MORE THAN 100 DELE- [ sion, Industrial Accident Pre- | plant of General Motors was ensuing year were elected, | GATES, from many commun- | vention Associations, in the city | enjoyed in the afternoon. In the | Caught by the camera, from ities in this section of the prov. | Wednesday. A golf tournament | evening a banquet and business left, Jel Murray Smith, Sra | ince, attended the annual meet- | was held at the Oshawa Golf | meeting was held at Hotel Pen. sh x FM ey Of ing of the Central Ontario Divi- | Club and a tour of the south ' Genosha when officers for the | chairman; Clie Carss of Cobourg, division chairman; William Boddy of Oshawa, past division chairman; and Gordon Anderson, general manager of the IAPA, ~Times-Gazette Photo Immigrants From Britain x Livestock Judging Test Largest Group Coming Here Brings Keen Competition The Oshawa branch of the de-!plied for landing in Camada. This| Germans, Portuguese, Yugo- partment for citizenship and im- was announced by the statistics slavians, Greeks and French are Iugralion Jeceives = average of section, directorate of technical also heavily represented five to six applications each'services, department of citizen- first quarter year of 1957, i " : 4 9. month for admission to Canada, ship and immigration, Ottawa, in! Most of the male new arrivals Live ook Jing =o etition Gater, RR 2; Stewart Thomas G. Shelton, immigra-/its quarterly immigration report, found jobs in the service field,' i jot Junior Farrgers, 1904 points tion - officer - in charge, ex-| This figure is more than three followed by the professions, cler- = Ad in the past excellent classes! CNE Shiel - Douglas Scott plained that Oshawa is not con- times the number of immigrants/ical, agricultural and commercial wore proyided by the SE Shaws: RR 2 : sidered a port of admission. Ap-/coming to Canada during the first fields. A total of 13,436 immi-|jivectock breeders of the district 'Dunrobin Trophy plications from immigrants, most three months in 1956. The num-'grants headed for manufacturing Those who provided classes IE | Blackwater of them baling from the United ber for that period was 18,963. |and construction, . . I 8, who choose Oshawa as| British immigrants head the list amounted to 4681. + C -- B0 i Be a lo a Te ea He roan ihe 35,713 male od pala deadales, Heber(, Dairy Trophy = Bob Holliday on to the departments in Toronto of them from England. The vest immigrants amounted to 26,747, shires; Ransom Stock Farms,| Parrott, Ashburn, ' and Ottawa, came from Ireland with. 2952, including 10,869 wives and 14,053 Oghawa, RR 3: Shorthorns and| Beef Trophy The only immigrants arriving Scotland with 5147 and Wales children, |Suffolks, Walter Beath, Oshawa,|Columbus; runner-up, in Oshawa in this manner are with 459, In 1956 only 4912 British) Most of thé new immigrants RR 2, "| Baird, Blackwater, RR 2, en fs wa Diane arriving at immigrants entered Canada dur- gettied 10. the Province of Dntatio H. L. Fair and Sidney Mac-' Sheep Trophy -- Hugh Baird ort or on ships ing the first three months of the wi ,157, compared with only| Do vat R ; atriving a the HI Harbor ig 1 p Donald were in charge of the Blackwater, RR 2; of mmigrants, Includ- lon the list with 12,798 immi-|/the neighborin ricult .| Horse Trophy -- Murray Jack ing all Hungarian refugees, are, 11,936 HUNGARIANS grants, British Columbia third By fo autic Joural hi son, Brookiin. RR 1: runner-up received at other ports of entry, Hungarian refugees are second with 8397, followed by Alberta, Ivan Bell, Lindsay: E. A. Sum. Ron Werry, Oshawa, RR 1. and their files transferred to Osh- on the list with 11,936, compared Manitoba and Nova Scotia, mers and Earl Brown, Bowman. JUNIOR WINNERS awa later on, to 76 in 1956. Italians with 7606,/ A break-down according to ville; and Ed. Pearson, 62.460 APPLICATIONS Datish yi 2162, United States age-groups, shows most of the im- market, From January to March, 1957 [the Nhe ane a 1908 and migrants in the first three months| The juniors were a total of 62,460 Immigrants ap-iin that order. own in the 25 to 29 year age judge two classes 1916 Walter points. Kerry, ~ Keen competition was evident Farmers, in all sections of the successful members: Annand Hugh Baird New-' 1. Douglas Scott, Oshawa, required to Jackie Coates, Brooklin, RR 1; 4 of vali Bill McDonald, Brooklin, RR |Shorthorns, Yorkshires, and one 5. Eldon Wilson, y give reasons for one class of each, . | The winners for the various SENIOR WINNERS el we were: enlor Trophy -- Werth (3 hier, |Cannington, RR 2; runner-up, {Bob Holliday, Columbus. Junior Trophy -- Douglas Scott, : {Aubrey Carson, Oshawa. RE 3 unner-up, Ren: pruce Noble, Uxbridge, RR 2; 9 Graduate Section -- 1st prize -- David Evans, Uxbridge, RR 3. miniature trophy won by Hugh GRADUATE SECTION Baird, Blackwater, RR 2; 2nd WINNERS prize ($4), Walter Kerry, Port Perry, RR 1; 3rd prize ($3), Mur- 2: 2. Walter Kerry, ray Jackson, Brooklin, RR 1. RR 1; 3. Junior Farmer Trophy -- 1st. Uxbridge Junior bridge, RR 2 Advertising Executive To Be Kinsmen Speaker Don Hensahw, an executive of |the MacLaren Advertising Co., Limited, Toronto, will be the speaker at the dinner meeting of the Oshawa Kinsmen Club in Hotel Genosha on Thursday, June CCF Candidate Addresses | Oshawa Polish Community CCF candidate, Mayor W. John humanitarian spirit in the CCF, ¥ i 3 { RR 3; 4. Ron Werry, Oshawa, 12; 6. Renald Parrott, Ashburn; 7 Naylor, and T. D. "Tommy" |not found In any other party. Thomas, MLA, addressed a|Quoting an article by Pat Nich meeting of members of the Osh-|olson, Ottawa correspendent of awa Polish community at the The Times-Gazette, he comment- Polish hall, Olice avenue, Tues-'ed that CCF delegates in parlia- day night, ment stood heads and shoulders Before an audience of 30-0dd over all other members people Mr. Thomas appealed for The 'little bit" of a hospital support at the coming federal plan, granted by the government, elections, June 10. He stressed had been topped hv a general that the CCF was a working- health plan in the CCF province men's party and represented the of Saskatchewan years ago. The working people. Liberal government was taking Government health plans had away the democracy and free- been incorporated in central Eur. dom from the people, he said. jopean countries and Great Brit-| The mayor contradicted a i i. ; | ain a long time ago. He termed statement by the Liberal candi- # unfair that a New Canadian|/date in the riding that money i | had », lve in Canata I was just a commodity, Capital | 'are coming eligible was only an accumulation of ga-| I ay bor and wealth could only | PHARMACY GRAD Mr, Thomas suggested that it created by work. Murray Tureski, son of Mr was impossible to live on $46 a| Answering questions from the and Mrs. Nick Tureski, 214 month, The $6 increase had only audience, both Mayor Naylor and Jackson avenue, graduated been given for political expedi- Mr. Thomas denied any rumors from the University of Toronto, |13, Mr, Henshaw will speak on ency by the Liberal government,/of communism inside the CCF, Thursday, May 30, receiving his "Advertising and its Place In Bachelor of Science degree in pur Economy'. Pharmacy. He completed his | Mr. Henshaw was born and be said. party, These rumors had been Contrary to Liberal claims, the spread by the other parties, they 1 He | apprenticeship with Karn Drugs |riased in the U.S.,, where he was Limited. He attended South |a pioneer in the field of radio pension could not easily be aug-/sald, mented by private income. The "If there was any Communism 3 yp Simcoe School, Oshawa Collegi- | broadcasting as an announcer, ate and Vocational Institute, sportscaster, writer and program Ontario means test Inade it im- in the CCF party," sald Mr possible for many people to earn Thomas, "the mayor and myself a : fan additional salary. would not be In it." and Oshawa Central Collegiate |director. In 1934 he was invited Institute. to Canada to aid in the broad. ~~ =~ |casting of Toronto's Centennial ' FRIEND OF EVERYONE PROFESSIONAL FOLK ------ hl "Mayor Naylor is a friend of, His Workship told the audience . | Celebration and remained to mar- ry a Canadian girl, Many Traffic tics. Recalling hs Youth, ad The CCF followed the example Cases Heard |sel for Victory Loan campaigns 3 Mayor Naylor Mas { : 3 . elvic background, y ylor of the great Master, he said, not HIS rave] TC p , ' | vet finds time to write for radio] { candidacy previously, He prom-| 0 (hat the CCF would estab. WAS fined $50 and $3 costs. He Yel | ised to give his special attention, jj), an educational fund, if elect.