Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 16 Nov 1956, p. 12

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$2 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Friday, November Iv, Ive " The Lucky Kiss -- Mary Hez- | zelwood and Wanda McFarland, Oshawa Collegiate and Voca- tional Institute cheer leaders OCVI SENIORS HOPE TO WIN COSSA TITLE TOMORROW buss (center) Dave Disney, the | school's football team captain. | quarterback, | and triple-threat kicker and passer, wishing him "luck to the team' in the big game tomorrow against Barrie Collegiate, Georgian Bay cham- pions, at Barrie in the final for the Central Ontario Football championship title. ~~ na Dave (Bunny) Goldman, big running halfback and ground- gainer of Oshawa Collegiate and Vocational Institute's winning | football team, is shown munch- ¥ ; Dodwell highly, ranked Ontario junior tennis star and one of the school's "cheer leaders. Dave, on occasion, munches | raw carrots for their strength- | building qualities. But there is | adies' Curling Club Schools Now Welcomes New Members E. A. Lovell Harmony Duke of Edinburgh North Simcoe Queen Elizabeth Sunset. Heights Holy Cross South Simcoe Westmount Mary Street King Street Conant | Coronation St. Gregory's Ritson Rd. SS OOOO MLN NN TT TSR R Cea] CODINNMONSLALAR® ps . | The ladies' section of the Osh-this season's executive and con- In Badminton |awa Curling Club commenced itsVeners. ! 4 prised of members from: Oshawa |when over a "hundred members CHES VTS, DECAY, 450 EACH Schools Safety Patrols has now |"besom and stane" The voting sheets were distrib- and much interest is being | The president, Effie Hezzle-yteq to curlers of over two years' d b of its formati |eleven new members, and askedio deposit 'the lists in the voting|Elementary Schools with repre- | their sponsors to introduce them. receptacle by Friday of this|sentations of each school compet- |Bates, M. B. Reed, Roly Kinton, "A" bonspiel is being held in Simcoe Hall i | : J y | gymnasium. During | Albert Bradford, D. Marshall, M. ypjonville on Dec. 6 and the Osh. (the regular league schedule each strong, Oscar Parker, Gilesp draw was necessary and Phyl.|games with playoffs taking place Goulding, Miller Alloway and Fardham's rink will represent the | to joa dlg a Foi viing {who has returned. Dot Rabins, Merlee Lawrence | a The league standing. including The president also introducedand Hilda Black. the games of this week, 15-28 | . . Try Bigger Shoe dize Feet bother you? both of your feet while you are It's no wonder. About 90 per standing on them. Don't insist on {some sort of foot trouble sooner wearing. You may need a larger like that, one this time. chances are you're among. that, just one-sixth of an inch, re- 90 per cent. member, is half a size. , different height each day and : " th at 'he toe. The widest pars Whether in flats or high heels. {SHOES PON'S F1f de Phe iA "Should oid, Built-up leather heels generally | A little more care in buying shoes | © heel' should be smu heel i 0 : g so the| heels, and we can do away with much) ote doesn't slip. | QUESTION AND ANSWER | Let me give you a few buying : tips. |lots of shoes. In fact, it's even ad-| ynder fluorescent lighting. I now tice that I am becoming bald. A new badminton league com- lactivities on Monday afternoon play commenced two oy again become devotees of Whey, as given the new members| been in operation for one month {wood, gave a special welcome t0experience, and they were asked|The league includes 15 Oshawa [They are: Mesdames Georgeyeek ing every Tuesday evening at the Finley, David Lander, F. Arm-awa club is limited to one entry. school will play a total of 18 IR W. Graham, a former member. local club. Her players will be pions in March. FOR BETTER HEALTH | HERMAN N. BUNDESEN, MD, Ask the salesman to measure g | cent of the nation's population has|/the same size shoe you've been |or later. With odds The chief cause of foot trouble?