Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 7 Aug 1956, p. 3

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Lakeview Park Is A Popular Resort sis masses wei we +53 Picnics From Out-Of-Town Kedron Holds. | PointsEnjoyFacilities Tabloid Meet la soft grass, nights is often in the park om week days. Neil attends sometimes Something new in the track and) INDIVIDUAL CHAMPIONS field meet pattern was the Tabloid] Doreen Coverly, 43. Meet which was d at Camp| Sandra Van De Walker, 41. Visitors from many places come for picnics to beautiful and spac- ious Lakeview Park. Mr, and Mrs. Hardworker come to relax and have fun in the family group. Oshawa citizens are fortunate in having such a wonderful spot. Lakeview Park offers its com- fortable, cool lawns to many peo- ple from all over Ontario. Visitors| from the Marttimes and British Columbia also drop in. Cars with LARGE FAMILY PICNICS One of the biggest picnics was that of the Teefys, McMorrows and during the week but mostly on Sundays. Sometimes they are friends, sometimes with the fam- Kedron, last Saturday. In brief, a) Marilyn Harvey. 40 Tabloid Meet is made up of alllTEAMS AND CONTESTANTS campers and each team t Shirley Selleck, Captain, Heath- PEA v a every year to Lakeview for | sive parks, played host to thou- against itself. Eight events were arranged and demanded certain ekills for the experienced and old- jer girls, also other events which athletes with surprising results. F [Eight teams were chosen and in a "; |contra clockwise direction, the team 'rotated around the Sports ' [Field from one event to the next |after a lapse of several minutes, '/In less than 65 minutes, 52 girl |campers (eight teams) rotated _4|around the course ih grand style. The events for the Tabloid Meet were as follows: 50-yard dash, softball throw, goal-hi toss, bowl- ing, soccer kick, hoop race, arch- ery and the standing broad jump. § (WINNING TEAM Shirley Selleck captain, Meath er Collins, Sandra Van De Walker, were performed by the younger| Byrnes -- all one big family. John Byrne and Jim Teefy were both celebrating their 38th A Gerald, Francis and Geral-Ann Teefy come from R.R. 4, Lindsay. Bill and Kevim McMorrow are from R.R. 2, Pickerging. So are Mary and Edward Teefy; James, Terry and children, Tom, Bobby and Hughes Teefy. The Oshawa branch of the family includes John, Margaret Byrne and chil- dren, Mary-Patricia, and Anne, They are from R.R. 2, Osh- awa. Another big family came from Toronto. Twenty-five members of the Calls reunited Sunday after- hoon. This is an annual affair with them, always at Lakeview Park. Some members of the family came er Collins, Sandra Van De Walk- \er, Rejeanne Chamberland and | Betty Selleck, | Shirley Bint, Captain, Barbara King, Linda Sutherland, Mary Haley and Carol Bint, Maxime Stauffer, Captain, Doro- thy Selleck, Esther Bellingham, Linda Williams, Shirley Know and Doreen Coverly. Cheryl Morden, Captain, Pauline Pace, Jeanne Shrigley, Carmen | Duguay, Gloria Van nA Walker {and Elizabeth Belling y | Marion Harvey, Captain, Bar- bara Olynyk, Marianne Blakolm- ler, Kathleen Nussbaumer, Jill Harrison and Donna Jarvis. | Gayle Cherry, Captain, Pamela | Morden, Nancy Arkle, Jackie Har- Alberta and other province license plates were at the park this Sun- day afternoon. : Many interesting and unusual personalities come to the park. Hundreds of the most interesting people are there each week-end. They are the men, women, and children -- who make up this fan- cy world of ours. Not 'big shots', but individuals with their own likes and dislikes. All have a spec- ial life story of their own; no two 'are alike SALVATION ARMY THERE The Salvation Army comes to these people at Lakeview Park. Thus they can afford bodily re- laxation without missing spiritual food. With the Salvation Army and | | i i kend, The Call family, most | ada e s i ; ta, are pictured above during a weekend eal jaImyy their annual family reunion. | sands of holiday spirited people break in their holiday festivities | of whom live in Toronto, have | Lakeview, which is one of Can- | over the weekend from Ottawa, others from RCAF Thirty-five members of the Call | Station, Coldlake, Alberta. family, some from as far away its band come men like A, J. Rejeanne Chamberland and Betty rison and Virginia Bint. Gail| Graves of 57 Warren Avenue. Mr. Selleck. Score, 156 points. Grace Arkle, Captain, as Ottawa and Cold Lake, Alber- at Lakeview Park over the | been coming from all over Can- | ada's most beautiful and expan- | --Times-Gazette Photo