| Was arrested on everyone in Oshawa," sald Mr. that many members of the CCF His radio experience led him felt that he had always tried tolonly casting its nets for food for] BOWMANVILLE Reginald {80 those people who needed | charge. Thomas, virtespoctive of creed, were ministers, Jrotessors and ok pe | eolor, race or origin." school teachers. He himself had into the advertising agency busi- orship told the audience been a candidate for the minis. ness and, during the war, he was His We ip that he had a lot to learn in poli- try once, he said, loaned to the Canadian govern. ment as a public relations coun- "be fair to all people. the body but also for food for the Griffin, 26, of Enaiskillen, plead. the Hnited States average over | The CCF was the only party whole human being. ed guilty to a charge of impaired [0 pies per Me his Lhe would run for, he said, after i _'driving before Magistrate R. B, 8 3 § turning down two other bids for or Rigi ing Bal Baxter in police court here. He tually every state and province, DON HENSHAW help. | 1 iv : did v . Condemning the $6 increase a iL Te Told Nould give an OP Albert J. Murphy, 61 Jackmans Woodworking. land handicapped children, wunforgiveable", His Worship| poo" money free of interest, road, Bowmanville, pleaded guil- * termed the attitude of the federal No one would be denied an edu. ty to having liquor in an illegal | government contemptuous, die- cation place in Bowmanville on May 26. : He was fined $10 and costs Toronto, RUMMAGE SALE -- toms Building, Salvation Army, on Friday, "BINGO St. John's Hall, corner Simcoe end Bloor, Friday et 8 pm 20 gomes $5 ond $7. 5- $40 jackpots leader of one of Canada's largest in Metropolitan tatorial and arrogant, It was just : ? . " - "passing the buck", he said. | He said that such a plan, Kent Williams, Hampton, was ommenting on his barnstorm. brought mefore the provincial snag 10 and $3 costs for driving atari i legislation had been defeated by / " ; hid ] tour through Ontario riding h t on May 22 without a front licence £ he said he had noticed a general the government. _Iplate on his car, I] ". {trend among the voters, It was Hugh Mills, Bowmanville, tu ent I t man S aly time for a change, gh a0 pleaded guilty to two separate one could be sure which way the charges. His first offence was on | votes would go. ec. Io ems | May 6. For driving without lights| Fifteen prizes were taken by| The Oshawa students enterec § Mayor Naylor felt a certain . lon his vehicle on that date he was Oshawa students in the 1957 On- projects which competed » yor ° Are Discussed fined $5 and costs, and for failing tario Student Craftsmen's Fair more than 200 entered from al 4 | to stop at the stop sign at Ontario which opened this week in To- parts of Ontario 'COMING EVENTS | Wendell Brewster, director of and Queen streets, Bowmanville, \ronto sponsored by Ford Motor| The week-long fair was openec the Oshawa Recreation Associa- oe My 2, Je received a $5 fine Company of Canada, Limited. |monday by Frank G. Batters te. 11 . ¢ Brantnme] VET COStS Top Oshawa winner was Victor secretary of Ford of Canada, anc AT THE CUS tion and three assistay) directors John Malda, Newcastle, was Worral, Grade 12, Oshawa Col- was attended by leading educa 32a di a | id p I charged with not having a muff-/jegiate and Vocational School, tors from the Ontario departmen attending a special meeting of the ler on his motorcycle on May 22, whose surface guage was chosen of education, Ontario College © Playground Leaders' Training He was fined $5 with $3 costs. 1a select winner. : Education and elsewhere. Course Committee of East Cen. Harold W, Brown, King street,! other Oshawa winners were Select winners will have tral Zone pleaded guilty to a charge of fail- pon Wright, Grade 8, King Street projects sent on to Dearborn The three additional recreation Wir to lake, pres a ons against School; Dennis Karpiak, Grade|Mich., to participate in the Inter lofticers from this city accom his vehicle being set in motion. jg © @dith Cavell School; Irvine national Industrial Arts Awards !panying Mr, Brewster are Robert The tfence nok place on May Longstaff, Grade 9; John Strach-|Projects, all class room work o Bateman, Joan Lambert and ved a De of $5 and $3 costs, (am Grade 10 { : 1324 Wesley Ogden, The Oshawa four 10; Ray Harrison, Grade 11: lintricate jewellery, some met with John Eilbeck, the David