Oshawa Man, 61, Drowning Victim At Lake CD Plans To Be Aired At Meet H. T. Hopkins, Oshawa civil defence co-ordinator return from Toronto today, where he dis- cussed Oshawa's role in the new civil defence picture with Major A. D. Pearce, regional civil de- fence co-ordinator. Oshawa was recently designat- ed a "support area" for Toronto in case of atomic attack on that city in new civil defence plans. Final plans for Oshawa's civil defence role will be discussed at the June 25 meeting of the seven Ontario regional co-ordinators with the provincial civil defence head- *_ | quarters staff, Oshawa civil defence prepara- tion will shift into high gear af- _ |ter these more detailed plans are| | said » This preparation is designed to ti | ready Oshawa for the internation- A | | UAW ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATED AT DANCE al alert paper exercise which will take place in late July. | * Get Vaccine For Schools Enough polio vaccine has ar- rived in Oshawa to allow vac- cination of all 4,700 elementary school students in the June pro- | gram. | Dr. A, F. Mackay, medical officer of health, feared last week that the vaccine might not arrive, and that the vaccination program |would have to be curtailed. Now, the June 13 and 15 vac- |cination days will be carried | through as scheduled. The June | program is designed to give ele- \ 1 ! i : | CRA Makes Plans guests. Top left, left to ri.l!, | magge and Jeanne Ruscoe. Si- are Tom Lyons, Joan Thexion, @miliar celebrations were held Alice Reardon and Maurice Mil- | last week in other UAW centres ette. In picture right are two | in Canada and the U.S. charming guests, Evelyn Del- --Times-Gazette Photos ed | Bowmanville, ary nanced four-fifths of the construc-|of the high school may enter | Canadian universities next fall. school and supports 48 Trinidad | Others will enter the University College of the 'West Indies tion of St. Augustine girls' high primary schools, exception of $30,000 from the gov- First shots were giv-| accouuiant. Members of Local 222, UAW- | at a dance in UAW Hall recent- | CIO celebrated the 20th anni- | ly. It was one of the most co- | versary of the founding of the | lorful social events of the year | local, and also the founding of | for the popular labor hall cen- the United Automobile Workers, | tre. Shown are some of the | _] J -- BR Hs ig 3 | | TEEN-TALK Tra in Pat ol For The Summer | I 1 I S The CRA summer playground part of the playground supervisors metaly school students their se. programs are designed to meet|to be able to teach and instruct| en jn May. tu ents an three basic needs of children, phy-|the children in making different | About 2 00 . | © 4 u 3 sical, social and creative. [things during their arts and crafts| A out 2.2 ih 30 he Salic hy Sports and games give the chil-| periods. e al Hid ay. s 18 w - E | OTTAWA (CP)--The federal h 2ieal ; d dren their exercise, satisfying| The basic training is Jeesived, a oud than the 2500 c.c.'s ask- )--The federal gov- patches, are ideal proving grounds their physical needs and at the Camp Quin-Mo-Lac, where a fu . For Big Xams [oroment is training the goon, vin for fire patrol. same py they learn to get along training in all aspects of super-f But that will De enough" Dr. patrol the seven national parks in| The variety of situations a war-|and share things with the other|vising a playground is covered Mackay said, "But we w ave | . {the Rocky mountains to be as| den must v competent to deal children on the park. prior to the beginning of the sum-|to use excellent technique and| By JOE MARIASH both The town hi Lindsay hii be rugged as their yas domain. with in the Rocky mountains is| To satisfy the creative instinct of mer months. waste not a ron So make it gol Grade 13 students from both| turned over to last for a day, of-| Park wardens who work the year| staggering to the casual visitor. |a child, CRA has designed an arts| Each afternoon at the camp will| around to all children." high sehodls i Oshizya had a soft | felally,; as Jnembers, of He Lind. round among He lowering