Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 16 May 1956, p. 24

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- rma Sa Do? tg a So ei Is Big Army 0 la new group of pioneers carving a residential community at the near- by village of Oromocto. Mud is major obstacle just now to housekeeping duties at the Central Mortgage and Housing Corporation's development--a vil- lage within a village--and some residents think 'their new homes are too small. Heavy machinery is also a prob- lem when children are at play, and parents must drive their children to school because it's too far for the youngsters to walk. These residents are families of | construction crews paving the way {for operation of the Canadian! |Army's ne.. training centre at Camp Gagetown, |GENERALLY FINE | Mrs. George Hayward, her hus: {band and two children live in one of the recently-constructed CMHC homes. ! "The house, is generally fine," {Mrs. Hayward says. 'Though the paint job isn't any too good and the kitchen isn't big enough." Then there is school transpor- {tation for the elder of the con- |struction inspector's children, seven-year-old Suzanne. "Getting Suzanne to school is % / f : / LAN) ate 4) é J bid FREDERICTON (CP) -- There's| peration | "We have to drive her to Oro- {mocto every day because it's too far to walk. They're building a new school here, 1 {it's open by fall" | pects of the community's everyda {life. Housewives tramp through it |for groceries or to hang out their clothes, Children revel in it, then leave a trai' of mud from doorway to wash basin. } Plank walks stretch across par-! |ticularly muddy areas. ! But landscaping is |ahead with bulldozers aside layers of clay to provide al base for gravel. Construction workers are well aware of the danger to children; playing near working equipment, st i Building Of Camp Gagetown i certainly hope x Mud interferes with many as-| _ shoving "Sometimes we just don't know! ? what to do," said one. "The kids are here and we're here. We just have to put up with it. "We try to be as careful as we an." But once the spring thaw Is over and the ground has th #- oughly dried, landscaping is ¢.- pected to move faster towards completion. Within a few years the streets will be paved, grass will be growing and the backvards will ibe playgrounds for the area's chil- dren. difficult," Mrs. Hayward says. Fluoridation 4] Said Proven VICTORIA (CP) -- Propaganda against fluoridation may hold back | research into one of North Amer- ica's worst disease problems, a top-ranking United States oral pathologist said here Tuesday. "Fluoridation is proven," said Dr. Reidar F. Sognnaes, professor of oral pathology and associate dean of the Harvard School of Medicine. Fluoridation is a "milestone on den- the way to oral health," he said. past that into more oral dis- full-dress farewell parade. The couch carrying she general is | seen with foreguard of Spanish- Morrocan outriders. Sugar Lack Irks Dentists TORONTO (CP)--Ontario th tists Tuesday practised what they 'But we are already preach, buf not without some Phase, and researching the first grumbling vital weapons against of long standing, Lt.-Gen. Mor- | Lt.-Gén. Pope's career in the ris Pope. This occasion in | diplomatic service of. Canada Madrid marked the closing of | and the Spaniards gave him a A farewell was given by the anish government of General anco to a Canadian diplomat cConachie's History ells Why CPA Is Good By BRUCE LEVETT port Lid. In 1941 the CPR bought, achie = Canadian Press Staff Writer [out a group of nearly bankrupt air- home-made in. There was no sugar on th> tables ease { VANCOUVER (CP)--It takes 18 lines and CPA was formed with the North. for the coffee drinkers at the On. nn yrs to fly from here to the Grant McConachie as general man- 'The mechanic, the trapper and tario Dental Association convention SHIP FREED i | ager for western lines. By 1947 hell turned the plane around. We had luncheon. . was president. the brothers in the cabin, The "We are trying to promote the! COPENHAGEN, Denmark (Reu- an 18 years. One of the stories Mr. McCon- | pilot's cockpit was open. |cutting down of sugar intake," a tors) The Danish fishing boat The hefty, youthful president of | achie does tell concerns his first] "We tied the plane's tail to a| convention official said. "But some yy p panjelseon, arrested by a nadian Pacific Airlines went the! airmail contract. [tree and I told the trapper to|Of the boys don't like the idea of Soviet warship in the Baltic' last ard way--via the Yukon and the! "I was flying an old Fairchild |watch my arm. When I waved, he drinking their coffee without SU- Saturday for alleged illegal fish- ush country of northern Canada. 