Reeson, Grade 10; Robert for their quality community programs branch re CHILD SUFFOCATES Mosier, Grade 10 and Joyce Nine judges, specialists in var presentative to the department ofl HAMILTON (CP)--Five-month-|Mepstead, all of Oshawa Colleg- ious fields, were given the diffi education and other recreational old John Keddy, found dead in his/iate and Vocational Institute; and cult task of selecting the winners ofiicials from the zone crib Wednesday, suffoeated while|J. Kaladzie, Grade 11; M. Brady,| The fair is organized and un The meeting was called to dis- suffering from stage Grade 10: Bill Roka, Grade 10;|dertaken by a snecial committee cuss re-organization of the East of pneumonia, a post-me m I. Doboskensky, de 11 and of educators which carried or | Central Zone with a view to amination showed. The infant was Arnold Jacenty, Grade 11, all of under the chairmanship of Har gaining a greater efficiency of found dead when his mother went Oshawa Central Collegiate Insti- old F Skinner of Toronto {action from the zone, to attend him at 8 am tute, fir is held at the College siree were praisec TAN ex RCAF Mountainview personnel, please get in touch with Vie Bagnato, P.O. Box 538, Adelaide Street, Toronto, regarding a toke place in Belleville, Ontario, this summer. reunion to THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Thursday, June 6, 1957 8 Elect CobourgMan Team camp at Petawawa th the Port|during the week of July 13 to 20./ron will train at Raglan and on Ontario County Junior Farmer Perry, RR 1: Hugh Baird, Black- 22-23|M. Brooklin Horse ig ; runner-up, under command of Brig Ruther- .aborers Holsteins, Roy Ormiston, Brook- Stewart Annand, Uxbridge, RR 2. ford of Toronto. Ronald appointed to command the sum- mer -- Bob Holliday, | Capt, Jack Sheriff, MC, as second Hugh!in command and Capt, . runner-up, | 10,209 in 1956. Quebec was second competition and were assisted by Stewart Annand, Uxbridge, RR 2.| 1 Ashburn; 6. Cl and Suffolks, and'Jackie Holliday, Brooklin, RR_1:| their placings on 3 Gordon Fenn, Sunderland, RR' Diefenbaker says the Liberal gov- 1. Keith Shier, Cannington, RR| The Progressive Conservative |23.4; Bh Holliday, Columbus, RR leader, speakin 1: 5. Lloyd Wilson, Uxbridge, RR members of the government as ,| "steering Canada's ship of state.' Claremont: 8, 1. Hugh Baird, Blackwater, RR c Port Perry, |. Murray Jackson, Brook- InterClub lin, RR 1; 4, Stewart Annand, Ux- i | there will be no rights left." June 1 on the and publications and to indulge! Bible Classes for men, and spends in his hobbies of photography and much time in work for crippled] With For many years he was the his wife and two children he lives with their I. Travell, Grade students from a full-size boat to The IAPA SectionHead Give Inscribed Plaque 'Electric Trades Sign New Pact | | | / | A recent conciliation meeting tric, said he had been pleased to {held in Oshawa by H. E. Scott, see such an amicable spirit pre- |of the department of labor, result- vailing. The employers liked to ed in an amicable settlement be- see their men keep up with the tween electrical workers and con- general wage trend, but not to tractors in the city. step ahead and aggravate the | Attending the meeting were tenderers towards inflation, The representatives of Hill . Cornish agreement reached, had attained Electric Ltd.,, Eastern Electric this aim, he thought Construction Lid. and of Local The conciliation meeting lasted 1894 of the International Brother. over five hours at the end of {hood of Electrical Workers. {which a new agreement was After settlement had been reached applicable from June 1 |reached Cy Burr, acting business/to May 31, 1958, | manager for the local, who at-| This established the hourly rate |tended the meeting with Ken for journeymen electricians at Johnston, business representative, $2.50 in the industrial field; $2.30 {and members of the committee,|in the domestic and $1.90 in the remarked on the goodwill creat- motor control, Hours worked are a 40-hour of "We were impressed by the five - day week. {goodwill on both sides of the table, An additional 17 out of town during this conciliation," he said, contractors will also be affected "and feel it has established a re- by the new agreement, lationship which will be very, A special meeting of the local helpful in the