ADDITIONS TO PROVIDE ROOM FOR MORE PUPILS ~--=Plan Second Air Survey Of Antarctic Regions TRTRREREL IARI TTY Foerveml * A CREE SE RMONY PUBLIC SIMCOE PUBLIC SCHOOL | TORONTO -- A boy and a wom- an suffered broken Coronation, Har- rate traffic accidents | Wednesday night. Ruby Alderwood, 71, of Oshawa This will greatly relieve the suffered a broken left leg when crossed Yonge street at Snowdon avenue. Police said the woman's view was | primary obstructed by {charge was laid against the driv-| Edward Bridge, 26, staff sepa- hibited. Only three more days and onc in Toronto again Oshawa schools will be ming with activity as pupils and of sum- "fling" for some, and for others will be ready the first of the new OF an opportunity to settle down for year some other types of em- school after a summer work as the case may be officials 220 PRIMARY e days with Labor Day weekend, primary schools, ¥ this year during the first, mony and North Simcoe, will con- of leisure congestion term which is expected to see the largest enrolment in the history of along with the office All city schools will re- two collegiates, are Tuesday making preparations for the ex. SChools, 220 in all, i Time come under the jurisdiction of Dr. who was appointec Tuesday schedules of work for both pupils bY the Oshawa School Board last 7000 will and teachers are just a few of the|¥ 1700 second- tasks facing them are expected real work Lang- It is expected that close to 10,000 accommodation. { Thomas Sewell, four of Quebec suffered a broken leg when morning. Of this number, the tendent of schools Of the 220 teachers, 45 will be he ran into the p. v to Oshawa schools wil ary and another 1400 ath of a car|1956 sales will top the 1955 peaks; | NOW. H irvive: , Of . 97 . " another 8.8 per cent are geared for stores throughout the city a clear er. The eo rel " h are featuring displays of textbooks as va " New Brunswick avenue. The accident occurred in and school supplies this week { ront of the lad's home In addition to these teachers the are secondary schools S/teachers and the separate schools, apparently anxious to get back at schools, trying to avoid the hb the ceed all past seasons, but will do € 1 | usy at work putting the s purchase in tip-top shape for the s r. Elliott asks that all parents outlook for retailers is also bol- oes nding their children to| Stered by their good open-to-buy chool for the first time should! Position. a birth certificate greatly assist] the teachers during enrolment. board urges all students to morning MANY BEGINNERS ing to school the day will not like- COMING EVENTS CORONATION ORAN Woodcrest School will definitely be hundreds of children who will be|reigste ready for opening o Is| without fail as the tremendous job : IH 1g of organization will be completed|the government oil company, said|19 - month - old rt on the basis of the enrolmgaé- will! first morning also announces a formal educ them-| barges 1 estab- | coast their lished after the first registration. and nive were injured. eorner Bloor and Simeoe fo nty B65 - 87. Five 540 + jackpots. = * 204aifor some time mow at three other or she will be accepted. if Labor Day WwW e ekend Crew Members Gathering Will Tax Transport Present indications show that|problems. holiday", will see thousands cf|est weekend of the year. people converging on the high-/ALL POLICE ALERTED th / ways, buses and railways, taking] Chief Herbert Flintoff of thejues that have been occurring on advantage of this last long week- Oshawa Police force said that all/these long weekends," one official end before the fall season. |available men will be on call if|stated. | A. W. Stonebridge, passenger|the need arises. / On the provincial front the Hon. agent of the CNR in Oshawa, "Our greatest problem during|James H. Allen, minister of high- stated this morning that he ox- these holidays is usually the tie up/ways, asks that all who use the pects railway traffic to triple over|at traffic lights. If situations arise streets and highways of the prov the weekend. "Starting Friday and|we will despatch men to the dif-/ince to make a full effort to drive through Monday our ticket staif|ferent lights, so as they may be with care and consideration. will be working around the clock," operated manually," he said. "Highway tragedies can be pre- he said. | Chief Flintoff asks that allivented by the simple observation The railways will provide extra motorists take the greatest ~arc to|of driving and walking behavior sections on their trains, especiallv|avoid accidents over the weekend. |set out in the Highway Traffic Act. on Friday for the going traffic and| "Accidents always prove that/No part of this act is intended to on Monday for the coming home one or more traffic laws have been |inconvenience anyone. 