Blueberry Rake Investing "| Paid Off Irr Bi AMHERST (CP) ago truck driver grew of Amherst invested $6 in a blueberry rake. The small in- vestment has paid off hand- somely. Now the Pettigrew family spend their annual summer vaca- tion picking blueberries -- at the rate of a ton a day. It may seem le strange way to spend a holi- day, but Mrs, Pettigrew says her family "really seems to enjoy it." Last month Seven Roland Petti- years the Pettigrews made over $500 during a two- week vacation stint, but that was about $100 below the usual take. Mr. Pettigrew said this year's harvest of 40 tons was below par compared with those of the last seven years This year Mr. and Mrs. Petti- grew, daughters Betty and Diane and youngest son George, 16, were in the blueberry fields from about 9 a.m. until dusk. Two older boys, Harold and Jack, and their sister Shirley, were unable fo join the family because of their jobs. Jack, 21, is in the air force at Ottawa. Harold and Shirley are employed here, I JUST A VACATION Mrs, Pettigrew, a friendly wo- man who enjoys hard work, says it isn't really a vacation but a change from everyday housework." She takes time out from the blueberry fields to bake 50 loaves of bread during the two - week stint. The family hasn't lost its appetite for the berry either Blugherry pies and pancakes are always on the daily menu The Pettigrews stage friendly Advertising Code For Breweries The ok LAUGH AT BOOKING IN BEATING Three youths being booked in Thomas left, | laughs. They are accused of Coney Island. Brooklyn, police | laughs as Ferro- | beating Harry Gardner, 74, of a ort hth i) Py New Rochelle, and robbing him station in connection with the vecchio, 20 of $15 as he sat on boardwalk beating and robbing of a man leans manacled hands on rail. in the early morning hours, of 74. appear to find the situa- | James Osgood; 16, right, chain- | seeking relief from the heat. tion far from serious... Hand- | ed to Ferrovecchio, also INTERPRETING THE NEWS Sun Shines Brightly For British Tories VISIT. HELPED President E Britain lan peacemaker Mac week Churchill Macemillan's ager cuffed Baldwin Vincent back to camera t's 8 Macmillan will take place Thursday, Oct are As the I1l-word announcement came from 10 Downing Street, a warm September sun shone from a flawless sky Figuratively shone just i Tories In fact Minister admits that way Prime smilingly breaking his With the disarming frankness that has become something of a political trademark, "'Supermac' acknowledges--privately and pub licly--that fortune has fa his Conservative government in the last few months But, he blandly musn't begrudge a politician little luck now and again Ma dmillan now ward a date that whether his luck can firming an almost forecast, he announced night that the general ATLAST! AFLOOR WITH A LIFETIME SPARKLE! senhower's visit to cast Macmil- international the pally Tke- broadcas last commentator Randolph referred to Eisenhower campaign man- things helped to role of After television in the Al- has EDMONTON berta Liquor asked Alberta (CP) Control Board breweries to re- frain from advertising their soft drinks on television, chairman George Clash said Tuesday. A similar request was also sent to a distillery in Calgary, the only one in the province Mr. Clash said the request was made so that the distillery and the breweries will not enter tele- vision advertising pending deci- new code of advertis- sun the he brightly political for as vOore seemed almost 00 good to be The weather lulling electors into a som noleni, couldn't-care - less-about politics moods, was one reason for Conservative optimism The list could go on and on Opinion polls showed the gov ernment forces with a clear edge over the opposition Labor party. Little more than a year ago, La bor was in front things true you sell a says party of complain economic all. And adopted volicies policies, | ion" on a elwee i between ing The give more now is a to of for have pet traditionally has little about a period stability and jobs the Conservatives some of Labor's blurring the differences the parties Labor, protest moving to- n will show last, Con- unanimous Tuesday election is will and new code breweries freedom to advertise illegal to advertise and liquor in the province. Breweries have been adver ing their soft drinks on radio, buses and newspapers but, Mr. clash, the board does a possibly distilleries It beer {ing before the new code is drawn up. He did not know when the {new code would be in force. Sick's Lethbridge Brewery Limited is the only, one now ad- vertising on TV by sponsoring the Sgt. Bilko Show. The brewery Isaid it instructed its adver- has by Sept. By TOM WILLIAMS Canadian Press Staff Writer KAWENE, Ont. (CP)--Manage- iment and labor are learning to {understand each other by forget- {ting squabbles and meeting per- |son-to-person at a retreat tucked {away in the northwestern Ontario {forest near here The lesson is part an ex- of NEW SPARKLE SANDRAN Bow! Millions of tiny gold