a small part of the fun thousands of people who i c Just Bad by : oliday | di. Sac 1 4 |directly related to many illnesses| FUN AT THE BEACH shown on the faces of Donna | splash through the rolling white and Dennis Bessie, Constable | surf, iruly enjoying their day at 'eddy - Masie- / i RE --Times-Gazette Photo - |precipitate an asthmatic attack. colds, sore throats, | chite . Shirley Binf's team, 146 points Maxime Stauffer"s team, 143, Cheryl Morden's team, 136 [FOR BETTER HEALTH ' Weather Affects Health ' InDog Days Of Summer These statistics revealed DO you like this warm summer| weather better than those cool unsettled, cold weather brought days of last winter? If you do,|an increase in the number of chances are you're on the slender|slender persons committing sui- side or at least of normal weight.|cide while those of considerable|; Thin persons usually enjoy the|girth and weight generally waited warm weather more . than their|for warm weather before ending stout friends, But they react un-|it all, favorably to a cold wave. The| If you're seriously overweight, |weather plays an important part|I think you'll find you have great- {not only in our general health,|er difficulty adjusting to high {but also in our day-to-day moods. | temperatures than you have to A cold rain, for example, fe-/cold or even frigid weather. quently alters the disposition of| With every change in the weath- 1 persons iderably. 1It|er there's a physiological change may bring on a state of physical (in you. The weather affects every and mental fatigue even though (chemical and metabolic process in they had been in a pleasant mood your body -- your body tempera- only hours before. {ture, blood pressure, pulse, even Thunderstorms, incidentally, are the urine. So what can we do? For one thing, let's enjoy this and even deaths. | ABRUPT CHANGES summer weather as long and as The abrupt changes in baro- much as we can because, before {metric pressure and high humid-|we know it, colder weather will lity accompanying a storm can be here. And that means more , earaches and And statistics show that a high other ills. . umber of heart failures occur QUESTION AND ANSWER during thunderstorms. R. W.: What causes ankles | You have probably noticed thaf|swell it's much easier for you and the heart? ren to become irritable and| Answer: The most common utralia Rehabilitating Feminine Lawbreakers By COLIN SINCLAIR MELBOURNE (Reuters)--Iron bars have given way to frilly col-! ored curtains in Australia's new- est prison for women, Until recently, women prison- ers in Victoria were kept in a sec- tion of the grim stone fortress at Pentridge, the state's main prison in the Melbourne suburb of Co- burg. Now all women serving sen- fences for offences anywhere in Victoria are a community group at Fairfield, in Melbourne's rural jdressmakers, machinists, laun-| and outside dresses, cooks and waitresses-- open groun and good citizens. |for flowers and vegetables. "We try for more than deten- Beyond are fences, but the: tion--we try for rehabilitation," of wire, not stone walls, and says the matron, Miss Katherine the wire will be hidden by flower- Perrin, ling trees and creepers. "We want to provide these wo-| There is room for 100, which is men with new horizons; to putlabout twice the number of women them in touch with 'things which normally under sentence in Vie- they Have never known. toria. 'We try to foster the good in- i i stinets in the heart of vary we. PRL Mm se iy man. ; 3 ; PAINTED WHITE BEHAVIOR COUNTS the group of buildings d is being cultivated y are even on stormy days. It's easier causes of swollen ankles are heart ill on such , too. land kidney diseases. For a further example of what| In kidney disease, there may be the weather might do, let's .look|a general swelling of the body. In at some suicide statistics from heart disease, the swelling is in Chicago. the lower part of the body. United States Hesitant On Admitting Refugees By GEORGE KITCHEN i | Bhar RoE EIN Weiler | frcantine, in Tose soustsles WASHINGTON (CP) -- 'Approxi-| ere the quo as are spent, thous- | {mately 40,000 European refugees ands of applicants who have quali- lare barred from entering d 1 United States because they fled to|strictions of American immigra-| [the "wrong" countries in the tur.