71 into the Peace River country was to chop the rope." gar. addition to the orient, he wound out of Edmonton. They were get-| Grant gunned the engine until the ling in Russian waters, radioed {Friday night that she had been p in Europe, South America, New| ting their mail into Fort Nelson tail rose, straining against the SPORT OF KINGS {freed. She said she had been aland and Australia. |once a month boat and I told them 'rope. Scanning the short take-off Horse-racing was popular in Eng-| allowed to leave without either her Today, as the globe-circling head{I could fly it in once a week." space, grant drepped his arm and 'and more than a century before |catch or fishing equipment being the eighth largest airline in the| In those days he flew in fresh |the trapper's ax fell on the rope. the reign of William the Conqueror. confiscated. utilized probably aircraft catapult ent. It took Grant McConachie more | Atom Power To Operate Fish Hatchery { NEW YORK (AP)--Plans fer the world's largest fish hatchery to be built on the St. Lawrence river and operated by nuclear power were announced Friday by | commissioner. Louis A. Wehle, in New York to discuss the project with en- gineers, termed the | partment dream." The hatchery, ! [with its nuclear heating and push {button conirols, will be so modern, | he said, {present hatcheries will be aban- doned. The project would be located near Massena, N.Y., with water supplied from the turbine dis- charge of the St. Lawrence power dam. | | USEFUL BIRD | The Australian kookaburra, about {the size of a crow, destroys many "harmful insects and rodents. world. Ggant McConachie is slow vegetables with freight cargoes to PROPELLER SPLIT [go taik aboui ihe days wien he get cash for gas to fly hack aut! "We shot down that beach and had to draw his maps as he went| 'I used to sell vegetables and out over the lake. There was a ! ong. fresh fruit right from the plane. terrible vibration and I thought the IG CORPORATION | Oranges were 50 cents each." |rope was fouled up somewhere." "We don't want people to get the! The post office department sent; It wasn't. His propeller had hit lea this is still a bush operation.'"' | an inspector to look over the Mc-|an obstruction on take-off and The operation now is a $40,000,000 Conachie operation. porporation with $16,000,000 worth him in behind the Grant piled |split down the middle. But Grant freight and didn't know that until he landed aircraft on order, including five! taxied away from the shore. back at Edmonton. f the new Bristol Britannia turbo-| SINKING PLANE Grant Mec- prop . airliners. | *I could feel a drag," he recalls Conachie has flown 1,000,000 miles E r they can fly at night or during the day "The chief "said he would go- when I could land on a twig." Plane Crash 'Takes 18 Lives | KATMANDU, Nepal (Reuters)-- Eighteen persons were killed here | Tuesday when an Indian Airlines Since those days, airlin @ And, while it still operates single-| "but the inspector couldn't get to!as a pilot and another 1,000,000 as ned float plants to northern/me to tel me what was wrong." a passenger, push points, CPA also flies to] A mechanic had left the caps off| He estimates that during the last Japan, Mexico, Hawali, The Neth- his pontoons. As the plane taxied 11 years he has flown an average rlands, Australia, New Zealand into the lake, it was sinking fast.|of 400 miles a day. Peru. It has just signed a |The postal inspector was up to his| Toward the end of the bush ontract to fly into Argentina. {neck in water, phase of his career, McConachic George William Grant McCon- "The tail was under water so woke up in hospital following a hie was born April 24, 1909, in(I couldn't steer. I had to pour on crack-up. Looking down at him Hamilton, Ont. He grew up along|all the power I had and take the was nurse Margaret MacLean. the borders of the Edmonton air-|plane right across the lake and up| Today she's Mrs. McConachie,| ort. {on to the shore of a small island." mother of the fast-moving execu- | At 16 he was cardging rides with| The inspector became a fast|tive's two sons. sh pilots Wilfred (wop) May and friend of McConachie who got the! It was McConachie's passion for H (Punch) Dickens by wiping| contract | building air fields which led to Ae the haywire and fabric| The other flight he remembers-- his winning of the 1945 McKee planes the famous airmen flew "mercy "flights were routine in| Trophy for "long and outstanding Mover northern Canada. |those days'--occurred near Pel-| service in the field of aviation." EARLY TRAINING ican Rapids on Lake Athabaska,| He built air strips through Fort "He received his first pilot train- north of Edmonton. He went to the' St. John, Fort Nelson, Watson ing from Carl Johannsen, who aid of two brothers who