'The act is traffic. violated. The driver who obeys designed to prevent accidents and USE EXTRA BUSES traffic signs and signais is follow- provide maximum travel conveni- The trains will not be the only|ing a pattern designed for safety|ence for all, and every time you means of transport taxed to|by experts. So why take a chance; {violate a driving rule, you are po+ capacity. H. Moore, supervisor of you have nothing to gaia and|tentially a killer," Mr, Allan raid. the local Gray Coach Lines, said|everything to lose. A good driver COURTESY TOWARD OTHERS this morning that extra buses will/looks ahead, sees ahead aad thinks, A statement by Mr. Allan, if be on all weekend. ahead. The best advice I can coffer kept in mind by all travellers over "This week, with people travel- is to know and obey your traffic/the weekend, would certainly re- ling to the Canadian. National Ex-|signs," Chief Flintoff said. duce the number of highway fatal- hibition in Toronto we have been TO CONTROL SPEEDING _.|ities which have been occurring in going steady from early in the| Provincial, police officials said|Ontario. morning until late at night. Now that all available men would be| In the statement he said: "The {with the long weekend coming uplon the highways in an effort to|problem of traffic accidents will |and the expected increase in traf-|crack down on all speediug motor-be brought tinder contrcl only {fic we will have no rest whatso-|ists {when each of us realizes that our {ever," he said. "As on : ) f I | Ticket agents and rail and bus radar spot checks will be main- be carried on in our association |officials are not the only ones withitained along the highway and no|with other road users." RADIO STILL POPULAR Zoning Bylaw 'Stations Increase Nearly Ready Des pit o TV Inr oa d S The proposed Oshawa zoning by- law, iy the works for five years, belong is now nearing completion. City Solicitor E. G. McNeely t0/said * yesterday that, barring hitches, the bylaw will 2/law by the end of the year. "At least that done' pp McNeely said. By KEN CLARK | drivars will always isi de its North radio. : AL Ton. television, made is after Nor can the housewife get alon the war, some predicted that radio Without a radio. Doing dishes end would form another extinct spa- burping babies cannot be a cies as the human race progress- With one eye on a TV set. Tradi-| ed backwards. tionally, this work has been done It is common knowledge now|t the accompaniment poap ce-boxes. that nobody is keeping their radios|°Peras, drooling out of voice-boxes for their antique value 20 or 30 Another thing, to enjoy music ears from now you don't have to see the orches- Ye Radio is stronger than ever 1!ira and the band, and sometimes won't quote statistics to prove it iis preferaile not io ste thei 4 1 haven't got uy, anyway. category will close his eyes any- RADIO IS HEALTHY way when he listens. I do know that another radio the point where it is a "rough working draft." {board before a final draft {drawn up by the city solicitor, The final draft must also Take away these reasons for the station has opened up in London, existence of radio and a lot of Ontario, recently, in the face of others besides and you still two radio stations already operat- wouldn't lose the radio audience. ing there plus the TV station whieh And for this reason. came in the past three years. People like entertainment in or- Radio is healthy, and this is/der to escape from the cares of why |the present-day world. And TV and of the people before enactment, Local and provincial mercy will be shown careless and this weekend, "summer's last big|police are preparing for their busi-speeding- drivers. Everything in our power will be done to lower the high number of highway fatal- the July 1 weekend, normal face to face behavior must Hunting air crew from opera- tions in man, the world including the North Pole, are gathering at Oshawa Air- port in preparation