Oshawa, is misbehaving itself this year. For three years in succes- sion it has borne flowers - that have been a mixture of crimson and white. Now; on---one stem, it--has produced two 'blood-red dahlias which form a startling contrast to its normal blooms. Mrs. Andrews, yho is the mother of two young children who have Times-Gazette delivery routes, doesn't know what is going to hap- pen next in her garden this year. She and her husband were going out to cut down a plum tree which had not borne fruit for years but thought better of it. Now the tree is laden with plums for the first time. "I guess we scared it," was her comment. - Junior Farmer Church Service Held at Scugog The Christian faith should be to trust in the armor of God and He would build a wall of fire around our nation. The speaker felt, as a natinn_. the$ocv-uer 10 drop of the quick - witted impish- which has 'enlivened family" now will have her own say whether she can wear strap- Jacobs of sporting 21 4 Part-Time Assessors Should Be Paid More And Duties Some of the 17 municipal asses- sors in the County of Ontario are underpaid, said Gordon McLean, County Supervising Assessor in a report to County Council yesterday. This condition should be rectified so that they will take a keener in- terest in their work. Another im- portant change recommended by Mr. McLean is that if more of the assessors were employed by two or more municipalities, they would then have full-time employment and the results of their work would be more satisfactory. This is al- ready being 'done in one case. Only three municipalities employ full-time assessors. Reporting on other matters, Mr. McLean said: "I have examined the assessment appraisal cards made in the year 1950 of the differ- ent municipalities throughout the County for the purpose of ascer- taining whether the valuations of real property made by the asses- sors in each township, town or village bear a just relation one to another. After this examination of all assessments I have prepared a schedule and recommend that this schedule be adopted as the Equalization Assessment of the County of Ontario for the year 19- 51 and to be used for the County levy in the year 1952, 3 The following is a brief report of some of the highlights of your County Assessor's work during the first half of the year 1951. Several amendments to the As- sessment Act were enacted during the last Session of the Provincial Legislature and are now in effect. Section 5- is re-enacted by two sections 51 and 51A and deal main- ly with additions to the Assessors' and Tax Rolls. Supplementary assessments on buildings under construction are not to be added to the tax roll until the buildings reasonably fit for occupancy. How- ever, all buildings under construc- tion, whether complete or not, must be valued for assessment purposes to the extent that they increase Combined the value of the 'land -and this amount written in the Assessment Roll before it is returned to the Municipal Clerk on October 1st. Each polling sub-division should Le assessed and totalled separately in the Assessors' roll and these as- sessments made consecutively along streets or concessions as the case may be..The Municipal Clerk should also write the Voters List consecutively along streets or ooncessions and not according to the alphabet as was done in past years. However, the Council of a municipality may by by-law auth- orize the clerk to write these lists alphabetically. On July 27th I attended a meet- ing of County Assessors in Toron- --the purpose being to discuss the new Provincial Manual which was introduced last year through- out the Province by the Depart- ment of Municipal Affairs. Max Sloan addressed the meeting and informed us that several changes were being made to this manual and that these amendments would be forwarded to each municipal- ity within a few weeks. These changes will no doubt clarify the system of appraisal in this manual where the rental capitalization is used as one of the two main fac- tors in assessment valuation. For the most part our assessors are giving good services under difficult conditions and I am proud of the improvements in assess- ments they have achieved in the past year also the great improve- ment which will be shown by the work done in the current year. Your Assessor has made & care- ful check of assessments both on real property and business assess- ments along the main highways, in the hamlets as well as other scat- tered places of business in the rur- al townships. These assessments indicate to me that they are lower are occupied or+than they. should be. The result of this practice means that the lands that are used solely for agricul- tural purposes are carrying pro- portionately more than their share of the tax burden, Convention Asks More Daily Bible 1,400 members and friends of the Seventh-day Adventist Church, in convention on the campus of Osh- awa Missionary College, recited last evening with Pastor H. M. S. Rich- ards, the internationally known radio and television speaker, one of their best-known ..Scripture texts: "Let not your hearts be troubled: ye believe in God, believe also in me. In my Father's house are many man- sions: if it were not so, I would have told you. I go to prepare a place for you. And if I go and pre- pare a place for you, I will come again, and receive you unto myself; that where I am, thére ye may be also." (John's gospel, chapter 14, verses 1 to 3). Using this text