Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 2 Aug 1958, p. 17

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18 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Seturdey, August 2, 1958 Recalls When Settlers | Had To Evict The Bears Photo| TRAPPERS' CHOICE graphs taken by Mrs. Dan Pat-| Mrs, Patterson's husband was|C {pilot for the Echo, which was the . | choice of trappers and traders for torthern Alberta are going into their occasional trips "outside." The chief attraction Echo's dining room. The cobk, Fred Yaskiw, now in Edmonton, was known as "the best cook in the north." EDMONTON (CP) -- erson of Edmonton when she worked on a paddle-wheeler in Edmonton's city archives. Relics of her family's pioneer jays on a farm in Saskatchewan are being included too. The photo- de pol dishes, all listed in French. Mrs. Patterson left the Echo in| 1929 when she was married. Her husband stayed working in north- ern waters until he died in 1937. Their old ship, the Echo, now is beached and used as a fish-clean- ing plant. was the The young lady ch; CU-'the same little-girl jook. But she's umber, and so on through 12|3 housewife now, and soon to be |a mother. Bell. "Very,. very happy.' ished an absent-minded reporter: Bell, Marilyn Awaits Sir Stork Lives Quiet, Simple Life Does Marilyn feel ill - effects from her epic swims? "I would have worried if I hadn't had good medica: care," she said. "The thing is to stop before it begins to hurt. Too much of anything is not good." Did she feel more excitement] in battling competitors than in pure long-distance swimming? "Well, in a race, you go against the others. In the other kind, it's a housewife," was one suddent comment of the girl who con- ment of the girl who conquered Lake Ontario, the English Chan- nel and Juan de Fuca Strait -- and is stili only 20 years of age. "I've had enough of swimming, If I hadn't been able to do what 1 wanted, perhaps I'd still want to try, but it's not that way at all. "I watched the Atlantic City swim the other day and was per- ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (CP)-- in the beach air had the same wistful smile "And I'm happy," said Marilyn With mock severity she admon- "You can quit calling me Miss I'm Mrs. Di Lascio, you But Marilyn lifted her sea-blue eyes earnestly hen she was asked whether her husband ever shows male resentment of er athletic fame. "Never," she said. "That's one of the reasons I admire him." Joseph Di Lascio, 23, who stud- fed psychology in coilege and was a lifeguard during summers, now; |is a parole officer at Camden, a manufacturing town near Phila- delphia. "We live quietly--neither of us cares much for going out except for an occasional movie," said Marilyn. "We come to Atlantic City every second weekend. "Most of the time, Joe satisfied just to sit in our apart- ment. and watch television. While waiting for the baby I have lots girl had the stamina fo es- tablish such a record: Atlantic City mixed marathon, July 26, 1954 -- Marilyn finishes seventh, first woman. Lake Ontario, Sept. 9, 1964 -- Marilyn swims from Youngstown, N.Y., to Toronto, 32 miles, in 20 hours 56 minutes; first person fo swim Lake Ontario. English Channel, July 31, 1955 --from Cap Gris Nez to Dover in 14 hours 36 minutes; t | Newsprint Up In South Korea SEOUL (Reuters) -- South Korea, with one newsprint rill in operation - nd 'two others being built, soon will b eable to neet its own newsprint requirements. With 37 daily ne. papers swimmer ever to do so; 22 miles. Juan de Fuca Strait, fug. 23, 1956--from Ediz Hook, VT ash., to Clover Point, near Victoria, 10 hours, 38 minutes; 18.3 miles; record time for U.S. - Canada swim; first woman to swim from U.S. to Canada and fifth person to swim the strait, throughout the country having a circulation of been importing 'bout 33,000 tons of newsprint a year. The completed newsprint mill, built at Kunsan, on the west coast, with help from the "'nited Nations K or e 8 n reconstruction graphs and the early mementoes vere displayed first at the Ed- monton Exhibition. The paddle wheeler, Ncrthland Echo, took supplies to traders on he Athabasca and Clearwater Rivers and the shores of Lake|served with every meal. Athabasca near the northern Al-| On another boat, the Dease serta - Saskatchewan boundary. Lake, on which Mrs. Patterson In trips between 1925 and 1929. worked in 1935, trappers were of-|on the property. Mrs. Patterson photographed lifelfered a choice of consomme Es-| After her father had helped or-| along the route. pagnole, creme de spinach, filet|ganize a school district, the chil- know--Mrs. Joseph Di ascio." QUIET REFLECTIONS Marilyn was visiting Atlantic City--scene of one of her swim- ming triumphs -- from her home in Camden, N.J., and ,aased to muse about her glittering caree:, sometimes seriously, sometimes with quiethumor. "I'm more than content to be EATON"S Opporiun just a matter of fighting the tides and yourself. The water s a competitor." Did she get a particular satis- faction in beating men? "I had that feeling," said Mar- ilyn with a mischievous smile. "They're supposed to be the su- perior ones, We're still debating it" of chances to practise my cook- ing. Once I couldn't. do much more than boil potatoes. People ask Joe whether he likes my meals, and he says yes. "It doesn't matter whether our baby is a son or daughter. We talk about a boy." It's difficuit to believe that this Is approaching mother hood anything like embarking on strange waters? "Only one thing worried me in swimming, and that was fog," said Marilyn. "To be able fo hear, but not to see -- never to know, never to see. "There is no fog here.' agency, now