for the British government's second air survey of the Antarctic. The two Canso am- phibions aircraft, which did part of the 60,000 square mile survey last year, are being readied for their ardous duties by Field Avia- tion Company Limited, Hunting's far - flung parts of| At Field Aviation Base a, auton, Edge H, e, the eer; e H, Green, of Crawley, Sussex, the navigator. A member of Inter- national Aerodio Ltd., will also act as radio operator of this crew. One of the Qansos Soing to the Antarctic has recently returned under Captain Pettus from a PSC survey flight beyond the magnetic north pole. Its flight to the Ant- arctic will make it and its captain servicing and overhaul or tion. Captains of the two Cansos are Robert Pettus, of St. Thomas and Christopher Gavin - Robinson, of London, England. This will be Bob Pettus' first flying experience in the Antarctic, although he has had much experience flying in the Arc- tic and other parts of the world. He repl James Gr hields of Oshawa, last year's Canso captain, who is now making flying and mining history by flying the world's first electromagnetometer fixed wing aircraft and helicopters for another Hunting "company, Aeromagnetic Surveys Limited, of Toronto. RETURN TO ANTARCTIC The crew, captained by Bob Pettus, will include Lew Terry of Toronto, as co . captain, who re- turns to Antarctica for the second time; and Paul Nielson, of Osh- awa, the engineer. Pettus, Terry and Nielson fly for Kenting Avia- tion, the flying arm of the Photo- raphic Survey Corporation, of Toronto, the world's largest and most diversified single air survey unit, which is supplying aircraft and some air crew for the survey. The other air crew are from an associate company, Hunting Aero- surveys Limited, of Elstree, Eng- land, which is working directly for the British government, These HAS air crew include John L. Symington, of Boreham Wood, Hertfordshire, the naviga- tor in the Pettus crew and an as yet unknown radio operator from Now, the bylaw has advanced to This draft must be approved by the city engineer and the planning| is| be approved by city council, and the Ontario Municipal Board. It may also be published for the approval Also in connection with the by- law, the Oshawa Planning Board, is now completing the last of seven maps showing the exact use of every lot in the city under the International Aeradio Ltd. The crew of the Canso under become|Captain Gavin - Robinson include {Ralph R. W. Brumwell, of Mepal, is our hope," Cambridgeshire, the co-captain; the only cial aircraft and pilot to have operated at the ex- treme ends of the earth. By par- ticipation in last year's Antarctic expedition, The Photographic Sur- vey Corporation and its arm, Kenting Aviation . became the first commercial operators in the world to have flown in all seven continents. TO LEAVE SEPT. 24 The two Cansos and crews are scheduled to leave Oshawa Air. port on Sept. 24 for their long flight south. Enroute they will stop at the Falkland Islands to do a month - long aerial survey there for the British government. They intended to do this survey last year on their return but damage to the aircraft incurred in an Ant- arctic gale with winds of over 100 miles an hour, delayed it. The Cansos are headed for De- ception Island, off the coast of Antarctica's Grahamland Peninsu- la, where the survey is to be con- ducted. Deception is so named be- cause it appears to be a solid is- land from the surface of the sea. Actually it consists of a horseshoe of fairly high cliffs which form the rim of a volcano whose water- filled centre forms a natural land- ing place for the Cansos, On the shore of this volcanic lake a slipway has been prepared for the Cansos. There is an emer- gency runway in case ice flows from the outside sea penetrate through a narrow strait. A base has been piepared by last year's expedition. With such preparations fand an earlier start made than last year, it is hoped that the 60,000 mile survey will be completél by spring when the Cansos will return to Oshawa. Window Puncher Pays Fine Of $25 A one-sided punching duel be- {tween two plate glass windows of the Simpson-Sear store in Oshawa| "No sir, I am too young," alle answered the accused. avenue south, Oshawa, on the early| morning of August 30, ended with! the windows broken in pieces and| lice sta- schievous and Gerald Blair, 