for his sermon on God, Jesus, Heaven, and Jesus' Re- turn, Pastor Richards in his radio | address, broadcast direct from the convention auditorium over CKLB, and the citizens of Oshawa who he appealed to his large audience listened to the service--in their homes, to be more faithful in daily Bible reading. Mr, Richards who was married in Oshawa some 25 years ago When he was a minister in Ontario, ex- pressed his pleasure at being able to spend last evening and all day Tuésday at the Ontario convention, with the gospel singers, the King's Heralds Quartet, and Pastor D. L. Olsen, the associate speaker of the VOICE QF PROPHECY, and di- rector of the Voice of Prophecy Bible Correspondence School, Los Angles, California. The group which is well-known on two radio systems in the USA and is regularly televised on the Speaker Faithful | Reading 'West Coast, has been on a tour of North America these last two months, and attended many state- wide church conventions. They will present their last program in the auditorium on the campus of Oshawa Missionary College this evening at.7:30 p.m. and the citizens of Oshawa are cordially invited to hear this group of radio preachers and gospel singers. Before returning to California, the group will be featured at the Laymen's Congress of the Seventh- day Adventist Church, which will gather between 10,000 and 12,000 delegates from the North American continent and some overseas Vis- itors at Grand Ledge, Michigan, next week.. ; Earlier yesterday, Monday, Pastor J. M. Bucy, Dominion secretary of gospel colportage, and G. H. Rose, Oshawa, leader of many colporteur evangelists in the provinces of On- tario and Quebec, spoke on the publishing work of the -Seventh- day Adventist denomination. The Signs of the Times Publishing House, on Kingston Road East, Oshawa, supplies gospel books and Christian literature for use by the church throughout Canada, Pastor W. P. Bradley, one of the associate secretaries of the General Conference of Seventh-day Advent- ists, Washington®D.C., and for many years a missionary and 'church ex- ecutive in the Far East, spoke at a special Young People's service Mon- day on the "Romance of Foreign Missions", Mr, Bradley is scheduled to conduct other missionary pro- g#ams at the convention which will terminate next Sunday. Circus Attracts Large [Evening Show Crowd Close on the heels of the Osh- |i were followed by the McIn- awa Fair. the Cirens, game iQ in the p organizati losh troupe, tight wire artists, an = 2 ma wine roducts of the Ford on in Canada. PAGE THREE Sentence Two Pastors To Two Months Noranda, Que.--Two Baptist pas- tors from this Northwestern Quebec mining town ran into trouble Sat- urday night in nearby Val d'Or and LaSarre, one of them going to jail for the fifth time yesterday. Lorne Heron, who was released after a two-month term only last Monday, was arrested along with Howard Killick, a Baptist mission- ary, dn the street in Val d'Or Sat- urday. Yesterday the pair were sentenced to two months by Re- corder Jean Louis Baillargeon. It was Killock's second term, both of them for two months. Four of Heron's terms' have been two months apiece. The first was for 15 days. ? The same evening, Leslie Barn- hart, who was responsible for a verbal reprimand Saturday from Montreal's Roman Catholic Arch- bishop Paul Emile Leger to a parish priest in nearby Ste. Germaine, was given a rough time as he sought to conduct a street mezting in La- Sarre. Seven times he was dragged from the meeting place, first by the chief of police, then by special constables. He finally had to give up the meet- ing. Heron and Killock opened their meeting in Val d'Or at 8:20 p.m. by singing a hymn. Heron then preached for-about 10- minutes be- fore police arrived to teH them they were breaking the law.' All similar Baptist arrests in Val @Or have been made by virtue of a by- law which prohibits an action liable to obstruct traffic. . The pair continued their. preach- ing and they were arrested. Barnhart said he believed the treatmen® he has received in La- Sarre was a reaction to his exposure of the postmaster and priest in Ste. Germaine Boule, just 18 miles south of LaSarre, who admitted in- tercepting and burning mail meant for Baptist followers. Saturday's meeting started about 8 p.m. with Bernhart preaching. He was accompanied by Lloyd Carr, 20, Helen Hall, 20, and Pierre Rossignol, 12. After Barnhart had been preaching for a. few minutes, Police Chief Edouard Carpentier approached. him and said he had orders to tell him to circulate. Barnhart said he had a right to be there and was going to stay. The. chief went away, then came back and again ordered the group to move, Barnhart asked what law the chief was upholding. The chief went away again. He came back a third time and this time grabbed Barnhart by the arm and said, "Get moving." Then two special constables, sworn in for the evening, grabbed Barnhart ky the arms and dragged him toward the car. The other two dragged Carr. When Barnhart refused to erter the car, the constables,"plus some bystanders, struck him, knocking him down and tearing his jacket. Barnhart returned to begin preaching several more times and each time was* dragged away. Finally he announced that the meeting was adjourned until next Saturday. : . HORSE STEAKS Winnipeg (CP) -- The manager of Manitoba's only horsemeat retail butcher shop says Winnipeggers consume almost 3000 pounds of horsemeat every week. Most popu- lar cuts