J 4 v ' né col he eno' fice In, - FEE ER NOT A BIT AFRAID Lost In Bush, Girl Lived Week On Grass RAINY RIVER, Ont. (CP)--A shy, 11-year-old girl, who lived on grass and weeds during the week! she was lost in dense bush near her home, sat up in her hospital sed Sunday and tucked into good- sized meals. Saturday, Carol Johnson's first request after she was found asleep beside a fallen tree was for ice cream. Apart from that, she was fed only soup during her first day back in civilization. Carol was found five miles from her farm home at Bergland, 18 miles north of this Northwest- ern Ontario town. Dr. G. E, 8. Fraser,. attending the girl, said that apart from running a mild fever, bramble scratches, sunburn and wood-tick bites to her feet and legs, she is in good condition #nd will be all- owed to go home in a day of two Carol was a little overwhelmed by the excitement over her res cue, and talked only to her par- ents and the doctor, ANSWERS WITH NODS Mainly by timid nods of her head, she answered questions put to her by her overjoyed mother and father, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Johnson, ; Yes, she nodded, she had been old at nights and she trembled sunder the blankets at the mem. % of her wezk-long trek through 1 bush, No, she did not want to eat any more grass, She told her mother she had said her prayers every night just as she had been taught. "I was just going out fo find daddy's cattle," Carol said when asked why she wandered away The nature - loving girl was found when more than 500 search- ers started out on what was to be the last day of the hunt, "Oh, I'm so glad you found me," she said when a party of searchers came upon the wel and shivering child, She told them "I wasn't a bit afraid." . Forest Fire Reports Scare U.S. Tourists By BEN WARD Canadian Press Sta'f Writer North Bay, Ont. (CP) A visitor from. Cleveland walked into a hotel here and asked for a room "where 1 can keep an eye on the fires." The puzzled room « scratched his brow. "Fires?' "Sure," replied the tourist pulled out a newspaper c which told of 41 forest fires ing in Northern Ontario It took the clerk some time to convince the man the fires were far away--in some cases hun- He (dreds of miles, The man took a g tourists, celled trips | reports. | "As soon as they hear of a | dozen or so bush fires some peo-| ' |ple get the idea the whole coun- try's burning," he says, | Mr. Richardson said he has compiained to the Ontario lands and forests department about ifs practice of locating fires by the number burning in each district "They call these districts by the names of cities or towns and report North Bay with so many fires, Sudbury with so - many, Sault Ste, Marie, Cochrane and She was wearing only a cotton blouse and a jumper-type skirt to forth, =u] and was barefoot when found. FRIENDS WORRY | Carol told her mother she was, During bad forest fire periods carrying her shoes so as not 10 almost every centre in the north| lose them, . gets scores of telegrams, mostly | It rained heavily Friday and of US, origin, from people in- temperatures dropped to freezing quiring about the safety of hol-| several nights, idaying friends and relatives. | "I was praying constantly and Northern chambers of com: I was answerzd by God," sald merce are becoming more and the girl's mother Sunday. more concerned about the. effect of fire reports on tourist trade. Many of their tourist pamphlets point out that Northern Ontario | rovers more than 350,000 square miles ~-- nearly 100,000 square | miles bigger than Texas -- and| most forest fires ae only afew) eooked by each ghelwas as uy eres v ' elephant's mem- "We get the odd person who Joug asa P comes north just to see a forest Hors d'ocuvres--Turkey. fire," Mr. Richardson says] (jam chowder--America, "Usually they have to look pretty Fogash froid--Hungary. hard and some of them never do Paella velencianna de pou- see one." let--Spain. Filet boeuf vieux bruxelles --Belginm, Souffle atelier--Germany. A SIT, BURB, SLEEP AFTER BANQUET LONDON (AP) -- Famous' chefs from six nations cooked up -one of the most fabulous luncheons since the table- groaning feasts of King Henrl VIIL "After such a meal," said the Duke of Bedford Thurs- day, 'the only proper reac- tion is to sit down, burp and go to sleep." "Hear, hear," shouted the diners. The staggering menu of de- lightful delicacies cost more than £1,100 ($3,080). works out at $51.33 a stomach for 60 invited guests. It was all free, Hosts were the owners of the Kensington Palace Hotel, with the en- thusiastic co-operation of the Brussels' World Fair, The chefs from the .United States, Germany, Hungary, Belgium, Turkey and Spain-- were flown here from Brus. sels, each with an assistant. The menu -- one course | During the -week searchers flushed several large bears in