and silver sparkles sealed ander scrubless 100% vinyl! "NEW SPARKLE SANDRMN « rises. wine Whee Sect eid one swish of a damp mop! | ® NEW SPARKLE SANDRAN x wamiset. ior weifto wel seedy » A¥TY 100M IN OUT howe ® NEW SPARKLE SANDRAN x mosdnated with wet a mendes. ops. loot ® EEW SPARKLE SARORAN is mace by exclusive Duo-¥myl Process Sanam. of gold and siver metallic chips are inset imo the vinyl, fen seed Aight nd smooth for Iife onder 2 second contol clear 100% wd ~Jomgnt-wwaving floor covermg material known' w WOW SPARNAE SANODRAN © screbless won) pol, won't san] S40 Siar Satiorts aud soles Yess Jot ove SPANAE YAO Jo Weleve Sul Suaitvd 4 Sur eoviies sa bt sq. yd. MANOKAN FR ROSS E. MILLS Co. Ltd. 80 SIMCOE ST. NORTH, OSHAWA Phone 8-6218 A GROUP of amateur ar tists, interested in teaching art in their Northwestern Ontario communities, get expert' advice { from an instructor during a study session at the Quetico Conference and Training Centre, centre, located in i Tite g Harvest contests on the blueberry tar] rens, located near Parrsboro, N.S. Father Roland holds the rec-| ord for raking a 30-pound bucket in one minute, 40 seconds. The | rake is used to scoop up blueber- | ries and aump them in the wait- ing pails. Harold's 51 one of the achievements The blueberries are sent processing plants in Nova hd and New Brunswick, where they | are prepared for market io are sold chiefly to United States! and Ma me retailers Nova Notia's blueberry harv:| est is worth more than $1,000,000 annually. Processing plants, "/ tablished in recent years, have made it possible for more blue- berries to reach markets; Automation n| Test Marking MONTREAL (CP) Now it's automation or the marking of students' examination papers. Prof. Gerald Dunn of the Uni-| versity of Manitoba told Tuesday | about a new machine which not | only takes over the job from teachers but takes the human- error element out of marking papers. Examinations are punch cards which and tabulated by the Addressing a one-day of teachers al Mel sity who are studying of teaching chemistry, Dunn said that '"'on the whole are 'satisfied with the results." "But this method does not take| into account the student's ability | |to organize his thoughts and ex-| {press them. We are attempt {to fill this gap through required laboratory reports of experi-| ments Sutherland Works In Art Gallery FREDERICTON (CP) work of Graham Vivian land, 53-year-old British who has managed to fame in his own time cupy one entire wall of he Brit- ish section in the Lord Beaver- brook Art Gallery when it opens Sept. 16 Prominent sketch of Sir Winston om which a now highly versial portrait of tl wartime prime minister based. Free Bus Rides In , Ottawa Thursday | OTTAWA (CP) buckets a day is| family's proudest et are m up on scored problems Prof. we ng! | This The Suther- ist ac hie ve original Churchill contro- Britich was will be the e All passen- want them to stat TV advertis-|gers get free rides on Ottawdonce-proininent place in agricul- 'port says. The range sheep ram- {buses between 9:30 am. and 12 noon Thursday. An Ottawa de-| partment store (A. J. Freiman| Limited) is footing the bill to promote its 59th birthday sale. | Ottawa Transportation Com- mission officials said the system], usually carries about 11,000 pas tising agency to cancel the show !sengers on 85 buses during the farm products {morning period Human Relations Test In Quetico Art Centre relations be- the Quetico periment in human ing carried out by Conference and a non - profit org at developing nmin for ally every phase of social, nomic and cultural life The centre was founded a year ago at the site of a former pro- vincial forestry department air nization aimed virtu- eco- i a key the rugged forests 100 miles west of the Lakehead is essen- tially an experiment in human relations veloping leaders, every phase of life economic and cultur drawn from for various al purs CP Photo nits Traming Centre, | It is aimed at de- centre, describes the effect of re- STARTED IN 1958 ; ple mes PAGE THIRTEEN The Oshavon OSHAWA, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, VOL. 88--No. 210 1959 False Charge Against Union Political Tint To Hearings WASHINGTON (AP) -- Chief lawsuit in an effort to defeat |counsel Robert F. Kennedy told union demands for a pension {the Sen ate rackets committee plan. Tuesday that Toledo lawvers| "That's why these whole hear have admitted that charges they ings are such a # " Kennedy helped to bring against a union ge the Biol, 3 ead, 5 official were a fraud. " 4 "Our investigators went out fo hel Bamed one of thei ore and talked to those at- awyers as H. P. Ells, and the|, g {union official as Richard T. Gos- formers 24 they admitted it was ser, senior International vice |2 holt Gossel the charges president of the United Auto agaist ei iri of union fi. | Workers Union Lie irregularities were all a | John A. Bolman of Toledo, a : ; {former UAW oificial, had testi- ap ey formally oS cowed |fied that he was expelled