20, 70 LaS Blair on his way to the tion charged with proposed zoning. There are a lot of obvious rea- radio are primarily and first of |sons. TV sets will always be|all entertainment mediums, de- {angers to ars. iy distracting. spite the number of public service BLADE OF ADZ everal people including Attorney- and educational types of programs General Kelso Roberts might not/that filter along the frequesioies. ALWAYS ARCHED approve. . ' | In radio, you coul ear Amos | And the number of cars as weland Andy, the Kingfish and the to Ei 0 Zxellke. Cutting all know are multiplying as fast as rest, and your imagination built up ADS -- especially the Cla rabbits. Some radio stations pointia rosy picture of the whole wry, sified Ads--are Hi best as hours - long disc-jockey programs cheerful crowd on this long-time § finding oe pea at the car - driving audience. Car-|popular program. ! tools, homes, furniture ng | When it switched to TV some countless other things you're . |years ago, Amos and Andv and not using. Hunting Dates Announced They were real, just as the viewer! experienced Want Ad writer |was real. Anyway, in my opinion,| sharpen your ad for quick less was left up to the imaginaticn| regyits, and a lot of the punch was Jost. up to the breaking of the windows. Police stated that they came |along too late to save the store | windows. {Blair at the time they arrived had They explained that turned his attention from the store and was attempting to punch a telephone booth which stood beside the building. HAD BEEN DRINKING Blair told His Worship that he had been drinking during the eve- |ning, and could not state whether |the windows had offended him, or (just what had happened, for him |$25 o turn his wrath on the store. "Were you drinking in a erage at asked His Worshly, "Well then where did you get the liquor?" was the next question. "I found a half case of beer on the side of King St.," was e answer Blair gave to His Wor- far from the place to lie about his actions. FRIEND OFFERS RESTITUTION A friend of Blair's in the court- stepped forward make restitution to the firm for the cost of the windows. The court was told that total damages would be close to $150 which the friend paid after a quick to a . His Worship fined the accused and costs or one month in county jail. the crowd appeared on the screen. Phone RA 3-3492 and let an In other words, TV doesn' al- 1 TORONTO | 131, 1957. | By JACK LEFLER bored listening to them only ing, muttering man sits shackled hand and foot in a lighted isalation booth. His thick shoulders strain against the straps binding him to Squirrel (lack gray and fox): | Small Amounts 3, 1956 J 1 2 - ps g a 050 Gan Bid Home [3a bwed se cr st We live in an age where man and down. Hay, Stanley, Stephen (Huron gounty); | Whitby, Pickering, Whitby |tario county); West Townships s What are these children guilty of P determine whether county) -- Nov. 3, 1956, to Feb. 28, sane or 1957. and bread, are such children worth | | Remainder of the province --|a penny each to you? Do they |Aug. 23, 1956, to Oct. 31, 1957. |mean as much to you as a large | Bag limit, six cottontail rabbits package of cigarets? in one day, purchase or sale pro-| These homeless fots mean murder of his former wife and her husband. Merkouris was convicted a year |ago of murdering Mrs. Despi LOS ANGELES (AP)--A scowl- kouris glaringly] { built, Prisoner Imprisoned In Courtroom During Trial The violent outbursts of Mer- early in his current sanity hearing caused Judge Nye to or- der that he be physically gagged. But Merkouris worked the gag loose and continued his tirades. "Something had to be done so Merkouris could hear what was soundproof and air-condi- tioned. A loud speaker carries insane, | Courtroom voices into the booth, telephone line enables Mer- verse. Merkouris sits there now |flanked by two sheriff's deputies, 4 drone on. He enough to "Mom' Whyte that she has dedicated her life and work] te loving and caring for them. Children have found hope and love, a new food and care in her home that! {eq they would never have otherwise porhes, 4 known. trial, Hunting Goods as the pr |Forbes, 35, and was sentenced to mutters and sometimes screams, death. But the Supreme Court re- but the judge, counsel and jurors versed the conviction and ordered] He has never been| for the slaying of Robert | "this is the first time an isolation |prisoner. I believe it is the hu- 8. 