the area buf Carol said she had not seen any, room on the topmost, fourth floor, anyway, hoping for a glimpse. FREQUENT CASES Incidents like this occur fre- quentiy in Northern Ontario cen- {res during the summer season northerners claim, They contend that the stories of forest fires CCF PARTY PRESIDENT VANCOUVER (CP) --- Mrs, Pe 'THE DAILY TIMES:GAZETTE | VOL. 87--NO, 128° OSHAWA-WHITBY, MONDAY, JUNE 2, 1958 Lesage New Head That. Letter Hits 'PM For Not | Stopping Tests LONDON (AP) -- Tass news agency has made public here a 'etter from Premier Khrushchev reproaching Canada's Prime Min- ictef Diefenbaker for not getting the United States and Britain to halt nuclear weapons tests. The letter was dated Friday, May 30. Khrushchev went to So- fla, Bulgaria, Saturday at the head of a Soviet delegation to the Bulgarian Communist party con- scare away thousands of potential Grace MacInnis, daughter of the !elected president of the CCF in ber of Parliament. British Columbia Sunday. She is Woodsworth, CCF in 1933. Her husband is Stan Richardson, a tourist op- erator near North Bay, says he has a thick file of actual incl dents where visitors, particularly from the United States, have can- An-'nipeg declaration: - --_-- sa u--t THURSDAY, JUNE 5th, 10 a.m. --_ ------ «+. They Want Us To Come As We Are! (uot mm i a . & IN| THE HEART OF DOWNTOWN OSHAWA The Store That Offers More e # Plan To Attend r. . . Bring A Friend ! 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The Good Housekeeping Guaranty Seal on the label le your assurance of gquelity, A GUARANTEE IN WRITING Given with Each FLEXOFORM Maitress oe = $2500 IN VALUABLE PRIZES TO BE GIVEN AWAY Including ., . a restonic Flexoform mattress FREE 8" x 10" dithograph print of the picture shown above will be given away to the first 1500 people attending the grand opening of Oshawa's newest store ., VHS A gress, Soviet officials in Ottawa founder of the CCF party, was gus MacInnis, former CCF mem- said the Russian ambassador there delivered the letter to the The letter answered a Diefen- {In that letter, the Canadian prime minister said the Soviet .an- nouncement of unilateral zuspen- sion of nuclear weapons tests was not a substitute for international agreement on the question, DISTRUST SEEN , He termed "highly artifi- cial argumentation" Diefenbak- er's charge that Soviet veto of an Arctic plane patrol system weakened the Soviet stand on nu- clear tests. He attacked U.S, plane flights in that region and asked Diefenbaker how he would like Soviet planes flying toward Canada's borders. But the Soviet premier insisted he was not questioning Diefen- baker's sincerity, only his logic. He said he was disappointed that suade the U.S, and Britain to stop their tests. Speculate On Loch Ness | Monster Tots | (AP) -- Has the Loch Ness mon- ster had babies? same time? \ The crowd of monsters {sighted recently, or so the story is told along the shores of peat- | stained Loch Ness in the Scottish | Highlands. | For years Scottish tourist | board operators, publicity men, | keepers of nearby inns, picture | postcard salesmen, souvenir shop |operators and other monster-be- |lievers "have been ' content with | just one monster, | But with the bidding for tour- [ists getting fiercer, multiple mon- |the trade. That's the skeptics' | point of view. | ANTI:-MONSTER VERSION | Anti-monster Scots have an ex- (planation of what their kinsmen | claim to see: | Surface disturbances, confused | with monster 'shapes, are caused Iby gases bubbling to the surface from decaying and expanding vegetable matter on the bottom of the lake. Some Scots say there must be the bilge of a ship as it passed Canada has done nothing to per-| | Saturday, the B, C. CCF party prime minister's office Saturday. | the daughter of J.- 8. defeated an attempt by old-guard who founded the socialists to downgrade the Win- baker note earl'er in the month, No one knows just how she got it, but Suzie, porpoise at the Seaquarium in Miami, Fla., is sporting an unbeautiful shiner. She rests her head on PAGE SEVENTEER By GUY RONDE, Canadian Press Staff 'Writer QUEBEC (CP)-~-Jean Lesage, a veteran politician in the federal arena, Saturday was chosen leader of Quebec's Liberal party in a smashing first-ballot victory, Mr, Lesage is member of Par« B|iament for Montmagny - I'Islet. and was minister of northern af. fairs in the former Liberal fed. "eral administration. He succeeds A Z Georges Lapalme as provincial Liberal chief. It will be the task of the 46- |\vear-old Quebec city lawyer to {lead the Liberals from the {shadows of Premier Duplessis' {Union Nationale party which has {held sway in Quebec since 1944. |At no time since then have the Liberals been able to win more than 23 of the. 93 seats in the Legislative Assembly. They have % |17 members now, {EASY