from 31 ed if i ons {the union in 1950 after Ells had | Gi ¢ DOVAng Ii 18 | &98 WU) [represented him .in litigation Situation I've ever seen. which involved misconduct| Kennedy said testimony pro- |charges against Gosser. Bolman duced by the Republicans never said the case was settled out of fully checked for accuracy was court. |going into the record. NINE YEARS -- 1949.57 COST OF LIVIN N= RECORD LIVING COSTS The Canadian cost of 126.4 on Aug. 1, up nearly one- half of one per cent from July. | has reached -a record high of | | | | average industrial wages and |1oledo Blade, paid the lawyer|Aug. 21, has heavy political the price index during 1949-57, | pared with 171.9 June 1 and |Smith, now a judge of the county | - -. Arts Building {BRUTAL BEATING trom Gosser when Kennedy cut|versity of Toronto arts building OTTAWA (CP)--Sheep- raising of meat. consuming 142 pounds farmer federal government |; and half of that is im- of (the industry it was learned Tues- [per capita annual consumption. living | based on 1949 prices equalling | Boiman said he believed that! The investigation, resumed salaries which stood at 171.6 |fees of Ells and Dudley Smith, overtones. Tac UAW usually sup- graph (shaded area) | July 1, last date for which fig- (also a Toledo lawyer associated! {ports Democrats for political of- its movement through 1958 and | 164.6 July 1 last year. appeals court at Toledo, of do- so far this year. _The index is --CP Newsmap a WIONg. : Bolman was telling of a brutal Contract Given He aisin beating he said he had suffered [at a union meeting for demand-| TORONTO (CP)--The contract He questioned whether Bol-lon St. George Street has been man nad beer a "front" for|awarded to Redfern Construction could become a major contributor | |per capiia a year compared with to Canada's agricultural economy [132 pounds in Britain. But of this, survey the industry has con-| |eluded. |ported. In Britain, these meats {day that the committee recom- Canadian sheep breeders nded a number of steps 10|should look to the west for breeds 100. Also shown is the index of pay; Block. publisher of the Tuesday after a recess since traces the yearly average of | ures are available. This com- |as counsel. No one accused fice _-- EE | {ing an accounting of union funds|to build the new $6,000,000 Uni- Be Rewarding: Can WwW 11 {some employers in the ensuing!Co, Ltd., of Toronto. and a rewarding business for the only 2.7 pounds is mutton or | Following .a yeai's study of account for 23.3 pounds of the Frm sheep-raising back to its|to improve their position, the re- ture. |bouilet, 'romnelet, columbia and The report notes that the in-|corriedale -- were suggested as dustry is unable to supply pres-ithe best to improve the quality ent demand for both wool and |of the wool. lamb, adding that the demand | To counter U.S. demand for for these products "will continue |these sheep, the survey report well into the fuiure which suggests a premium of $2 a head be sai¢c of many other|be paid to breeders and owners » on ewes that will pass inspection Canadians rank high as eaters' as potential breeders. cannole base. Its white frame bungalowsbody from a different status, not and conference halls nestlelas competitors-just as people." against a backdrop of jack pine,! The reaction of a mining com: | aspen and birch on the shore of|pany official who had been work-| tranquil Eva Lake, 100 miles west ling with labor representatives on| of the Lakehead, |the centre's executive was typ-| |ical: WIDE INTERESTS "Until fl Iv ti I got The Quetico Centre borrows its| AE. now. 'ie only Hime 1 go together with these fellows was Iname from the neighboring Que-| tico Provincial Park. It EN {when we were fighting like the facilities and advice for training devil over Some conga: > and study groups with interests Other. bul mow lm gelling FORTY YEARS ago a teen- age girl got a job selling ad- vertising on a 30-day basis for the Niagara Falls (Ont.) Re- view. Winnifred Stokes soon graduated from advertising and worked her way up as | 'PERMANENT FIXTURE' social editor and long-time police reporter before become ing managing editor. Miss Stokes -- her married name is Mrs. Winnifred W. Hill -- is shown here in the Review's composing room. --CP Photo by Mr ranging from trade unionism tol HOW tel a they re a great oil painting, from industrial su- une Kids ei the comm) pervision to dramatics. |ments of a trade unionist after During the first year, more several sessions during a labor| than 300 persons attended COUTSeS | sohool with a lecturer who had| at the centre. They stayed in heen considered to be on man- residence, pooling their know-|aoement's side. | Ld ledge, skills and views to improve | "tim a¢ guy knows his stuff alll their grasp of their specific pont» the union man said. "The! n 1 S fields only trouble is we're getting tol While working to build the like the beggar." | Ld y skills and knowledge required of| C. M. Mcintosh. the centre's | leaders in particular fields, the