had been! Lake, into the Yukon and took the had more than one influence on severely burned. airplane off the inefficient skis and b career "The government at Ottawa floats. When the Second World War It was Johannsen, leaving to fly asked if we would fly a plane in, | erupted, his string of northern air- for a tiny airline in China, who|They offered to pay for the plane | fields became the northwest stag. Moffered young Grant $300 a month|if we cracked up." It was during ing route over which flowed 'all {--Chinese dollars--to go with him|the "between season" and the only kinds of aircraft from the United as pilot-mechanic. place to land in the area was a|States' to Russia." A His family didn't like the idea narrow strip of hard beach. Mc- It was in this northern wilderness and Uncle Harry picked up a|Conachie loaded a mechanic that Grant MeConachie, whose small Fokker plane to get his aboard an old wheel-equipped six- persuasive powers are legend, met imephew into 'the air in Canada. [place plane and took off. his match J_ Years later, the tiny China line] FOUND SMOKE HAZARD "I wanted to fly a band of In- had grown into Chinese National] "We had talked to a trapper who dians outside," he recalls. 'None Airways with Johannsen its chief was looking after the brothers. A of them had ever seen a train, car pilot. He died in a Nanking air- telephone line was still working. or a modern town. I figured 1 er crash We told him 'to have a smudge could charge $150 a head round- "So many of those men are burning. We wanted to know the trip and they wanted to go. Bui dead," Mr. McConachie muses to- ground wind when we came in they wouldn't step into the plane day-- 'Dickens, May, Johannsen." |He had a whole forest fire. We unless the old chief said it was ail The young pilot found there was had to land across wind to escape right and he wouldn't say it was more air freight businesy than he the smoke." all right, {epuld handle during the '1930s° so, No doctor would go with the flier. "I tried to sell the chief by tell- {after paying back his uncle, he so the young pilot had loaded ing him 'you've never seen a bird rented another Fokker. aboard a quantity of medical sup- fall, have you? And aircraft can COMPANY FORMED plies. do lots of things birds can't do- ¢ Independent Airways Ltd. was "But I couldn't do anything for| they can fly upside down, they can med and'at 22 Grant was an|them. They were in terrible shape. fly through clouds and fog and | line president. I knew if we didn't get them out ! "Independent grew into United/to Edmonton there was no hope § Air Transport Ltd., which be-{of saving them." came Yukon Southern Air Trans-! That was when Grant McCon- | 3 i FOR BETTER HEALTH ~ Choosing The Right Frames For Glasses aay HERMAN N. BUNDSEN. M.D. |pinched look. If you have a small while landing at Katmandu air- ARE you wearing the right face with delicate features, slen-|port. glasses" der, comparatively inconspicuous| The aircraft, which carried 28 The lens prescription frames probably will be more be-| passengers and a crew of three, . all right, but what coming. was on a flight from Simra. in | frames' Large specs, however, help bal- Nepal's southern plains, to Kat- While this may be going a little ance a full, round face with Mmandu, All the passengers were | b to have been Nepalese. The crew survived. Delicio be the may about The distinctive flavour of Heinz Ketchup does something wonderful for food. The careful blend of spices, added to Heinz own plump, ripe, pedi- greed tomatoes, brings out the best in any dish! If you're not using Heinz Ketchup in your kitchen and on your table now, you're missing 'something extra' with your meals. Make sure Heinz Tomato Ketchup is on your list next time you go shopping. far afield in a health Solum, I'm! prominent features. olisved ing to give you some advice . ; : Boe ee td frames which wiil| For this full, round face, angu- . " {lar shaped frames will look better suit you best, for appearance as| . k . well as from a medical standpoint nd. ones Jost men, incl. LONDON, Ont. (CP)~The On- | For there 1 are some who feel because * they are considered Signs tario Society of Radiogy aphers embarrassment at wearing 'speci paconine opened a two-day convention Fri- tacles. . wi = A day with about 125 delegates ,in FOR GLAMOR COLOR OF FRAMES ; attendance. Actually, glasses can glamorize Remember that the color of th your face. The Better Vision In- frames should harmonize with stitute has set up a ~| your eyes. hair and complexion rules for selecting the right pair. A blonde with light eyes, for If your no long, you'll want|example, looks attractive in deep . with & low nose-bridze.