WINNER | Mr. Lesage rode roughshod ia ithe voting over the opposition of | Montreal lawyer Paul Gerin- P| Lajoie, Rene Hamel, member-of PORPOISE HAS SHINER TREATMENT as he applies some soothing unction to the injured eye. Suzie's baby, Bebe, watches the operation at right. | the lap of Jimmy Kline here | {the Legislative Assembly for St. { Maurice, and Montreal dentist Dr. Aime, Fauteux, Mr. Lesage had 630 votes, against 145 for Mr. Gerin-Lajoie, 97 for Mr. Hamel and one for Dr. Fauteux, The new leader has said he will {resign from his federal seat 'but {whether or not he will make an iearly attempt to gain a seat in he provincial house is still not known, Social Studies To Be Scrapped For Geography | EDMONTON (CP) -- Ontario|held as part of the annual meet- schools next term will begin us-|ing of the Canadian Association| ing a new geography course de- as the best in North America, geography department - at Was| University of Western Ontario, |raphical training the | | through the Caledonian Canal. Arctic in to awesome | ster-sightings could be a boon for| Proportions in the warmer waters 'Nuclear Station Finished [The creature, probably | origin, has grown of the loch. Loch Ness is the perfect place for a monster legend. The water lis dark and shadowy, in places '800 feet deep. DIES OF BURNS OWEN SOUND (CP) -- Harold | Victor Reilly, 52, died in hospital here Saturday as a result of {burhs suffered March 31 when an was pouring kerosine exploded. MAN IN THE STRAW HAT MONTREAL (CP) Steele, for almost 60 years a {familiar sight with his straw hat| | tired with no plans for the future] | "but a shipload of memories." | Steele, 85, worked as a cargo| | checker on the dock staff of a steamship agency from 1891 until| 1949, when he was transferred to| {the firm's head offices uptown, | Although he is still healthy, his eyesight is failing and that's the | reason he, decided to hang up the old' - fashioned straw boater hat that 'marked him with two gen- erations of sailors. | He wore the headpiece through-| out the seasons and was known| everywhere as "the man .in the straw hat." . READ AND SMOKE now is read and smoke his pipe. | "I never had much time for| hobbies, 'but I've got a shipload of memories." He recalled the years at the start of the century when tempor- ary wooden buildings occupied the sites where modern harbor sheds now stand. The buildings were erected in spring and taken down each fall because floods carried them away if they were left, he said. ; { There was no electricity at that| |time so an oil lantern was' stand-| {ard equipment for every checker, 'The ships, although steamers, And there were lots of small] 'then, you had to sail." Steele said all he wants to do - 36 hours continuously to get a ship loaded or unloaded, he said, tavern | at Joe Beef's famous nearby. of Geographers. DRUMNADROCHIT, Scotland|scribed by a university professor| DESCRIBES COURSE He said the new course will be | The province will scrap 'social compulsory in grades VII to X, How else, insist the faithful, studies" in favor of a new course and optional in grades XI to XII, ican you explain how 10 people in whigh history and geography culminating with the grade XIII | standing in 10 different spots can| will be. taught separately, said examination being accepted by see 10 different monsters at the pr, E, G. Pleva, head of the universities as an entrance pa- the per. A byelection has beén called for July 2 in the riding of Matane but it is doubtful that Mr. Lesage {will enter the race, There is some speculation a Liberal member of the legislature may give up his seat to Mr. Le sage, The possibility also exists he might not try for a seat until the next general election, expected in 1960. In that event Mr, Lapalme, who retired a few months ago as party %head, probably would con. tinue as opposition leader in the Legislative Assembly. Delegates "adopted about 30 resolutions. One re-affirmed that education is exclusively a provin. | Grade VII geography will deal) cial matter, but would leave Que- "The Ontario students will get|with Ontario and the rest of Can-|bec universities free to accept or {at least 12 times as much geog-'ada. The following year it will be|reject federal aid. raphy as the average Michigan the U. S. and the rest of the | student, and will exceed in geog- average | | Russian student," Dr. Pleva said. United Kingdom and the Com- He spoke Saturday during a monwealth, and grade X western symposium on school geography,' Europe and the rest of the world. Americas. Grade nine will stress The delegates also decided that there should be free education for the all students attending primary, secondary and technical schools. Another resolution called for a provincial labor code, By JOHN E. BIRD Canadian Press Staff Writer CHALK RIVER, Ont. {first