peaks, Bjsering work as teams in the and crafts Jivgram whereby, if it be devoted to an SHtensive Zo time t last week as they putisay Teen Town celebrate eir and forests o e Rockies now i lis the playground supervisor's| gram of learning how and later their minds to the books and for-| Jamboree. receive advanced training in search $59 SUSIE wiles OF Dame vv. wish, the children will spend a making all the different craft ar- DISTRICT FIRMS 80k about golly to school. . tol yuna lke 8 red picnic | aud Tescre, Sk and winter TesCUe| anart and the man on the spot good part of iho Jay Taking ticles which will he later made by | th e ay, pM 7 Be rion} e Teen ows 3 ava somes {and fire control | must be qualified to work alone in| fancy or practical articles. e children on the parks. Hi -s Ye will be hoy that they A aL gh pti Their Jotionl 38 3 Camp Soleads handling an emergency call from i : Fd {in the Xiint park area of DBanll| a stranded climbing party, a rash wil fing Sut Sl Seis Simi) and what-have-you. national park. This site Yas cho-| of forest fires, a SRR R on ho ; | BIG SWITCH sen because the terrain offers just hear or a balky truck. | it We undetsiaid {hat OCV] made| The big switch is expected to ahoyt every problem a warden is| y ol i take place on June 23 and there|likely to meet. i hi i tots rose Assempry CCC! |will be plenty of entertainment inSCOPE ENLARGED [i a Shredict: The closing assembly for this store for any who can make it UP| Warden training schools are not| By training and instinct he gets ear was held last week at OCCIL there. new to the national parks service|to know when a storm is just A impressed upon all the fact It looks pretty promising that/of the northern affairs department. around the corner. | that the end of school for sum-| Port will soon have a Teen| What is new is the enlarged joope SIGNS OF DANGER mer is near. Speakers at as-| Town of oF Under the -jof the training program for the| The trained eye of the warden sembly were Dr. Claude Vipond {ance of the Perry Lions|men in olive green uniforms with) must recognize advance signs of of the Osh Board of) Ge" We base that statement on|the yellow "Park Warden" flashes/ avalanche danger or accurately Education and Bev Bennett, pre- the fact that when Al Dodds and|on their sleeves. | forecast the strength of snow, ice sident of the OCCI student coun-| Bill Howard, along with yours| Only men with mountain sense, |or rock formations. If a snow cor- cil. Jeruly ade the, tip lo theif bond keenness and stamina are er. Nice lias built wp beyond a safety i ! i hn » mitte to take the courses. ey | level e mus now ow to set a) ius remarks, De. Viton 1&1 very enthusiastic about the whole | become proficient in ea charge to blast it out. | them were leaving to go into a idea. They want to get under way| climbing, fire fighting, sking, sens-| For winter search and rescue world of technical science. "Peo-|2S soon as possible but not before|ing danger and predicting weather | the warden must be sure-footed on| ple", he said, "who concentrate investigating the situation first. | conditions. | skis 2nd snowstioes, In summer he| on things, usually end up frustrat-| Further information says that| The first mountain search and| May have id direct a team lower-| ed". There are opportunities to| 'Whitey is going to make an-| reseye school was held in Banff De casua wn a mine rescue serve people, he added, this is|other speech, but more about that park last October. The 42 wardens Pasket OW eer rock face. both an, interesting and valuable next week. and four RCMP constables who A bo a ighting a Jorest Sire experience. The speaker urged CALLED 'INQUIRER' | attended were typical of a group Thay e Brre 24 a chasm with a the students to concentrate on, OCCI's Centralite, published dur- who trained in February this year ont C rob. ® argon must ideas and study what life is about. ing the past week, had a unique| in winter rescue operations. Cross He ehasm the inching his Dr. Vipond quoted a parable by|cover. In fact the publication is a| The February group also will