AJAX LIONS CLUB HOST DISTRICT MEMBERS The Ajax Lions' Club was 10st to delegates of all Lions' Jlubs of District 10 south on Nednesdy evenings. More than 30 Lions sat down to a dinner served by the club's auxiliary. It was a meeting to discuss mutual problems and inspire member clubs on to greater service. Senior members are shown in the photo. Front from the left, Jerry Finnegan, secre- tary-treasurer, Ajax; H. L. God- dard, deputy district governor, # Bowmanville; Rufus Lambert, zone chairman, Oshawa; Fred Wright, president, Ajax; Barnett, chairman of public speaking. Back row, Be Bevan, president, Bowmanville; Ted Griffin, president, Port Perry; C. Murphy, president, Cobourg; Norman O'Rourke, Bowmanville; Ted Gray, presi- dent, Millbrook; B. Rickard, president, Newcastle; M. W. Tamblyn, Lindsay, Ontario. --Photo by John Mills Heavy Enrolments Cut Teaching Standards WINNIPEG (CP)--The race to eep pace with increased student nrolments is causing a decline in lanada's teaching standards, the resident of the Canadian Teach- rs' Federation warned Wednes- ay. Caroline Robins of Saskatche- jan told a teacher training ses- jon at the Canadian Education \ssociation convention that be- ween 1941 and 1951 there was a ignificant increase in high school nd university enrolment but only i small rise in the number of eachers with degrees. She called short courses given o prepare teachers for the class- oom a stupid waste and added 10 progress was made in solving he problem of poorly - qualified eachers in Saskatchewan until standards were raised. She said that in 1953-54 34 per sent of Canada's 35,000 teachers lid not have matriculation or one- jear teacher training. ACCEPT CHALLENGE She advised raising standards as the only effective way of get- ting more and better teachers. Stiffer and more - challenging courses of training would help because "young people do accept a challenge and shun a profession that is too easily entered." Teachers face new problems in the classroom today. Miss Robins said children are better informed and more sophisticated but they also come from broken homes and a society with a material sense of values. Society expects teach- ers to do something about this. Dr. C. C. Goldring of Toronto, director of education for Toronto | called for more scholarships for { bright students interested in be- | coming teachers. He said 70 per cent of university students in the United Kingdom attend on 'schol- arships or bursaries compared with only 15 per cent in Canada. Dean G. C. Andrews of the Uni- versity of British Columbia said | higher salaries are needed. A deputy minister of education should get from $15,000 to $20,000 | and principals of large high schools, $10,000. * A favorable reaction to Justice Minister Garson's views on fed- eral aid to education was ex- pressed by most delegates. Ontario Education Minister W.J. Dunlop said Mr. Garson's state- ments opened the door to the provinces to apply for more funds from the federal government. The justice minister said in Ot- tawa federal aid to the provinces for education is a matter of gov- ernment policy and not one of constitutional law. He indicated there is nothing in the British North America Act to prevent federal grants for education. Mr. Dunlop described the fed- eral minister's views as "an ad- vance" in the campaign for fed- eral aid. G. G. Croskery, secretary of the federation, said Mr. Garson had "clarified the legal position." He| said the essential problem in evolving an aid plan is to, get the provinces to agree they want the funds. Farquharson Says Worry - Often Worse Than Disease HAMILTON, Ont. (CP) -- Doc- ors often do not realize a pa- ent's symptoms may be caused ore by his worry than his dis- se, a professor of medicine at University of Toronto said 'ednesday. Dr. Ray F. Farquaharson told a ing of Ontario and Quebec in dizziness and fatigue are fre- quently caused by a patient's con- cern bout the threat of illness to Business men who have recov- from aheart attack or suffer from hypertension often suffer [qustrial physicians that hugs) proved so much he went back to imperilled by disease, Dr. Farqu-| harson said. | | He described the case of a 58-| | year-old clergyman with a large family. He was advised to retire Detroit Priest In Trouble Over Children WINDSOR (CP)--Charges have been brought against a Detroit priest who Monday told police his car had been stolen by a group of after a heart attack and became so weak he could not walk. After he retired he felt better because the decision was made and im- work, living to be 85. Another Toronto university pro-| fessor called for more exercise and less Sating end smoking to] reduce heart Dr. D. P. Murn. ada's highly fat di ing and easy Working he se. said Can- , heavy smok- conditions cidence of ric examination. teen-agers he had befriended. Father J. C. Levaque, parish priest at Annunciation Church