years ahead." members called Tuesday agreed | Edward G. Tozer, general unanimously to accept the con- manager of Hill - Cornish Elec- tract, | Training For Summer Camp Gets Under Way This Week It has been announced by Lt. Squadron Sergeant Major is 88M Col, F. 8. Wotton, CD, that sum-|Clapp. The summer squadron will {mer camp training will start im-|be training on Monday evenings |mediately for annual summer|and on two Suvlays during the to be held month of June. June 16 the Squad- The Ontario Regiment will join|the ,\with the Governor General's weekend of June will spend the let To Retiring elected at last night's annual meeting of the Central Ontario division of the Industrial Accident Prevention Associations here, William Boddy, of Oshawa, turned the post of division chair- man over to his successor, C. W, Carss, of Cobourg. Division Vice Chairman for the year is Max E. Clarke, of Peterborough. Section chairmen elected were: Belleville section, A. Grime; Co- bourg - Port Hope section, F. Powers; Oshawa section, Des- mond Newman; Peterborough - Lindsay section, J. Clarkson, Retiring chairman William Boddy was presented, on behalf | the tion, with a plaque) in appreciation of his work while in office. The plaque is in- scribed with association crest. The officers were elected fol-| lowing a full day for the dele- gates to the mecting. The dele gates numbering more than 100, toured General Motors south plant, and competed in a golf tournament, before adjourning to the Genosha Hotel for the dinner meeting. During the evening, the meet- ing was entertained by John Giordemaine, one of Canada's top magicians, Mr, Giordemaine, a past - president of the magi- cians' society, recently returned from a convention of the Magic! Circle, in Europe, Special guests at the meeting were R. G. D, Anderson, general manager of the association, and Smith, assoclation president, | at the Raglan area living under canva: and siuau.ating as far as possible actual camp training. It is anticipated that some 120 all ranks of the Regiment will at- tend camp this year and the Regi- ment will parade under command of Col, Wotton to the CPR station on the morning of July 13 led by the Regimental Band, The Regi. ment returns from Pelawawa Murray the following Saturday at a time Maidlow as Battle Captain. The!to be reported later. Guards to form two |armoured units at the summer ,lcamp, There will be three regi- ments of artillery attending at the , same time, the whole group being ,| Major W. C. Paynter hag been camp. training squadron with Liberals Giving Canada 2; 2. Kenneth May, Bi iii Thy | 'Bum Steer,' -- PC Head By JOHN LeBLANC Canadian Press Staff Writer | steps for the convening of a Com have been lost to us in the las ernment is giving the Canadian few years." Conservative policy, he said | people * will many bum steers." | lyin ts through made known in advance e year, advertisement: ho rererre "Perhaps that is why there has .'been so many bum steers from |these people," he said. "Some- |where along the line they must have lost their compass.' He emphasized his view that anada needs a restoration of the rights of Parliament and spoke generally along the lines of an earlier speech made in Owen | Sound. The theme of his day's cam- paigning was broadly the same in| | pach riding he visited. A party of overwhelming strength and in power for a long time was a po- tential threat to democracy. "NO RIGHTS LEFT" | He told a 1,200-strong meeting lin Owen Sound that if the Lib- erals are returned to Ottawa Mon- | day "don't ask the opposition to !stand up for your rights because produce, falling prices and dwind- ling markets. He laid blame on "all-powerful ministers' who, servatives demanded action. Before sterting the day's tour of the hustings, Mr. Diefenbaker spoke at a breakfast meeting in | Toronto to about 150 supporters. PARTY UNITED He said the Conservative party is united as never before and 'that | only defeatism in the federal field now is an irrestile force." Today, tne Conservative leader, now nearing the end of miles of election travels, for another round of campaigning in Western Ontario. He said there was a time when iberal party was true to par.