| Be sure the shoe has plenty of yowll always feel comfortable, | Poorly fitting shoes, of course. Tu," Uidect part of your foot. are more resilient then covered !foot discomfort, . y It's a women's privilege to have] yA : I have begun to work | Tpirst, take a look at your pres-| visable from a health standpoint. |pof lent shoes. If they fit properly Women, you see, do well to have Could this type lighting be caus- [you'll notice the first signs of|a variety of heel heights. ing it? IT am a woman of 24. wear on the sole under the ball] You should have shoes with| Answer: No. If anything, fluo- lof your foot. heels of at Li jites {iflerent rescent light would stimulate the | If this is the case and the shoes|n°181%s, ranging irom [scalp rather than casue baldness, have heen comfortable, tell the medium to flat. |for this type light gives of some oe fa about them. The shoe] Wear them in succession, a ultraviolet rays. last is a good one for you and low crashes through the enemy line on the gridiron. The big game, OCVI vs Barrie Colleg- iate, Georgian Bay champions, takes place at Barrie tomorrow for the Central Ontario Football maybe he can fit you with a simi-| r lar pair, title which was last held by Oshawa in 1945. nothing resembling the timid rabbit evidenced as the big fel- ing a carrot during practice "time out" fed him by Donna Saskatchewan Opens New Mines Rapidly ENFORCEMENT IMPOSSIBLE EAU CLAIRE, Mich. (AP)-- This southwestern Michigan town of about 500 persons, which for five months had a policeman but no laws to en- force, now has laws--not no policeman. For two years city elders worked on a new set of or- dinances to replace the old set which unexplainably had *'dis- appeared." But when they approved the ordinances, the village council fired the town's only full-time policeman. They said they couldn't af- ford his $3,600-a-year salary. with . . . TOP QUALITY ... ST. LAWRENCE CEMENT 1.25 per bag "AVAILABLE NOW" McCULLOUGH LUMBER is pi 4 These girls can be depended on | to keep the OCVI . supporters keyed up to a high pitch of en- thusiasm. --Photos by Times-Gazette I: SHE "Scott Meisner RA 3-3011 Hauls Biggest Load | SAULT STE. MARIE, Mich. | | By M. A. JOHNSON JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP)--The word baas in the Afri- kaans tongue means master. In South Africa it is synonymous with the white man, and the govern- ment of Prime Minister J. G Strijdom is determined to prevent this from ever changing. But it is also commonly ac- cepted here that both whites and blacks have an equal claim to South Africa as their homeland. And the government declares that its program to keep the races al- ways separate is in the best inter- ests of the non-Europeans in South Africa--the A n natives, the "coloreds" of mixed blood and the Indians from A Indians have never been permit- Best Quality Stove Oil 20 3/10 per gel. Dial RA 5-1109 VIGOR OIL CO., Limited 78 BOND ST. W. OSHAWA | \ Vigor's famous ® Prompt Delivery ® Courteci:: Sarvice ay, - Are you ready for the Travel Season? If not dont worry, let ws . , . wel make your reservations, arrange trensportation, keep you posted en con ditions and retes . . . ot ne extra cost. DIAL RA 3-9441 We have a direct Toronto Telephone Line for prompt Airline Reservations MEADOWS TRAVEL SERVICE Owned end Operated by Thomas Meadows end Co., Canada Ltd. 22 SIMCOE ST. SOUTH, OSHAWA Dial RA 3-944) ---- parate train coaches| there are not I | | B | 18S THIS, 0 A TERN? 0 A "SEA" GULL? 0 A HERON? wr } owledge J dd Uy OL¥ds. | Purr-fectly ~ Obvious , A ¥ { 1 Ll This long-winged swimming bird has tremendous powers of flight. You often see i. wheeling, gliding and swooping in the wake of a boat . . . or gathering in grayish white ranks on docks, or rocks. You can't mistake this bold scavenger . . . for the noisy screaming and yelling of the "toa" Gull is a picturesque part of any harbour seéne. oca rz 7 ¥ ONLY 32 SHOPPING t is spend By DAVE QUANCE shafts are going into operation. A northern Saskatchewan now Canadian Press Staff Writer |500-foot Shen with four Jevels has gone by Jarze companies Ww A ie : "PY K been sunk on a property at Moose highly-trained teams of geophy 2 LA RONGE, Sask..(CP) Known pint, jutting into the lake from|cists, geologists and A kad or 200 years as a producer of fish the northeast. Another company working in air and ground par-| : and furs, Saskatchewan's north-/ is sinking a $1,000,000 shaft 51/ties. But there are still many .in-| i znd Is Sragrging as a Jinetsly miles east of here. gividus] prospectors leading al ich land that may make S| STEADY INFLUX onely, rugged life. province one of the continent's The two properties were thelHIGH RETURNS eading mining areas. | fips : y . first copper finds in the area and| For some, the dream comes _ This part of the wheat province strikes there started a rush lastitrue. Gunnar Uranium's rich is moving underground to bolster year in which 2,500 claims were|property on Lake Athabasca was its one-crop economy, and govern- filed In several weeks. ound by prospector Albert Zeemel ment officials predict