in Detroit for the past eight years, appeared in county police court AJAX NEWS Rjax Home & School Will Hold Meeting | AJAX (Times-Gazette, Staff Re- | porter) The Parents and | Teachers Home and School Asso- | ciation of south Ajax will hold their first monthly meeting at Parkside Junior School on Mon- day, October 1. Inspector E. Witts of the On-| tario Provincial Police will speak | Ajax residents will also discuss a | matter of great importance to all | parents of the Parkside School district. A cordial invitation is extended | to all parents and new residents | to attend. This is an opportunity to meet with your child's teacher] or principal and discuss your | problems. | Inco Pondering, Development At Moak Lake NEW YORK (CP)--A company spokesman said here Wednesday | it will be a few weeks before In-| ternational Nickel Co. will an- nounce a decision on whether it will proceed with development of a Nickel mine at Moak Lake, 400 miles north of Winnipeg. The company said earlier it has already spent $5,000,000 on the site nd has 200 men working there. Thirty buildings have been built| streets laid out, and power and sewer lines have been installed. | If the mine is developed con-| struction may cost anywhere from | $50,000,000 to $100,000,000. It would | also be necessary to build a hydro-| | electric plant at Grand Rapids on | Wednesday on charges of indecent the Nelson River, 40 miles north | assault and supplying liquor to minors. He was remanded for psychiat- The moral charge relates to a east of the mine, at a cost of] $25,000,000 to $40,000,000. A railway spur would have to be laid 55 miles northward from mile 200 on the CNR"s Hudson] Bay Railway line to the mine site. BOWMANVILLE . | Representative -- Paddy Quinton, 29 Temperance Street AND DISTRICT ing in Orono, Monday evening, the executive of the Orono Orphans and the Bowmanville Barons in- srmediate hockey clubs decided to enter one team from this area instead of two as formerly. The new organization will be called the Bowmanville - Orono Com- bines. Newly formed executive of the organization will include the fol- lowing officials: President, G. E. (Ted) Mann; vice-president, Wm. Armstrong; secretary - treasurer, Nelson E. Os e; committee, B'ville - Orono Combines Are The New Hockey Team BOWMANVILLE -- At a meet-, Jamieson. Co-managers will be Hesper Dean and ank Jamie- son. This unprecedented move will be wonderful news to the many hockey fans who have long urged such a co-operative effort in the interests of better hockey in this area. In the past, both clubs have competed agamst teams with sponsored top notch imports, while endeavoring as much as possible to use local players. This new endeavor should provide a larger area to draw from, making it 'possible to produce better tract more from entire RS ten fa effort will be extended further as time goes on so that younger play- ers in the minor groups will also Bowmanville, THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Thursday, September 27, 1956 & Both executives hope this joint in forces for the overall good of ockey in the area, In this way, with its artificial arena, could pi g Although all the details have not been ironed out, the first practice of the intermediate team will be held here at 6 p.m. on Monday, October 1. The league is expected to include Port Hope, Lakefield, Cobourg, Lindsay and the new Bowmanville - Orono team. Sched- ule details will be arranged in the near future so that fans in the area will see their team in action as soon as possible. OLD ARTISANS Wooden collar harnesses of 1, 000 years ago in Denmark had rich, silver-plated decorations in i To Red Russia facilities for all age groups wish- ing to play hockey. Ab, West, Hesper Dean and Frank teams which, in turn, should at- Tito Gone Soviet ptane this morni airport of Batajnica on a pecial an will spend several days resting on the Black Sea coast. To Pay Visit BEI.GRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) President Tito left today with So- viet Communist party secretary Nikita Khrushchev for a A visit to the Soviet Union. Tito was accompanied hi: wife Jovanka, Vice bresidont Aleksander Rankove and Djuro Pucar, chairman of the state of Bosnia-Hercecovina and a mem- ber of the Yugoslav Communist party Politburo, Like Khrushchev's equally un- expected trip to Yugoslavia, Tito's latest visit to Russia was de- scribed as a vacation. The official FOR MISSED PAPERS IN BOWMANVILLE Phone MA 3-5561 If you have not received your Times - Gazette by 7 p.m., call KING TAXI All calls must be placed before 7:30 p.m. animal patterns. Yugoslav news agency Tan said the party left the milttare on "Traffic Safety". 