is producing about 1,200 tons of newsprint a month, or sufficient to meet 40 per cent of the country's requirements. Two other mills are under cons struction in South Korea, one with an annual production capac- ity of 11,000 tons and the other of 6,000t ons. Cooking on the boats up north {was not at all plain, Yaskiw's fare "was like a Christmas table all the time," Mrs. Patterson said, Pies. cakes and tarts were fectly happy to be a spectator." In 1954, when Marilyn was a New Toronto high school student of 16, she came first among the 'emale competitors in th. Atlan- {ie City swimming marathon, seventh in the race. And it was here she met her hushand-to-be, when he was a lifeguard. SHOT BEARS FIRST When Mrs. Patterson first came west with her family in 1907 from Ontario it took a guide to find the family's Saskatchewan homestead. The settlers' first concern was to shoot the bears - Casual shoes of glove-soft leather (processed calf) to pamper your feet all year round . . . and they're offered at this low special price because they're ends-of-lines! They have foam rubber cushion insoles, wedgee heel platform soles. In brown or black, sizes 5 to 9, medium fitting only. 3 99 A-LOAFER STYLE with buckled strap across vamp B-OXFORD STYLE with one-eyelet tie Sat cpetions | EATON Opportunity Day Special, pair.......... menian, He is an engineering con- sultant by profession and has been to the United States, Red| China and India. In Moscow, he| is a deputy minister for construc | tion. He proudly shows visitors scale models of the work his men are undertaking and says he plans to | be in Burma indefinitely. | Against a backdrop of golden | pagodas and lotus-covered lakes, | Russian engineers, wearing pith| helmets, work alongside Burmese | laborers." They are laying the| foundations for the technological institute and hotel. In addition to the so-called gif: | projects, the Soviet Union has| lent Burma $10,000,000 to be used for an irrigation project and for construction of an agricultural tools factory. Both are low inter- est loans, repayable within 12 years. | Burma is receiving aid from | both sides in the cold war, pre- serving some friendship for both because of its neutrality policy. | Women's Summer Casuals Save 1.96! Reg. 5.95! Please, no telephone or mail orders Ends-of-lines clearance of four popular Summer styles in shoes. come in Elk (tradename) leather , , , wedgee heels, foam-cushioned insoles. have platform soles, Included in group is ee | dren travelled on oxen or trudged Ld ° rough trails on their way to Lifts The Lid 1%; To help the children make up lost time, the teachers spent end- | less after-school hours coaching | ff Modern Art them for exams. Mrs. Patterson says she took two grades in one | year and another time took two | since a display of British ab- others explained that insight and grades in a half year. | stract paintings was exhibited in|ynderstanding were vy to! Auckland, a similar picture has appreciate modern art None| hung in the councillors' room at| to 0 tke of = ne NEWS BRIEFS the local town hall. |challenged the right of the pic- Members of the council discus- ture to hang there as typical of| sed it casually from time to time. current trends. : | STABS GIRL, SUICIDES Some thought it sheer rubbish,| pw, months later the secret NEW YORK (AP)--A 16-year- . leaked out. The "painting" was|old girl was stabbed tc death . . . done by P. T. Curran, a car|Thursday by her rejected suitor Soviet Gift {salesman and member of the wi then Hilled Himed! Ly jump. Ends-of ines ran Fl ' | council, ing off a building. s ni FE ) 4 R Ww "I was under the house one day|after Minerva CONG Nat Jone : (]e ce ° (o] g (2le/ 8 (010 /4] (zed n #7 |and as I opened several paint tins) ma -- | 3 ; apartment building where she a esman 1 Yropves the ds ov to an od ived, Roberto Rivera, 23, fell to 3 plained. "It fook me fully five his death from another building In Burma eS. ated his work off VOTE AGAINST RED BAN urran smuggled his work of| " Cen 3 : art into the councillors' room and), coe" today. voted to (AD) cu. oil ? {listened gravely to occasion dis- a RANSON, Bem 48) ts Er sie i of Russia's travelling salesmen in| Fy that they know the author action now goes to President Car- five © sia. |of the hoax, councillors ari - ios 1b for signing. 85a. came to Burma nine-months| cided about the painting's future. 408 Ahan gning - ® {J & @® : J "Jus i i MI HED . " . SE: xhanov and a 4) ; man con linet dligitle 5 & CEES CRIS Germany| Please state second colour choice when ordering by phone or mail struction team are building $30,-| British artists," says one. "It/(Ap)--Five Ruhr coal miners 000,000 worth of "gift projects|should be sent to England as rep: | were killed or presumed dead in from the peoples of the U.S.S.R. resentative of New Zealand art." 3 cave-in Thursday. The 1.1anage- to the peoples of the Union of 'Leave it here," says another. ment announced today that one Burma. : "This painting is symbolic -- an|body has been recovered. The The Burmese say they will re- artist's impression of the confu-|other men are believed iv have pay the Russians with gifts of|sion that exists in the minds of been crushed to death when the their own, probably rice, begin-\most city councillors." 'gallery collapsed. ning in 1963. By then, the Soviet|-- team hopes to have built a 300- room hotel, a technological insti- tute for 1,100 students, a 200-bed hospital, a 50,000 - seat athletic stadium, a 2,000-seat theatre and . grounds for agricultural and in-| dustrial expositions. | 504 SIMCOE ST. §. for staff holidays Mon. Aug. 4th -- Sat. 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