that by 1960| The steady influx of miners,|when h Tked f hi ight: ineral production will equal the|geologists, drill i nwhen he wa out of his tent| OCVI's colorful cheerleader | shown above, left to right: Don- Tine iii iB vale. EO Sr _ their explora-| into a swampy pasture of yellow| squad which will be spurring ' na Dodwell, Phyllis Walters, Mining companies have invested has doubled business m the vil- a aes. He made 550, their team on to victory in to- = Mary Hezzelwood, Wanda Me- $75,000,000 in recent exploration|lage. Business used to die down in| Equal amounts went to prospec- morrow's game at Barrie is | Farland and Diane Sawyer. and development in Saskatche- winter when tourisis left, but tors George E. Blier and Freder- a ~ od ee AiG wan's 100,000 square miles of pre- trade now is steady all year. lick Giauque for a base meta: dis- |cambrian shield, and Labor Min-| The Saskatchewan government| covery 280 miles north of here ° ister C. C. Williams says mineral | trading post and the Hudson's| 1a Ronge, hoping its mining de- | production will be '"'worth $300,- Bay Company have new stores| velopment will be as rapid as the ou T1Cdl i SS) al 7 000,000 annually by 1960," approx-| Where they can outfit a tourist, uranium field farther north. points| (CP) -- The Colonial Steamship imately equal to the annual re- fisherman, hunter or prospector | to the statement by S. M. Fair- Lines freighter, Scott Meisner, to- . {turn from wheat. 53 provide, montis of SIpplies. | weather, vice-president of tie Ca-|day broke all "previous load rec-| {ACTIVE DEVELOPMENT assessing. sampling and prospect.|n2dian National Railways: "In-locrds here when she passed) : The uranium finds in for north-|ing of properties. Also wrowded|oustrial * development 'in S-skat-| through the American locks with a | ; {ing of properties. Also provided|chewan begins north of Prince mixed f barl d ern Saskatchewan already have by various firms are geiger and| Albert." if an cary 2 » an ey and oats made mining history, but La engineering services, consultant -- A otalling A ushels. rounded education, However edu-|enforced only by custom. But leg-|Ronge is beginning to steal the geologists, diamond drilling and cationists now agree that the cur-|islative action has been taken to|thunder from places like Uran- mine development. Prospectors |ricula prepared for the native prohibit African building workers|/ium City and Beaverlodge. Cop-|can purchase ready-made cabins Schools appear sound. |from toi skilled work in white |per, Sucks] snd other base metals from other suppliers. e government took over most towns unless they obtain exemp-|are the talk of mining men. church mission schools last year tion. This settlement of 500 rersons)T ARSPORT COSTLY f under the Bantu Education Act.| Whites earn far more than other on the southwest shore of Lac La transport t > t etause 8 The Anglican bishop of Johannes- races. The average annual wage Ronge, 170 miles north of Prince|pj SPX 4 Pv S, Ju. Wages are burg closed 23 Anglican schools|for men employed in mranufactur-! Albert, alread has overtaken ER, too. Miners and drillers can 1 3 , eady Ss eriaken earn $500 to $600 month! | rather than turn them over. |ing industries is $1,880 for whites, | Uranium City -as a centre of| day. ly th >. | SHIFT SCHOOLING |$669 for coloreds, $607 for Indians|claim staking, and the Influence airwacy' Tok ths Toad and the Under the government, th e|and $362 for Africans. of the mining "develo; ment can be 2 rways link this village with {number of students in African STRIKES OUTLAWED seen in the En economy. pce inert Sushmichowan's Senonls Ai or asel iron gi Law prohibits African trade| Of 1,736 claims recorded in the|and mining men Bape font coment] SroWwen possible. he taro DONS Shi bane strikes and lock- Provitice during Soptember, 709| visits by railway officials mean al school day has been divided into] Notices on benches at bus stops, on a and. 894 in ean Yailroad Will be built to La Rosge two sessions of three hours each railroad stations, parks and pub-|filed through the claims office] The chamber of mines at Prin Bo diferent BOND: wi pephs, lic gardens say, "'Slegs vir blankes| here. | Albert says if enough mines reach| 2 L S0 v "hid i their own schools. There has never| © Jrbeans only. Evidence of mining activity in- production Sage, 3 Sentral ymel ted to vote. African natives had Deen a demand for admission of| where separate Teases i Dimond drilling hey il be bulle 13 Henze the franchise on the same basis Bob whites fo wile sshoals, 2 trains. Pe el if], and drillers are being the site : THe" as whites in one of the country's ) the standards of white Whites do mot play non-whites| £ s as fis -| DOIN site. four provinces until 1936, but now schools are much higher. at any sport. All-white teams rep- mer gn) cores) Much of the prespesting in all Africans are on a separate hou; $25 a pupil a year is spent resent the country in international tp cians as fine t S same lf voting roll. They elect as their r e ucation of the Africans inlevents like the Olympics. famed fishin, Eo rou: in Is representatives four white sen- pamary aud secondary schools.