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Lalonde, 34 - year - old laborer, sobbed in the witness box as he told of a drinking bout prior to the shooting of Mr. and Mrs. Laur- ent Roy, aged 75 and 62, re- spectively. Defence counsel Raymond Daoust called for reduction of the charge against Lalonde from mur- der to manslaughter, stating "a man who is about to commit the crime of murder does not take along a couple of witnesses when he goes . . . to buy a gun." Lalonde, nervously wringing his hands, told the court he was mar- ried in 1953 and always got along Who Slew Parents-In-Law er Can't Recall with them and they did everything possible for him. He said he had been in a tavern the day of the shooting. When he left he got the idea to buy a rifle to go hunting. He said he had to ask the storekeeper how to oper- ate the rifle. He dropped in to see a brother- in-law, where he had more beer, and they then went home. "I rmember getting home but what way to Tilbury. Father Levaque told police he was concerned for the teen-agers' welfare and invited them to stay at his cottage overnight. At 3 am. he was just going to sleep when he heard his car start up and saw Manitoba has said a townsite for| 15,000 people is a possibility. He said the development of the area would mean an investment by the | company of $150,000,000 in the province. it being driven from the cottage, he said. He notified provincial po- lice and the car with six teen-| agers in it was intercepted near Chatham. I LOVE OYSTERS AUCKLAND, N. S. (Reuters)-- New Zealand's 2,200,000 popula-| tion eats 65,000,000 oysters a year, | according to latest statistics. | WORLD NEWS BRIEFS | I swear I don't r bi happened after that." He said when he came to his senses two men were holding him and saying, "You've just killed two already and you're not going to kill any more." Mrs. Lalonde testified that re- lations between her husband and her parents had always been ex- cellent. She said her husband rarely drank but when he had two or three quarts of beer "it set him off and his eyes would go| all wild." United Church Assures Indians It's Deeply Interested In Them (CP) -- The ness, a high percentage of chil-|announced today. The announce- the dren born out of wedlock, broken ment, in the Nepal government last| homes, lack of personal incentive press, also sald future expeditions LONDON, Ont. Middlesex presbytery of United Church of Canada night assured Muncey reserve In dians of its whole-hearted inter-| est in their welfare as Christian le. e presbytery passed a resolu- and community endeavour." The presbytery was told Tues- day night of the resignation of) Rev. E. M. Joblin, a Muncey | schoolteacher, from the commis- CAUSED BY HEAT PAPINEAUVILLE, Que. (CP) Heat and not food Poisoning was blamed Wednesday for an illness that hit 35 persons at a Sept. 1 wedding reception in this village 35 miles east of Ottawa. All re- covered. A report issued here by Dr. J. C. Belanger and Dr. Rene Lafreniere said laboratory analy- sis of food from the party proved beyond question that it was not the cause of their illness. TO TAX CLIMBERS KATMANDU, Nepal (Reuters)-- Mountaineering expeditions plan- ning to attempt peaks in Nepal in the future will nave to pay royal- ties of between 500 and 3,000 In- dian rupees (about $106 to $644) to the Nepal government, it was must respect local social, re- ligious and moral customs. . CRIME INCREASES WASHINGTON (AP) --Major i in the United States tion to this effect after several members expressed concern that| publicity given a report by the church's general council session |sion studying Indian problems. Mr. Joblin said in a letter to the | presbytery - that 3 secretary he was not responsible as commission [jumped 14.4 per cent in the first |six months of this year, FBI di- | rector J. Edgar Hoover reported | Wednesday. The statistics showed BREAK OFF TALKS CHICAGO (AP)--United States railroads and 11 unions broke off] negotiations with each other over) wages Wednesday and asked help| from the national (railway) med-| iation board. The unions repres-| ent some 900,000 non - operating] employees -- clerks telegraph-| ers, mechanics and similar per- sonnel. In a mail ballot the mem- bership has authorized its leaders to call a strike, if necessary. "EXPLORERS" SAFE PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP)--Two boys who crawled more than a third of a mile inside a four-foot- diameter storm sewer were taken| unharmed from the sewer Tues-| day night. Robert A, Altieri, 16,| and Alfred J. Behney, 15, were| hunting turtles when they decided | to explore the sewer. Residents of a housing project a third of a mile| {from where the boys entered] called authorities when they heard voices coming from curbstone in-| lets. | AIRCRAFT SALES BOOM LONDON (Reuters) -- Britain's booming airplane industry ex- ported more in the first eight months of this year than in any| '50 PONTIAC COACH '50 PONTIAC SEDAN COACH '50 FORD x '51 CHEV. COACH '49 PONTIA '43 METEOR COACH ~ aE 6170 HEATER PLUS VALUE CHIEFTAN 6 HEATER SEDAN HEATER HEATER RADIO, HEATER HEATER PLUS