way a ong wo thin strands of James Thurber of the New Yorker unique effort on the part of the take an intensive refresher course 5 Pak ny on Tope. lati i magazine in saying, "there is no staff, Julie Smith, Sylvia Sloan, in mountain fire control and the ,. ark safety Pen ations Yelylre knowing where most of us are go- Diane Hickey, Judy Seneco, Am-|/use of firefighting equipment that any persons planning to climb ing, but the hell-bent usually get ber Gall, June Murray, Bill Mar-} Prior to last October, wardens @ mountain or Io camp overnight there" shall, Joan Sinclair and Joan|at Banff, Jasper, Yoho and Koote- must register with a warden, Date, Summer employment seems to Florek. nay parks received . search and route and proposed duration of be on everyone's mind these days. In the part called, "Inquirer", rescue training on a small scale stay Yoyst De Specified. : For the guys between the ages we are inclined to agree with Bob for several seasons. Most park visitors comply with of 16 and 18, we would like to sug- Dargan of 12B and going to page IN RUGGED AREA this regulation. However, there gest that the army holds a good|11, we think we can identify the] The enlarged training school is Still are those w ho feel their moun- training course with pay, through-|girl in 13A who cried--by the ini- operated by the warden service of| ain prowess sets them above rules, out the summer. Time is running tails B.B., see the 'Inquirer'. | Banff national park under direc- Der simply leave on a hike and out so any who want to take ad-| Suggestions, criticisms, bits of tion of Chief Warden G. H. W. '°r8€ to register. vantage of it had better get their gossip, questions, news of teen ac-| Ashley and Assistant Chief Warden name on the dotted line tivities in Oshawa needed for this Bert Pittaway assisted by Acting Bruce James, we hear, threw column. We'd like your support in| Warden Walter Perren, former a real party recently at his home building this up into a regular Swiss mountain guide in North Oshawa. It seems the weekly feature. Please call or! The Flint park training school gang had a great time, canoes and write to Joe Mariash, care of the has everything at hand to develop all Oshawa Times-Gazette. resourceful trainees ~ a me - Mountains are sheer, with narrow QUIET STRENGTH rock ledges. The snow is heavy NATIVE TASTE LEOPOLDVILLE (Reuters) Africans in remote villages of the Belgian Congo gather nightly around communal village loud- speakers for regular radio pro- grams of news, household hints CHEMICAL SYMBOL Materials for this special pro-| gram includes everything and any-|th It is surprising just how yeh | e children enjoy the arts an ese periods, they are encouraged thing that is inexpensive and can|crafts period each, day. During be used to make one thing orth of clothespins. out as the : |other. This includes raffia work, to make as many different things| The warden must know his wea-| 004" work, felt craft, bead work, as possible, providing they finish | paper craft, painting and paper them, and the competitive spirit is mache and even making things out | brought roducts are put up on display. at| finished | p A basic training is needed on the! the end of the summer and judged. | Fish May Disappear LONDON AP) -- A British sci- entist fears the coelacanth, the) "living fossil" fish once thought to be long extinct, may really dis- appear soon. The first specimen of the ugly fish, whose ancestors looked much the same millions of years ago, was caught in 1952 in the Comoro islands off Madagascar, | J. L. B. Smith, professor of itchhyology at Rhodes University in South Africa, said the French have obtained a total of 10 speci- mens in the last three years, "more than enough for full sci- entific investigation." He said in a letter to The Times a permanent closed season should now be im- posed. "Science and the world," said Smith, '"'are no longer crying for dead coelacanths. "If a herd of dinosaurs were dis- covered in some remote jungle, the world would rightly recoil in horror from a policy of reward- ing natives to