|blue, blue green, gold or your nose appear | tortoise shell o escly, a hign b.idge| A blonde with brown or black| [ think you'll feel a lot better will lengthen a snub nose. eyes can wear medium green, knowing that your glasses im-| For eyes that are too close to-| coral, chinese red, gold and light prove your appearance. gether, try frames with ornamen-| amber tones or tortoise shell to! QUESTION AND ANSWER tation at the outer corners. Very/good advantage. | P. Y.: Will the daily use of al srnadl- 5 not only out vourl A brunette with light eyes prob-{sun 1amn he harmful? field of vision, but they also make|ably should choose deep blue, Answer: It is doubtful that any your eves appear little and close-| bl ce green, silver, white gold or harm can occur from short daily sc: {light pink tortoise shell Lxposure to an ultra-ray lamp ol PINCHED LOOK DARK EYES sun lamp Unless the frames are at | A brown or black-eyed brunette However, excess exposure to as wide as your face at the cneex-| generally looks 'better in deep the lamp can cause chronic skin bones, they arc apt to give it a|yellow, tomate red, gold, green disorders, CONVENTION BEGINS and light or flesh-colored tortoise si she. : | | gold or| tortoise Redheads can select any shade faee of green, coral, cocoa, dark dark to medium tones of shell ie leas o° ve AVAILABLE IN TWO SIZES Tomato Ketchup | | | turned to the West, is shown en- | after | to release him the New York state conservation kish foreign ministry Friday told t assistant military attache was per-! $5.000,000 sonally unacceptable because of undertaking a 'conservation de- espionage that he leave Turkey immediately The that most of the state's Iadenko, night, the foreign ministry said. | THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Wednesday, May 16, 1956 23 r. Hall Says Canada Needs. More Higher Education VANCOUVER (CP)--Higher edu- cation for a greatly increased number of persons is s==ential for Canada, says Dr, G. . Hall, pres- ident and vice-chancellor of the University, of Western Ontario at nt, Canadian Club here "Where are the people io develop| Canada, unless we can comb the | Dominion and make if possible for an increased number to have the opportuity for more education?" nly in universities are engin- 5 eers, physicists, zoologists teach- ers, clergy, lawyers, economists, historians and philosophers pro- uced. In the whole of Canada at upi- versities today there are only 69 students who will graduate in fue honors chemistry this year. There are only 40 pure honors geology students who will graduate. "What we consider assets in atural resourc>s were ~onsidered By our forefathers as barriers of rogress. . , Now Cansda's future s unlimited if we have neople to do this type of development work." versary of the birth of the Dutch master, Rembrandt, it was an- nounced Tuesday night. She will be the only C-nadian Dutch Honor Pearl McCarthy oicinws seis 7 et TORONTO (CP) -- Pearl Mc- have been invited to attend the | Carthy, Globe and Mail ~rt critic, | céremonies. has been invited by the Nether- lands government to attend cere-| OLD FIGURE monies in that country May 22-25! The first United States census in connectio with the 350th anni-'in 1790 listed 3,929,214 inhabitants. NEED MONEY? «s+ TO PAY OVERDUE BILLS PF can make a clean sweep of all your bills and give you just one place to pay. Ask about the PF ALL-IN-ONE LOAN. . You will be pleased to see that payments can be cut as much as 50% or more, Phone today. Ask us to tell you right on the phone how much you moy reduce your monthly pay ments. a IN MORE TROUBLE Otto John. 47, who defected to the East Germans and then re- tering a car at Karlsruhe West Germany's supreme ed for a second time from prison. John, West Germany's former intelligence chief, has been in jail for four months and will | stand trial on suspicion of trea- son. ~--Central Press Canadian | OUST ATTACHE Look i LY ISTANBUL (Reuters)--The Tur| lo die syebol wife you need money for eny worthy purpose. Ge: $25 to $2,500 PACIFIC FINANCE CREDIT LTD. "JOHN AGNEW -- MANAGER 13 SIMCOE ST. S. RA 5-6571 : LOCK FOR THE PF EMBLEM he Soviet embassy in Ankara its| activities and asked attache, Nikola Vasilievski was arrested Thursday Favour ' ox. «EGULAR SIZE ox. FAMILY SIZE The Oshawa Junior Chamber of Commerce SAFETY LANE OPENS TOMORROW! TO THURS. MAY 31st 9AM. TOSP.M Have Your Car N.Y ACRE. 50 Dcving Abily seem SAFETY GHEGKED Safety Lane is located on Bagot Street. You can have your car and your driving ability check any day from Thursday, May 17th to Thursday, May 31st. 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. daily ex- cept Sunday. Drive a Safe Car... Have your car safet Jaycees Safety Lane, opening tomorrow

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