VALUE US VALUE *6995 $7635 *995 HEATER--PLUS VALUE Plus Value USED CARS "2 PONTIAC SEDAN 745 | '49 HILLMAN SEDAN ~ *495 | "48 OLDS. SEDAN *325 | '47 FORD COACH HEA PLUS HEA PLUS '81 BUICK SEDAN AIR CONDITION HEATER--PLUS VALUE 890 HEATER US VALUE TER VALUE TER VALUE *195 52735 *173 RADIO, HEATER PLUS VALUE HEATER '43 MONARCH Sedan *395 | '47 BUICKSEDAN ii. $395 ei El would retard church work at Mun-| for views of members, He said cey, near here, and other reserves. he did Hot krow of the paragraph The report was made at Wind-| containing the offending words be-{ © =o 4 | , up 162,770 from the cor sor last week by a special church cause it was inserted after the) ponding period in 1955. commission studying Indian prob-|bulk of the report was written. | lems. | The presbytery passed a rsolu-| ANNOUNCE SAFETY WEEK Rev. Angus MacQueen of Lon- tion saying that reporting of the, OTTAWA (CP) -- A week-long| don said senior Anglicans had|church report was erroneous and highway safety campaign in the| told him their work was suffer-|improper and gave the impression first week of December was an-| ing as a result of the published | that Indians at large are lazy and| nounced Wednesday by the Cana- i Indi ditions. of questionable morals. The cen-|g; fety Conf |terrorists in Il truck at- gi BL gg "report said|sure also included radio broad- a Beneal chaieman tacked» bus in Algiers today, Berns BRONSON 53 GMC ly, T P i ! 2 400 ickup $735 50 DODGE »2-Ton Panel 51 C E 1 ] $ , y HEV. 1-Ton Pickup 245 50 GMC Y2-Ton Panel there were Indians on reserves) casts. |said highway deaths and injuries killing one Moslem and wounding PLUS "MANY OTHERS TO CHOOSE FROM" who could be identified with "ex-| The general council last week are more numerous this year six other travellers. Police said VALUE Dollar For Dollar You Can't Beat A Cliff Mills Motors "Goodwill Used Car" iving voted to ask the federal govern|¢ha.n in any of the last three|the terrorists swung their truck in PLUS cessive idleness, inadequate living {front of the bus, then threw gre- VALUE 230 KING ST. W.-OSHAWA PHONE -- DAY RA 3-4634 accommodation, lack of appreci-| ent to appoint a commission 10) years, | nades into it. NIGHT RA 3-4636 mm "PLUS VALUE USED TRUCKS" vows RS! $1295 | '51 CHEV. %-Ton Panel $1045 | '50 CHEV. 2-Ton Stake an estimated 1,291,120 major previous full year, the Society of | crimes occurred from January to | British Aircraft Constructors an-| nounced today. The August figure, of £7,744,214 brought 1956 exports to £73,057,779 -- about £7,000,000 more than last year's 12-month record. | an BUS ATTACKED | LL) GMC 9314 ALGIERS (Reuters)--Nationalist '53 PONTIAC PLUS VALVE PLUS VALUE PLUS VALUE PLUS VALUE *925 $795 *395 5235 ation of the value of money and| study the economic plight of In-| its proper use, poverty, drunken-' dians. APPOINTED TO CABINET | BE |. QUEBEC (CP -- The City of] Montreal Wednesday gained rep-| resentation in the Quebec cabinet for the first time since last April | in a minor portfolio shift. Paul | Dozois, member of the Montreal executive commttee, was sworn in as municipal affairs minister succeeding Hon. Yves Prevost,| who moved to the important post of provincial secretary. | WARRANT ISSUED TORONTO (CP) -- A warrant has been issued for the arrest of Samuel Beggs, 39, of Calgary | charging him with kidnapping his | eight - year - old daughter, Gail. | Police said the charge was laid by Mrs. Beggs who said she had come here after an estrangement with her husband. She said he had taken the 'child and was on | his way to Calgary. A * HOP-OFF SPOT Egg Consumption Drop | puenos AIRES (Reuters) -- A 1 group of Argentine architectural| Worries Poultrymen firms is planning a 14 - storey PAPINEAUVILLE, Que. (CP)-- |puilding with a roof accommodat- Poultrymen say the consumption ing helicopters. The structure to of eggs has been dropping stead- pe located in the downtown thea- ily since 1951, and mid - morning |tre district will cost $8,125,000. coffee breaks and late-hour televi-| sion viewing are partly to blame, poultry dealers were told Wednes- NATIVE NEW TESTAMENT day. MELBOURNE, Australia (Reut-| "They have changed the na- ers)--Australian aborigines are to tion's breakfast habits," said Don|have a full New Testament in Turnbull of Kansas City, Mo., sec-|their own language. Members of retary of the American Poultry|the Lutheran mission in South and Hatchery Federation. Australia and Adelaide university "In spite of the fact that doc- professors made the translation tors and nutritionists insist that!into Aranda, one of the major dia- breakfast is the most important lects, with parts additionally meal of the day, few adults eat translated into five mother dla- enough at that time of day." lects. FOR MISSED PAPERS IN AJAX Phone AJAX 333 If you have not received your | Times-Gazette by 7 P.M., Call AJAX TAXI All calls must be placed before 7:30 P.M.