| By custom there is social sep-| ied . | ators and also white members of |, 0 Dre sin ent expenditure for|aration. Hotels, restaurants, mov- Northeast and east of here are Parliament and the provincial Re ore | an 500,000 children injies and theatres patronized by mining camps where first mine councils. In addition, the govern- hin ing JR Shout sia The whites do not admit others. en ment appoints four senators on, . "pi? A is| Africans are protected from the the basis of their knowledge of {and nearly 30.000 Indians in their| "evil" of the white man's liquor. BOLD PROMONTORY [ the needs of the colored races. barat schools averages about| Incitement against racial laws|, Ofeat Orme's Head, Welsh CONSTITUTION INVOLVED $5.8 Year Hes has been checked by severe pan-|headland in the Irish Sea, has a It is the status of the voters of veh} 1s 8'50 Jegregalion in the|alties. Many non - white leaders|!8hthouse visible for 24 miles. mixed African and other blood that oh Ta Sonomie life of the coun- have been named as Communists brought a constitutional cleavage Sy ain ypes of work are re-'and banned from attending meet- PRECARIOUS POSITION In 1951 the g rnment packed Zande as exe usively for whites. |ings The special political branch] MELBOURNE (Reuters) -- A the Senate so that it could get a Otbel 5 are. considered beneath of the police keeps watch on pos- House owned by Roy Wines bal- two-thirds majority to remove the| "yt & gly. sible incitement by raiding homes|anced today over a 40-foot-wide coloreds from the common voting ' 0St economic segregation island meetings. |crater 700 feet deep. The hole was roll. The Senate passed the bill | The government currently is caused by the collapse of an old by the required margin. preparing regulations to label the/mine shaft, Eighty truckloads of The 1951 legislation put the col- WORLD BRIEFS blood of non-white donors with aisand have been poured into the oreds .on a separate roll and per- black Sticker fo prevent its being chasm but at least 120 truckloads mitted them to choose four white x - given accidentally to whites. are needed to full up the members of Parliament plus} Tank AIDING ARABS v a ~ ise bE PR the hale. white { Dfesentatives on the pro-| Tstael A) = Qthicials ot , nila § ] ons vincial comncil the appeals court Relief and Works Agency Wednes- upheld the SOVeIrnment's action in day night initialled an agreement removing the coloreds from the or Sontinied assistance to 200,000 common roll. Only one of the 11 aa) ge Cie dirael eld judges dissented beds, e Ul y a RESERVATION SYSTEM been assisting the refugees before Although the vernment denies [rae] seized the Gaza strip from full political to the Afri. --5YPh cans, it is tr establish a WARNED OF RATIONING system of | overnment' PARIS (AP)--The French gov- for them. Native territorial ernment warned motorists today and regional auth es have been to cut down on gasoline or have it set up in the pure ican areas. rationed. French refineries are Ly Fog os are to ne devel cuting deliveries 20 per cent he ; e Alricans national cause of the Suez conflict. In Be! homeland. Whites are denied the Swiss government also 3 Bers, rights in these areas just as Afri- private motorists to cut their use cans are denied rights in the of gasoline to a minimum white areas The government MURDER ON CYPRUS ing more than NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP)--A Greek 10. Cypriot woman was shot to death inesday night at the mountain of Moronero, in the Paphos yprus. The slaying was ported this month as tepped up their violence to support s for union of Cyprus CARLING'S RED CAP ALE BREWERY LIMITED ( IVE ing over Afric ondary schoolin native affairs educatior the de spit ety. Wha clear. | can chud HISTORIC CENTRE Te 1047 and € a.long known as Christiania, ren would aol recel

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