| Brantford. [he Libera inh Bd, but by its| Mr. Diefenbaker will end his actions, particularly during the major campaigning Friday night pipeline legislation debates last |in Hamilton and afterwards fly to year, it had destroyed equality his home constituency of Prince {among Canadians, Albert, Sask., to await the results During the miorning, Mr. Diefen- of Monday's general election. |paker spoke at Fergus, Mount -- ertat ma ---------------- Forest and Artis, communities » - /in the agricultural conservative- held Wellington - Huron constitu- S ty I ency. He was met by crowds of ocle IS | between 300 and 400 to, Whom hel pledged a new deal for farmers if| Sh S t the Conservatives form a govern. Jie © ow nat. [TO CALL CONFERENCE "We intend to take immediate ago as flags have been hybridized | until now they are the Host = cate and beautiful perennial in \BRPPLE POLISHING jour gardens and are known as THE MODERN WA The Horticultural Society hel Four fourth-graders tele- |junction with the June meeting. phoned a Cincinnati newspap- Since then the iris have been so er to place a Classified Ad popular in the gardens of the thanking their teacher for members of the Society that the having "learned us our arith- |show became > an all afternoon | metic and spelling, brought event with the entries being re- our reading up terrifically." [ceived and the judging done early Of course, there was no rela- |in the afternoon and open to the tion between the ad and the !public for the evening. | fact that report cards were The prize list consists of 17 | to be given out the next day! |glasses of iris alone and includes But there is a definite rela- |whites, blues, yeliows, pinks, tionship between Classified |prowns and blacks with blends of Ads and getting what you '|the aforementioned colors. Other | want. Dial RA 3-3492 for re- |classes consist of floral arrange- y| sult-action | ments l'store of the T. Eaton Company torium of the E. A. Lovell school and is open to the public all week. on Centre street and the public j Its purpose is to encourage the is cordially invited to attend and skills of student craftsmen and to| view these beautiful blooms from | allow the public to observe the (6.30 to 9 p.m. on Saturday, Junc quality of their work 8 t { | PLUMBERS The Plumbers: Licensing Board of Oshawa will conduct 1] examinations for Master Plumbers and Journeymen at the Board of Health Offices Oshawa Al.micipal Offices, June 14th and 15th. Applications to sit at the examinations must be filed with the secretary of the Board not later than 5 p.m., June 11th. 1 HENRY CHAPMAN, Secretary Plumbers Licensing Board t | said, refused to act when the Con.' | hip, as applied to the| safety - director's work, was the theme of a talk delivered by) H. A. Wallace, vice - president of | manufacturing, Massey - Harris - 'guson, Toronto, ""The safety director must be a| salesman first," Mr. Wallace, said. "He must be able to sell himself. He must sell himself to the man at the machine, by show- ing that he knows the hi Chairman Officers for 1957 - 58 were|day when a foreman comes fo him for advice." "He must sell himself to the superintendent. This is probably the most difficult job, as fre- quently the superintendent has not had the' benefit of a college education, and may despise such education. Never forget that these men learned the hard way, and those who learn the hard way learn well, "Finally, he must sell the pres- ident, This will be relatively easy, if he has made a Job of selling the others." Mr. Wallace stressed the im- portance presenting safety to managemeht in terms of dollars and cents, He said that it is im- portant to draw the attention of management to the fact that the his name, and the actual cost of an industrial acci- |dent is approximately five times the apparent cost. Remember," he said, "a safety program must be two . fisted -- it must not be pr ted as a h itarian service rendered to the shop. There are too many old timers who tend to think of safety direc- tors as socialogically - minded schoolboys." "Safety is more than humani- tarian,"" he said. "It is a cold, capitalistic project, I have yet to see a safety investment which was not a good, sound economic investment.' The work the safety-director has done in a plant, he sald, is reflected in the management's attitude toward safety. Mr. Wallace concluded his talk by giving the four cornerstones on which a successful safety campaign is based. 