are tenderlion steak and roast which retail at 60 cents a pound, too, in masterful make-up, and the highlight of their antics was a hilarious boxing match carried off in a slap-happy mood. Noteworthy among the Wild West troupers led by Lucky Hope, former Hollywood stunt man, on his handsome wonder horse "Lad- die", was auburn - haired Doro- thy Brown, trick and fancy rider from the Calgary Stampede. The show was carried through with fine enthusiasm, especially by the younger performers, in spite of an unfortunate accident which took one of their number out of the running recently. Last Fri- day, in Midland, Maria Rouen, one of the -iron-jaw troupe, fell and fractured her arm during a per- formance, She will be in Midland hospital for some time as a re- sult., But the show goes on! May Ask have been brought within the ! Speafheading this humanitarian Council To Request Area Be Game Sanctuary a There is an ever-increasing body of protest in the City of Oshawa against the senseless slaughter of wild life in the marshes in the south-eastern section of the municipality. It is maintained, furthermore, that now that these marshes boundaries of the city by an- nexations of parts of East Whitby Township, the means are now available to put an end to this indiscriminate killing. attempt to game in the immediate vicinity of the city were the men who owned property near or adjacent to the marshes. In 'the best position to see just what are the results of | allowing this breeding area to be used as a target range, they, con- sequently, were the most disturbed. Included in this group were the Gifford brothers, Lyman and Lloyd, J. L. Beaton and William Scatter- good. PROHIBIT WEAPONS Investigation has revealed that the best manner in which to cope with the situation would be to have the area declared a game sanctuary by the Ontario Department of Land and Forests, This would prohibit the carrying of weapons in the sanctuary and give police officers, both local and departmental game wardens a lever upon which to hang possible convictions. At the present time, under the terms of a municipal by-law it is forbidden to discharge a firearm within the city's boundaries and that, of course, meant in most sec- tions of the marsh. "No person shall make or light any fire or bonfire on any street or public place in the said city, or fire or discharge any gun, fowling piece or firearm or set fire to any fireworks within the city." So read the section of the by-law relevant. It did not, however, forbid the carrying of firearms. Police here, under the leadership of Chief Owen D. Friend, are will- ing and even eager to see this area turned infp a sanctuary. They are willing to do their best to see that it is kept inviolable but, they point out, the necessary legislation must first be passed to put them in a strong legal position. It is diffi- cult to catch a person in the act of firing a gun in the marsh, they say, but it would not be so much of a problem to apprehend hunters if they were forbidden to carry firearms. POINTLESS DESTRUCTION The pointless destruction of ducks, muskrat and, in fact any- thing which moved, in the marsh at all times and seasons of the year finally aroused the indigna- tion of nearby. property owners and, in fact, many other people in the city who were anxious to pre- serve whatever wild life remained. It is a well known fact that hunters, most of them young people, with no apparent sense of discretion, have been murdering birds and animals in the marshes for years and then leaving their bodies to rot. "It is a shame and I am certain- ly in favor of anything which would have the effect of preserv- ing the game left in the swamp," J. L. Beaton said. "Caught right in their breeding grounds the birds do not have a chance. It is neither sporting nor fair and it is, of course, highly destructive of game." Mr. Lyman Gifford felt similarly. "There promises to be a goodly number of ducks in the marsh this year and now is the time to take steps to save them before the hunt- ing season opens," he said. "Not that the so-called sportsmen who shoot in the marsh bother to wait for the proper season. They are popping off there all the time and are a menace not only to the game but to themselves." i William Scattergood, an amateur naturalist of some note, said that the varieties of duck in the marsh this year included teal, black ducks, mallards, sawbills, bluebills and American teal among others. There were in addition many other am- phibious birds and some animal life including muskrat and mink, MIGRATORY ROUTE From another source it was learned that at least one part of the marsh area is in a direct migra- tory route for smaller birds. Peo- ple who live in the vicinity of Bonnibrae Point, for example, have, for years, been able to see a much greater variety and number GAME SANCTUARY (Continued on Page 5) d me to go to Ontario Motor Sales. || Service Station on King Street ve what is left of the ® Tot Killed By Truck Few Feet from Home Niagara Falls, Ont. (CP) --Two year-old Russell Jones of Stamford township died Monday when rua over by a dairy truck a few fog from his home. Driver of the truck was Donald Franks of Niagara Falls. GRANT GRAIN PERMITS Washington (AP)-- The House of Representatives Monday passed and sent to the senate a bill to authorize Canadian ships to carry grain between United States ports on the Great Lakes until Dec. 31. 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