full . scale nuclear power (CP)-- The basic design of Canada's Design Of Full-Scale character. No site has heen chosen and no money set aside for such a project, However, there is little doubt that Atomic Energy of Canada plant has been completed by a|limited will proceed with the pro. nine-man team of engineers from private industry, : The plant will cost about $60, | | % x " [some 5 live out there, and | oil can blew up in his home. He 000,000 and generate some 200, this is one of their explanations: had been in hospital since the ex-|000 kilowatts of electricity, equiv- The 'monster is some crea-|plosion. He was lighting a wood ) : L : ture washed into Loch Ness from|stove when a can from which he coal-burning electric station, olent 'to the output of a large The design is conceptional in Montreal Waterfront Personality Retires Philip| sometimes stayed on the job for|around for a pet." Looking back on his career Steele said the work was difficult jon Montreal's waterfront, has re- ang jater almost all Gongregated but satisfying. "It was tough at times and 1 wasn't very robust, but I never ject within two years. It will cone stitute a major part of the Crows {Company's long-range program--- in co-operation with private ine dustry--to harness the atom for | industrial power. | The company, which operates ithe Chalk River atomic project, has issued a report on the basie design study which says the plant could be taken through all stages ~--from development to final de- sign and construction -- in an eight-year period. : The plant was designed by members of the nuclear power branch of the company, made up of engineers from private ine dustry.. The branch is headed by H. A. Smith, engineering design specialist with Ontario Hydro. Atomic Energy of Canada scientists worked closely with the {team on aspects of the study re- lated to nuclear physics. 'The proposed plant is known by the code name Candu---standing for Canadian deuterium-uranium. "I remember Joe Beef himself,| missed a day through illness in|The name was selected because He .used to sprinkle fresh say. dust on the floor of his place ery day and he kept a bear 55 years." Steele is married and'has three children. the plant will use natural uran- ium as a fuel and deuterium, or heavy water, as a coolant. West GermanPresident To Address Parliament By BILL BOSS Canadian Press Staff Writer .| OTTAWA (CP) -- Tall, white-| haired Theodor Heuss, president of the federal republic of West Germany, addresses the Parlia-| ment of Canada today, high mark| of a week-long visit he is paying to the country. First German chief of state to visit Canada, the 74-year-old pres- ident arrived in Ottawa Sunday, after spending Thursday, Friday and Saturday travelling inform- ally in Quebec and Ontario. prodigious feat of memory. In the evening Papa Heuss, as he is known in his homeland, re- laxed among compatriots in the German Embassy. Since reaching Quebec City last Wednesday by air from Bonn,Dr. Heuss has been in Montreal, the Niagara Falls area and Toronto, and has flown over the St. Law- rence Seaway project. Through an embassy spokes. man, the president Sunday night said his four days in Eastern |each by name to the visitor in a|rich von Brentano, West German {foreign minister, is to meet Fi- {nance Minister Fleming and {Trade Minister Churchill. | There is a formal dinner to- night at Government House, te be followed by a reception, The diplomatic talks continue Tuesday and the party leaves for {Washington Wednesday morning. Dr. Heuss arrived in Toronto Saturday from Niagara Falls and later made a sightseeing tour of |the city. - | As he entered his hotel, Dr. Protocol and expanses of red Canada had impressed him with Heuss was met by a group of carpet characterized the meticu-| the ingenuity of Canada's engi- German-Canadians from Winni« lous proceedings in the Union | neers in the preparations laid for|peg. He expressed his gratitude Station concourse, where Gover- | development of the country's fu-|for Winnipeg's help to West Ger- of Ottawa's diplomatic corps, president, Mr. Massey After the address to the joint - still carried spars to hoist sails|nor - General Massey presented ture, which he felt lies increas- many after the Second World | which sometimes was necessary. |the marshalled chiefs of mission ingly in industry. War, | The president's day concluded boats that plied the St. Lawrence members of the cabinet and sen- houses of Parliament today, Dr. with a white-tic-and-decorations River. If you wanted to travel ior government officials to the Heuss has a private meeting with dinner and reception given by greeted Prime Minister Diefenbaker late Lieutenant-Governor Kieller Mags | Dockworkers in those days each personally, then introduced this afternoon, while Dr. Hein. 'kay. h 1] || 2 1h =] .