slaughter as many as possible, "The situation of the Comoran coelacanths is in reality no better, and the present policy is debasing 1A | 000 for the Supply of electronic GET CONTRACTS Contracts totalling $1,038,264 were awarded to Oshawa district firms by the department of de- fence production during the last half of April. Two Ajax companies shared in the contracts. Stark Electronic Instruments Limited was award- ed a contract amounting to $640,- pr I Re Ry was given a con- tract totalling 500 for te equipment. the same type General Motors of Canada, Li- mited and Field Aviation were the two Oshawa The former will supply | standard commercial vehicles in | the amount of $200,000; while the latter will provide parachute assemblies in the amount of $170,204. , Drunk Driving (Charge Laid Barry brown, 22, Toronto, was | charged with *'drunk driving" af- |ter P.C. McGregor apprehended {him driving south on Simcoe | | street, here last night. Brown was| | released this morning on $500. | bail. | charges Oshawa men who face of "careless driving"| Two {were released from custody, to-| |day, on $200. They are: Edward |J. Sabanski, 19, and Angus Mac-| Lean. RUM MADE OF PURE WATER LONDON (Reuters) -- A Lon- ------- Falls From Boat While Fishing William Appleton Knowlton, 61, 492 Wilson road north, drowned in Rice Lake on Saturday last, when he fell from a boat which he and a friend, Bruce Pollock, 60, of had rented to go fishing. There will be no inquest. Pollock told police Knowlton stood up in the boat and fell over- board. He apparently suffered a heart attack. A carpenter by trade, Mr. Knowlton was born at Hornings Mills and had spent practically his entire life in the Oshawa area. He was a son of the late Alfred and Ellen. Knowlton. During World War I he enlisted in the 58th Battalion and went overseas with the unit. He was in- valided home in July; 1915. former Dorothea Morton, wi! married at Oshawa in daughters, Mrs. A. Taylor (Gi of Oshawa, R hom Mrs. F. Fehr (Dorothy) of Bi Columbia and two sons, La and William of Oshawa. LIST SURVIVORS Mrs, Bert Armstrong of and Mrs. Courtice; two brothers, Oshawa and Ross of Enn and five grandchildren. at the McIntosh Funeral Cha 2 p.m. on Tuesday, June lowed by interment in Mount Cemetery. Elder V. W. Colling Will conduct the services. wat He is survived by his wife, the hom-he 1924; osemary at "i Also surviving are two sisters, Ll Harold Lacha will be held at rs The funeral service Woman Assists Education Plan TETERBOROUGH, Ont. (CP)-- academic subjects, the high seheol Education in Trinidad owes a great|is used for church services "mpd rTOTER ig Miss Wagar is superintendeff of ere | a Sunday C. deal to the women of the United|club work. Church of Canada, says the cipal of a girls' high school ti school, two n Connie Wagar, former Peterbor-| Girls In Training groups amd=a arm Societies of the church fin-| ough teacher home on a year's fur-| Young People's Society which §he lough, said the Women's Mission-| organized. Miss Wagar said two graduates in Opened three years ago, the|Jamaica. high school cost $192,000. With the ernment and $10,000 in contribu- tions from natives, the school was built with WMS funds. Situated on a 14-acre property, it accommodates 280 students with a staff of 12, including Miss|all-America hockey goalie been elected to Phi Beta appa, national scholastic honorary, the university announced Friday. Wagar's sister Marion, who is the Only 12 students live in residence but more than 100 would like the convenience, said Miss Wagar. Some pupils travel 35 to 40 miles a day to attend school. Miss Wagar has been in Trinidad five years, and her work is familiar to the WMS here. Her book, Treas- ures in Trinidad, is the group's study text this year. After classes, which combine member of the Larries hockey team for four years, play- ing in more than 80 preinioy A allowed 206 goals, an average of Comwall Hockey Goalie Give Fraternity Honors CANTON, N.Y. (AP)-Bill Sioan, |St. Lawrence University's two-time has Sloan of Cornwall, Ont., was a Varsity .55 a game. FAMOUS