'booth has been used in a court-'mane and just thing to do." are undisturbed. "As far as I know," said Leavy, Impersonates Policeman To Policeman QUEBEC (CP)--Police Thurs- day told of the case of Roger Carrier, 25-year-old taxi driver or- dered to appear Oct. 10 for pre- liminary hearing on a charge of impersonating a police officer. He pleaded not guilty and was re- leased on $500 bail. Police said Carrier, travelling Wednesday with nine other per- sons, allegedly pulled alongside another car and waved it to a stop. Carrier, they said, identified himself as a plain-clothes detect- ive, bawled out the lone occupant of the car and reprimanded him on his driving. The occupant of the car turned out to be Detective- Sergeant Albert Brouillette of the provincial police . Montreal di- Jision He promptly arrested Car- rier. d room to restrain and silence a 'Market A Record The 1956 fall hunting equipment | No market is shaping up as one of record proportions, says Jeorting Goods Dealer, survey of major A manufacturers of firearms, am-|Mmake You lee jsood inside ws munition, scopes, hunting apparel|and help the "Mom 3 e Sad land accessories revealed that 83.4(climb just that much closer or per cent of the firms believe that $10,000 objective. Mail your 64c Sixty-four cents, a penny for each child in the "Mom" Whyte home as this is written, mailed to Keith Ross, 44 Bond street east, Oshawa, from everyoné who reads this will MANSFIELD, Tex. (AP) -- angry, milling crowd of 250 threat- ened Thursday to use guns if |necessary to keep Negroes out of |the all-white Mansfield High about the same volume. Regarding archery, manufacturers are 100 {per cent of the conviction that sales this year not only will ex- Desperado Dies = » 1 School. In Sin Sing [ While the crowd gathered, fed- {eral Judge Joe E. Estes in a OSSINING, N.Y. (AP) A|Dallas courtroom confirmed his prayer on his lips, 27-year-old Jos-| order for immediate integration of eph Reade died Thursday night in|the school (Sing Sing prison's electriz chair| C : | |for the rape-slaying of his broth-|first in Texas in connection with er's wife and the strangling of her desegregation of public schools in infant daughter. compliance with the U.S. Supreme Reade was convicted of killing | Court g. Approximately 70 (AP)--Pemex, | Mrs. Beverly Reade, 26, and her|Texas school districts, including daughter, Cheryi|those in San Antonio, Austin, and eight persons were killed bs an{Lynn, in a Jamestown, N.Y. [Corpus Christi, have integrated explosion Thursday on one of its apartment July 11, 1955. Reade's|without any incidents. at Tuxpan, on the gulf brother, Francis, 24, found his! The crowd began gathering at Another person is missing wife and child dead upon return-|7 a.m., an hour and a half before lig home from a nighi-shift igh. registration for the fall term was so with skyrocket impetus. The |Explosion Near Mexico |Claims Eight Lives MEXICO * CITY The threatened violence was the| An scheduled. They found a figure of a Negro hanged in effigy from the school's flagpole. The figure bore a sign saying, "Stay away niggers." SENT IN DEPUTIES Sheriff Harlan Wright sent four deputies to preserve order and himself went to the scene. Many in the crowd immediately surrounded his car. One de- manded, "We want a yes or no answer: Are. you gonna escort them in there with guns?" Wright replied, "You can't take the law into your own hands." "If you escort them in with guns, we are gonna have to get guns ourselves," one man told Wright. The sheriff said he would charge anyone found with a gun. "You'd better clean out the jail, Gunplay Threatening Texas Integrationists |us down there," someone in the crowd shouted. VOTED IN FAVOR Texas voters, in a July 28 ref- erendum, overwhelmingly voted in favor of school segregation. The referendum has no legal status, however. Asked what would happen if of- ficers tried to take a Negro through the mob to register, one man said, "We'd get some ma. chine-guns ourselves. He (Sheriff Wright) sure ain't going to get many votes down here--maybe a few nigger votes." "I'm taking no part in this busi- ness," school principal Willie Pigg declared. 'I won't be quoted on anything. You quote me on any- Ithen, You're gonna have a lot of thing and there's going to be trouble,"