|tion law cannot obtain the neces-| |moil that followed the ending of sary documents. In some coun-| |the war, |tries, quotas are reported to be| | These are the people, many of|SPoken for up to the year 2,000. |them escapees and persons expel-| The Refugee Act, to i Is it due to Kidneys or Marilyn Harvey's team, 133, Gayle Cherry's team, 130, Grace Arkle's team, 126, Barbara Campbell, 124. Dawe, Emily Hanowski, Gloria Ricketts, Denise O'Neil and Linda Cotie. Barbara Campbell, Elizabeth Philbey, Josephine Pace, Denise Duguay, Joan Palmer and Mar- garet Nussbaumer. Graves, 87, has been in the army for 76 years. The Coulls have three genera- tions in the army. Mrs. David Coull, 89, has been with the Sal- vation Army for 76 years Her son, Tom Coull, 62, of 175 Roxborough, Howe Claims Elderly Liberals + Tougher Than Underhill Thinks OTTAWA (CP)--Trade Minister Howe made a brief comment in the Commons Monday on histor- ian F. H. Underhill's statement that there are too many old men among Canadian politicians. The 70-year-old minister was speaking in a debate on the new International Wheat Agreement when Davie Fulton (PC -- Kam- loops) asked, out of the blue, what he thought of Mr. Under- hil's weekend speech to the Cou- chiching conference. "I did notice that he said some- thing about there being too many old men in government," Mr. Howe said, "but I also notice that the old men who have cracked up are not members of the present government." This was an obvious reference to the fact that five Progréssive Conservatives, the latest being Opposition Leader Drew, during this session of Parliament! On the other hand, Mr. Undery have'Credit leader Low 56. a sergeant major, has been in the army 50 years Granddaughter Marguerite Coull, 22, is a lieuten. ant stationed at Belleville head- quarters. John Coull, 26, a bands- man, is the grandsen of Mrs. David Coull. They were all reared through the Sunday School Army. Also attending was great-grand David, aged three. Doug Elfstrom, 3, of Dunbarton, thailed Lakeview as, '"About the nicest park I know of within travelling of the city. There are some parks in Toronto, but we seem to like this ome." When asked whether they always listened to the Salvation Army, Doug replied, "We do like it, but we do not make a habit of it. It is very nice of them to come here. I always had a soft spot In my heart for the Salvation Army." Doug came with wife Joyce and sister Garda. Her husband, W. Ab- bott of Toronto, and children, Dianne, 1%, and David, 4%, were also with them Down at the beach one-day va- cationers chased the playful sun in an attempt to get a little brown coloring from it Children dug the | suffered illnesses or taken a rest |during the current session. | Mr. Underhill, former professor lof history at the University of |Toronto and now curator of Lau- |rier House here, compared the ages of today's top political fig- |ures with those of a Reat.centuly |agos in an address to the annual |conference on public affairs at Geneva Park, near Orillia, Ont. John A. MacDonald was less {than 50 in, 1864 and his chief col- [league Georges E. Cartier just over 50. D'Arcy McGee was 39, [Charles Tupper 43 and Leonard [Tilley 46. All played top roles in |the political development of the | Dominion, {hill eaid, Prime 'Minister St. Lau- rent is 74, Trade Minister Howe 70, Agriculture Minister Gardiner 72. * Opposition leader Drew 62, CCF leader Coldwell 67 and Social P 4 y LE] 7 sand, buried each other, fought |sand storm battles, and splashed in the water with chattering teeth, Small frys made mud pies In the older age group pretty girls poised lectly attracting { le i hy { the!fied under the rigid security re-|:t3 | the attention of the opposite sex. out of] Then there was Gerry Peacock, 7, playing ball with his dad, Mr. H. C. Peacock of Port Hope. . Peacock came with his wife's ple but, as a good father, he not neglect his son. Adeline Anonichuk of 350 is a fourth form student at She was in the company of D. Bejkowsky, also of 550 and Mrs. Lorne Dutka, of Depot, Angus. The husbands were at the other end of the park pas. ticipating in games. Mrs, (] nine-month-old son, Lorne, sucking happily a milk bottle. "We used to come out more of- ten before, but not lately," Mrs. Bejkowsky told this , This young wife, a clerk in the GM the family income. helps out wi e 5 on, 1 like to chase boys," Ade. line Anonichuk Sescribed jokingly her 'fav pastime'. Mr. A. Von Gunten and wife, Ruby, of R.R. 2, Oshawa, are at the park once in a while. With them was daughter Sharon, 4 months, ang Ms, hig Gunten's niece, Nora Maracle, 3. DECLARE PARK LOVELY Picnics are once a year affairs with the Price and Milne families of Toronto. This was their first visit to Lakeview Park. "It is really lovely," remarked one of the ladies, 