TRAIL The Appalachian trail, outdoors route in the U. S., extends 2,080 home cooking and handcrafts with miles from Maine to Georgia. i 8 = PAR Park wardens lower an "acci- dent victim" in a mine basket down a sheer rock face at the federal government's training school at Camp Cuthead in the Flint nark area of Banff Nation- al Park. The men who patrol the ARK WARDENS PRACTISE RESCUE = Rocky mountains receive ad- vance training in search and res- cue, ski an wdate rrescue and fore control at the school. Only men with mountain sense, keen- ness and stamina are permitted to take the course at the schools operated by the national parks and music. Research shows that jazz and negro spirituals have no appeal for Congo Africans, al- The symbol H-2-0 for the chem- The British mastiff, a powerful and ice formations can be treach- ical element of water represents dog usually trained as a guard, erous. The lowland mountain two atoms of hydrogen, one of oxy- is generally docile and good-tem- slopes, tangled with thick forest though they often request Hawaiian en pered. growth and scarred by old fire music q{ BL ~~ Fad ONTARIO BARBER'S ASSOCIATION MEETS HERE Bill Rice, Niagara Falls, Harry McKelvie, Kitchener, Lloyd Smith, Oshawa, Robert Keighan, Niagara Falls, Mel Cerich, Clin- ton and Larry Drone, is president The bers, 47 of which of. this city. standing are Ed. Wark, Toronto; Len Dame, Windsor, Robert Ma- quire, London, Harry Ross, Osh- .| Bob Mountjoy, Toronto, and Toronto; | Dan Borne, Kitchener. Mr. Ross | A provincial executive meet- ing of the Ontario Barbers' As- was held in Oshawa recently for the first time since . the founding- of the organization. Shown at meeting, standing, left to right, are Harold Buck- borough, Niagara Falls, Ont; | sociation of the are association association has 1,500 mem- residents --Times-Gazetle Church, Tuesday at 1.30 o'clock. a once important scientific quest d \ | to the level of senseless slaughter : | of one of our most precious heri- i | tages in biology." % | BRINKS SUSPECT With the arrest in Baltimore of | Jordan Terry (above), 31, FBI | agents say they have come upon | | the first portion of the Brink's | robbery loot to have been recov- i | ered since the crime in Boston | some six years ago. Found in | Terry's hotel room was $4,635 in | towering peaks and forests in the seven national parks in the don firm of rum - makers searched Britain for a perfect type of pure water, and fin- ally found it coming from a tap in a Glasgow railroad sta- tion. The rum-makers now are buy- ing the tap water from Glas- gow water department at a penny for 100 gallons, and bring it 400 miles to London. With freightage and handl- ing, the 'perfect water" is costing the firm more than two pounds, 10 shillings a 100 gallons. The "perfect water," from Scotland's Loch Katrine, is extra pure because the rail- road station taps are clean and fresh from constant use. service of the northern affairs department. : Due to the passing of: A. W. S. GREER Q.C. his office will be closed all day Wednesday 10 and 5 bills which, offieials | said, was identified from serial numbers as part of the more | than a million dollar theft loot. LEADS SHOOTING WINDSOR (CP)--Jack Burn of | Woodstock hit 376 out of a possible 400 to take high over-all honors at the Ontario provincial champion- ship clay target shoot held this weekend at the nearby Harrow Gun Club. Close behind in the annual event | which attracted shooters from On- {tario, Quebec, Ohip and Michigan were Roy Cole and J. Hill of Ham- ilton, tied at 375. COMING EVENTS | BINGO MONDAY, JUNE 11, 8 p.m. 219 | Olive Avenue, 20 games, §5. and $6. | 4-840 jackpot 136a BINGO, ST. JOHN'S HALL, CORNER |of Simcoe and Bloor streets, Monday, June 11, 8 p.m. 20 games, 4 pots. 136a RUMMAGE SALE AT Athol Street on Tuesday, June p.m SCOUT HALL, 12 at 1.30 136a RUMMAGY. SALE, CENTRE STREET - PHONE RA 3-3633 12 KING ST. E Meat Specials! Tuesday and Wednesday! PORK CHOPS SFov.oer . as: BUTT .5%¢ won sr: SAUSAGE 2 = 29° LEAN FRESH MINCED TENDER Ib. 4 4. CHUCK CUBED VEAL STEAK 2 ws. 1.00