resident director, told of an in-| 1 or S . O centre's directors keep in mind cident that happened during al a broader objective, It's the de-| cour: se for women handicraft in- velopment of what they call "hu-|structors. NIAGARA FALLS. Ont. (CP)--|those 40 years she has hurdled man relations skills" -- roughly, "Twenty-one women took part Forty vears age a teen-eged girl/fences, climbed the Niagara the ability to get along with peo- in the course, most of them com- sat down in the office . of the Gorge and roughed it with the ple ing from bush communities in Niagara Falls Review not long| best of them. H. E. Thomas of Fort William, | Northwestern Ontario. A mon g|after sunrise and waited for the| "Socially she's all feminine," head of the cenire's executive, them they spoke 14 different lan- [publisher to arrive declares one of her close as- regards this as the most impor-| guages. | Winnifred Stokes was looking [SOciates. "As a journalist she's tant purpose of the enterprise. |opcracr® OVERCOME !for a job selling advertising and eal hard-tack." "While man has made tremen-| « . writing special articles for an ' r dous advances in science and |f UGH aiter iey Bhived, oe edition celebrating The Review's ENJOYS WORK technology, his human relations | eoyldn't speak English. But after [first five years as a daily new. > 8 ack on 40 years of skills have lagged behind," he Publisher F ' sarly LE Wsbuper work Miss Siokesss ills she'd been working with the Publisher F. H. Leslie. an early her married name is Mrs. Wil said in an interview. group for a day or so, she was riser himself. arrived after alfred W. Hill--was asked whether MANY DIFFICULTIES getting along wonderfully. ~ |While and hired her on what was|she would enter the same field "The results of this lag are| Through their common in-|Supposed to be a 30-day arrange-|if she had the time over again. seen in the difficulties world terest and enthusiasm for handi- ment. "I certainly would. There is no powers have in resolving their | raft work, the women were able ROSES FOR WINNIFRED profession on earth as fast-mov- differences over the conference|!0 Overcome the language bar- |" " Aug. 28 Mr. Leslie and his| 2 and as rewarding as the table. The problems of union and ier. "Bele and lus newspaper profession.' mang 4 The co-operation evident in the [SON editor W. B, Leslie, arranged : ; anagemeni, man and wife, tude. ) 1 40 roses on the 'desk of The 'Re- To youngsters with a$pirations colored and non-colared are in-|SUdY groups is also typical of view ging of becoming writers the veteran tencifiods by. Me Took OF such {the centre's formation. Mr. Me- ew"s managing editor The desk ditor gives this advice skills." ! Intosh said. {pow is occupied by Winnifred| "First. eat . When the lands and forests de-|Stokes--Wyn to her friends and eat up as much educa- The knack of understanding {partment indicated in 1956 that | |colleagues, tion you can, preferably uni i Setting sjoug w ih people planned to Move its air base! "She has so much printer's ink | hon 3 training in arts and jou v aditional [from the Eva Lake site, Mr. |in her ve palism. Then dip yow fingers lecture methods. Thomas + > eins now that I guess she (into as much printer's ink a - : Thomas, Mr. MelIntosh and alis a permanent fixture." said Mi hd said portunity will provide number of associates suggested |I eslie z Y. wil. provide "It has to be developed throught he department that a residen-| "There is no substitute for a live in, social experience, Yai Traini nee Toe bi 'We never have kept banking | practical experience ir a news- That's the purpose of the Quetico {there " {hours in my plant," he recalls. |paper office, even if it's just filing Conference and Training cen- The government approved the | "But this girl, so alert and early jcuts inthe morgue or carrying tre {dea and support, both moral and | |startled me Even at that, he| coffee for the hard - bitten edit- The centre's isolation plays a financial. was received from admits he underestimated his|ors." role in this development virtually. every agency involved "short-term™ employee's zeal She is a member of the Cana Dr. Roby Kidd, director of the mn leadership ' training in artis: It didn't take long for the girl dian Women's Press Ciub and the Canadian Association for Adult western Ontario. to get out of the advertising de- Canadian Managing Editors Cone Education and an adviser to the partment and into reporting and |ference. She is a member of the |writing, her real love. Niagara Falls board of education, The Quetico Conference and Wyn Stokes worked her way up|was its first woman chairman, Training Centre in May, 1958, as social editor and long-time po-|and was also the first woman was chartered as a non-profit or- lice reporter Ig re reaching thelchairman of the public library ganization, Imanaging editor's During board and the community chest. {moteness at the organization's annual meeting "Here we meet people nof as threats, not as peg as some