'but we won't stay any longer than we have fo today -- it is too cool We may re- |turn again' h , A cial bus brought 14 patients, ae- companied by relatives, from the Ontario Hospital at Whitby, Most wi "{/ Boys and youths in and fo ol did remarkable stunts to + + | compensate the feminine display. '| Life guards, Philip Slyfield and Peter Krawetz, were busy watch. . ing over the happy week-end quiet J] a relaxation to these individuals, Everyone coming to Lakeview Park can find a pleasant spot for relaxi i sunbathing, crowd. They are full-time 1 ces of the city, on hand seven days a week. Back in the park like many of 'heir colleagues, GM workers, Andrew Brejorek, 24, of 751 Ro- ~~ wena, and Neil Larson, 26, of 741 nd wt and picnicking Unless the children go overboard in their tumultuous games, which rarely happens, er something unusual occurs, and Mrs Hardworker are ass of a place to rest in perfect enjoyment, 724 NEWS BRIEFS GRANTS RESIDENCE WASHINGTON bill (AP) -- Pres. |until k 'dent Eisenhower Monday signed Carnival Aug. granting permanent res-|coins may then be redeemed for |accepted. The nickels are lawful the forthcoming Kinsmen 17 and 18. The dence in the United States to the|the regular nickels. adopted in & North Korean pilot who in 1953 flew the first MIG fighter to the American Air Force for a $100,- 000 reward. The pilot, 24-year-old No Kum Sok, is an engineering student at the University of Dela- ware at Newark. PIGEONS THRIVING WOODSTOCK (CP)--Since they were denied eniry into the belfry over the town hall, pigeons have sought other perches. Officials re- port the flocks are~back in greater b Residents say the pi- CAR DISAPPEARS SUDBURY (CP) -- Sam MeKin- |ley is wondering where his 1942 model car is. He left it on a high- way near this city because it was not running. Police said they knew nothing about the auto but believe it .may have been sowed away for scrap. WHO OWNS CHOPPERS? PORT HURON (CP) -- Police are trying to decide who is the true owner of a set of false teeth. Albert Allen says the choppers, found on a nearby beach, are the ones he lost five years ago. But Henry Albert claimed them as the outskirts. FULL OF CHEER The prison is named Fairlea, and its atmosphere is cheerful, friendly and full of hope. Prisoners there learn to become N ; | The rooms are for well-behaved, |led. from Iron Curtain countries, 1953, was the subject of bitter dis- buildings ainted white and" ws long-term prisoners who graduate|who happen to be living in coun. Pute Within the state department| around a central garden shaded !° them from the dormitories. At|tries whose quotas for immigra.|last year. Its administrator, se- by 50 - year - old oaks and elms, Present, each of four women im-|tion to the U.S. have been ex-|{¢urily chief "Scott McLeod, was| Each of the buildings has smaller prisoned for murder has a room hausted, Bwory Chvsy migration eipert individual garden beds around it|'°, herself. They were left in the lurch when|2dWard Corsi of applying its ad- --------------------| The white painted dormitories| Congress, in the rush to wind up| ™Mittedly strict provisions with have brightly-colored frilly cur-|its recent session, failed to amend "0due toughness. "4 [tains at the windows and patch-|the Refugee Relief Act and trans-| The program was speeded up, ? ; | work-embroidered bedspreads. |fer the unused quotas of other|but it now is grinding to a out | y y id TRAVELS FROM SHIP TO SHIP Pastel pink doors lead into the countries to those whose quota because quotas are running out. attractive single rooms, each lists have been over-subscribed. | Government officials 1} "#4 painted in a different color. Be-| Under the act, 90,000 refugee have urged Cosas pied This is how CPO Douglas Hat- side each bed is a small chest of (visas were assigned to Germany ally reluctant to lower immigra-| len of Port Arthur, Ont., goes drawers for personal belongings. and Austria. However, many ref. |tion barriers, to redistribute the| about his duties while at sea as There are pictures on the wal .|ugees who poured into those two|quotas. They point out that Am- | Pale, pastel - green walls and|countries found living conditions erican propaganda agencies con- gay curtains make the big assem-|to their liking and settled there, [stantly urge people t bly hall a cheerful place. with the result that almost half behind A | gunnery instructor for a squad- ron of three Royal Canadian Navy frigates. An lished gons are thriving. sailors when the United States battleship Iowa docked was the FRER TICEDY royal yacht Britannia. Thousands Flee From Flood In India KARACHI, Pakistan (Reuters | Thousands of persons led their {homes this week as the great {River Indus, swollen by heavy rains, swept through West Pakis- tan leaving a trail of wrecked |dwellings and flooded fields. Reports reaching here today said a state of emergency has been declared in the worst areas |where flooding tributaries have 12 King St. East Phone » » RA 3-3633 Meat Specials! Wed. & Thurs. VEAL CHOPS sun 2 .. 