'First," he sald, "comes intelligence. Intelli- gence in operation, and in asso- ciation with others." "Second is application. There is no substitute for hard work, A safety man cannot afford to slow down, or slack off." "The third cornerstone is plan- ning. A reasonable plan, Wl can be intelligently applied, is a thoroughly, before demonstrating how to operate it with maximum safety." monwealth trade conference to se- HANOVER, Ont. (CP) -- John cure some of the markets that t ensure the farmer an ade- here Wednesday | dnl parity between his income hein He said agriculture was endang- ered by the dumping of foreign | | | He has stops scheduled for Galt, |ideal, shady picnic ground, with London, Stratford, Woodstock and: Plenty "He must sell himself to the foreman by showing that he understands the operation of the shop, and the machinery in it. { Probably the most successful day {in a safety director's life is the must. The plan must be drawn up on paper, to insure uniformity, and so that it may be presented for inspection readily." | "Finally, there is acceptance. {If you do not get the acceptance, the other three points are use- less. Acceptance depends on you, as a salesman.' Picnic Season Under Way: At City's Lakeview Park : | The Blenie season is on od Ln lake, fod ue with have | | view Dominion. lo E. E. Bathe, Oshawa Parks Commission superintendent, sald that he is already swamped with applications to use the park for company picnics, ete. It is not surprising that the park enjoys popularity which brings parties from as far away as Peterborough and Toronto. At/ Lakeview there are facilities for| practically any type of summer | outing. | In the sports department, there are three ball diamonds two | softball and one hardball -- a the "party that previously knew soccer pitch, a crichet pitch, and| even an archery range. The younger set are provided for with| an excellent collection of swings, ' slides, ete. | so oi ACRES IN AREA [ The park is 44 acres in area. The south side of the park is an sheltering trees TRS north side is open, providing for summer sports. The parks commission recent- ly put 250 freshly . painted pienic tables, with benches, in the park These tables are reconditioned and painted during the winter Imonths, ready for the summer| a there its first iris show in i540 in con- taper Site fol. The show is staged in the audi- |§ season. | Refreshment booths are oper-| ated in the park in conjunction | with the large dance pavilion, | This pavilion is open throughout the winter months, and Is leased, from the city by a private firm. | A bandstand is available for concerts throughout the season. | What we used to know years GOOD . BEACH LACKING i About the only thing lacking at| Lakeview Park, which was do- nated to the city by General | Motors, is a beach, Mr, Bathe | said that until a few years ago,! was a fine beach in the park area, but that erosion has han A point of interest at Park fs the old Henry home, one of the oldest residences in the city. The home, which is over 100 years old, belongs to the park commission. Surrounding the !building are old Buffalo pens -- a |reminder of a time when a herd of buffalo wandered the park, in an experiment to establish a Ca- nadian wildlife sanctuary, A eir- rent rumor hints that a museum may be established in the old Henry residence. . Picnic parties throng the par! every day, now, as they will until the early fall. This week, two school picnics are booked for Lakeview, and the board of works annual picnic will be held there June 22 The largest picnic of the year (and probably the largest in the country) is the annual UAW pie- nic, when thousands of members of the Auto Workers Union, and affiliated unions, take their fam- lilies to the park for one of the biggest events in Oshawa's social calendar, late in July. Hare Optical G. T. BAKER OPTOMETRIST HOURS: 8 Bond Street East 9:00 o.m.--6 p.m. EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT Closed Wednesdays PHONE RA 3-481) High water in the' more Theatre TAB HUNTER es "Andy Sheaffer" Information WANTED! Is there an ANDY SHEAFFER or a SUSAN DANIELS living in Oshawa ? If so, please contact L. E. Osier, Manager of the Bilt- at once , . . You'll receive Guest Tickets to see our current attraction . . . "THE GIRL HE LEFT BEHIND" -- starring --- NATALIE WOOD