85¢ Tender Cubed VEAL 2 .- 1.00 STEAKS 2 SIRLOIN uw 79* ® WING Fresh Mae co r artis we ol county: SAUSAGE 2 u 29° 183a | N ckpots. 83 ddd TTR i b g 3 | a m L TO TWO owner of the plane, and Georges | ¢ Roy, 41, died. John W. Bailey e of this single-engine plane | 34, escaped with injuries. All lich crashed near Mont Rol- | were Montrealers. The «light wd, Que., 40° miles north of | plane siruck a telegraph pole be- | Montreal. Andre Jolicoeur, 41, | fore it crashed and burned. PLANE CRASH FATA The bodies of two men were {aken from the charred wreck- ENJOYING RESPITE AT CAMP SAMAC On his assistant camp Samac, enjoys with his wife Isa- belle and fifteen - month - old | is a teacher at OCVL PERMITTING, THERE wing of films, Wednesday, McLaughlin Band Shell, aus- Ee foo SAILORS' HOLIDAY | J 0 the Iron Curtain but, once nL ORTSMON TH, anand (CP) LINDSAY (CP) A parking |ones he lost five years ago. Police | There are recreation rooms fur-|of the German and Austrian visas|they have taken the risk and ticket here was paid with 20|are trying to arange for the two nished with easy chairs, radios/are going unused and will expire broken through, the U.S. is un- wooden nickels. The tender was men to meet. Failing that a den- jond Sabie' louis Sauipment; there this year. able to offer them asylum. D done, but that no buildings in the tal technician will make the de- : f I restricted are A ision. 1 Srying Mmachives in he Jandy y ; » a Sy ; ree ead I'l MUSHROOM CLOUD iii da bared, om the prin POZNAN ACTIONS j [and he Sct mB piss x 3 § Fim : linaVitnesses said flames shot into Among _ those slightly injured LONDON (Reuters)--The gen- | vege 5 ss ; hd hin . [the aif, and 2 Howing mush- put not detained in hospital was|eral council of the British Trades fa, t A A i njure froom 2pe slond ormed. Francis Kopinski, 36, of St.|Union Congress has endorsed a i , 7 a blast PH ae] ollowed the David's, Ont., a Canadian worker resolution expressing horror at g 7 He FF . hn St os roug t under control|at the plant. the "brutal measures" taken Earli Wo ours. The lunch-hour explosion rocked |against the workers of Poznan,' Y Xp osion classified Pepurts were that the|this industrial city of 100,000, and|Poland, during the recent rioks Sa ities Ty ject, believed involv-|the smoke was visible on the|there. It decided to make a pro- . NIAGARA FALLS, N.Y. (AP)--| Reporters iy had been 2ffecieq Canadian side of Niagara Falls,|test to the Polish ambassador Investigators today sought the |-- ven local police-|Ont. here. cause of a million-dollar explosion at the Olin Mathieson Chemical | Corp. plant here Monday that] killed three men and injured 17. E Company officials said the blast wrecked three buildings where an insecticide was being manufac-| tured and damaged six others. The three dead were Herman C. Strablow, 29, John Maule, 3, | | and Francis Kramarik, 22, all of the Niagara Falls, N.Y. area. brought the Indus to danger lev- | Twelve of the injured were still els. In the provimce of Sind alone f i |in hospital today, and a company | about 30,000 are reported home- spokesman estimated the damage | less. . 3 ' : t to buildings and equipment at $1, bo Food and medical supplies are E A " 000,000. | {being rushed in by relief teams il cad | He said the explosion, which! sinh boats a helicopters |came shortly after noon, was in a| ae ice ne by aeTRenCY tearns p building near an area where clas- | |ported nine inches above the high- sified government work was being, jest level previously recorded. f This capital's refugee popula-| | [tion of about 500,000 has been | COMING EVENTS | drenched by the heavy rains dur- f ing the last two days, but food| WEATHER daughter (Brownie) Christine |and medical supplies are being| il be 2 she the fresh air, sunshine. and Joved in Rehabilitation author. { Evening, yt a ities are moving about 8, refu- i water of the camp. Mr. Elliott |gees into permanent accommoda tion, day off John Elliott, chief at Camp i) | dl Wx |FERNHILL P. | Avalon, six ja

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