TWO NEW MEMBERS have | just recently joined the ranks of supervisor in the Oshawa branch of the National Employ- ment Service. H. W. Turner, ex- treme left, who succeeds Percy | 3% SEE cr EPI Densham as claims payment | Garnet Shaver who went to Ot- | supervisor, has been in the | tawa on promotion. Mr. Burke Oshawa office since 1942. J. | 30 ohervisor of the insurance | Burke, extreme right, was re- y cently transferred to Oshawa branch and second in command | to the manager. Left to right, from Long Branch to succeed | Veteran Claims Officer Retires It was in 1942 that Percy Den- sham joined the National Em- ployment Service in Oshawa, starting in as an employment and claims officer Grade 1. Now 18 years and many pro- motions later a remarkably youth- ful Mr. Densham has reached re- tirement age. He retires as claims officer Grade 4, and has been the supervisor of the claims payment section for the past two years. In that time both by cash and by cheque he has supervised the pay- ment of unemployment insurance to men and women from Osh- awa and the district. RECALLS CHANGEOVER The heaviest load of work in Mr. Densham's memory was just after the Second World War owing to the changeover from wartime to peacetime produc- tion in the city's plants. Layoffs since have been as big, he says, but the office has been more prepared to handle them. "Methods and procedures have changed in 18 years," he says, "and things improved under Mr. Hodgson's organization." CERTIFICATE PRESENTED At a staff gathering Monday night Mr, Densham was present. ed with a certificate of meritor- ious service signed by Col. J. G. Bisson, chief commissioner, and a clock radio from the staff in g% Oshawa. In many ways he will be sorry to leave the office. 'I can't say enough about Mr. Hodgson and the staff," he says. 4 And Norman Hodgson, manager of the Oshawa branch of the ser- vice, said: "I can't pay too high a tribute to Mr. Densham's loy- alty and service. He has been an employee that could always be depended upon and it will be dif- ficult to replace him for some time." BORN IN ENGLAND Mr. Densham was born in Eng- land and served throughout the First World War. In 1922 he came to Canada and settled in Port Perry. His immediate retirement plans are for "a rest at home'. Mr. and Mrs, Densham have two married sons in Oshawa and a married daughter in Gagetown, N.B. Succeeding Mr. Densham is H. W. Turner, successful candi-| A date in the recent promotional manager of the national em- competition, who has been in the ployment service, looks at the 1ai : A certificate for meritorious ser- claims payment office ¢ Ly S pay office since 1946 vice presented to Percy Den- NORMAN HODGSON, left, AIR CADET NEWS Cadet Mothers Form Auxiliary By WINGLESS WILLIE Last Monday evening the sec- ond meeting of the Air Cadet ladies auxiliary was held at the Rotary Hall. During the meeting elections were held. Congratulations are in order for the new president, Mrs Gallagher; vice-president, Mrs Jubb; secretary, Mrs. Kelly and treasurer, Mrs. O'Hare. The ladies also brought up dif- ferent 'ways in which they could make money for the squadron. One such way is a rummage sale which they plan to have April 9. It was decided that meetings for the auxiliary will be held every second Tuesday of the ions Ryerson Institute of Tech-|L€Wises who came to Upper Can-|8utted them July 4, 1864. month at 8 p.m. The ladies also discussed the possibility of sponsoring a father and son banquet later in the year. 49 ON PARADE On the home scene 49 cadets were on parade Tuesday evening During the classes the senior cadets, who are trying for the flying course, wrote two tests. The first test was on Navigation while the second was on Meteor ology. We would like to extend con gratulations to Cpl. Dave Jubb who took top marks on the test COLOR PARTY This year the RCAF Associa- tion is holding its provincial con- vention in Oshawa this coming Friday and Saturday. The Air Cadets this year are going to play a part in the convention, An Air Cadet Color Party has been formed to present the colors at the convention next Saturday morning. All cadets on the party are reminded to be at the cadet hall at 7.30 am CLEANUPS The next meeting of the NCO Club will be held April 10. A con stitution for the club will be dis cussed, Please keep this date in mind We are glad to see that nearly everyone has a spiffy. The few that haven't got them please get one quickly. We now have enough cadets for the drill team and practices should begin some exams. Any cadet who wishes to join may still do so. One thing we should impress on you is that this is going to be a lot of hard work but it should be fun The condition of the hall in the past few weeks has been quite sloppy because of cadets throw ing chocolate bar wrappings and other refuse around during the break. Anyone caught throwing paper, etc., on the floor shall re ceive extra duties. For example as Sgt Ditmarr always say "You'll sweep" Senior NCO's a Phase 2 of "Walters this coming Saturday MEET THE OFFICERS This week I am writing on a led of for Borden time after | (aside in sham retiring from the service | She Oshawa Snes SECOND SECTION OSHAWA, THURSDAY, MARCH 3, 1960 PAGE THIRTEEN | the manager and the other su- | Norm an Hodgson, manager; One-Night Fund Blitz Is Planned Plans for the forthcoming one night blitz for funds was discuss- ed at the monthly meeting of the| The drive for funds will be| branch of the Ontario Cancer So-| ciety on Tuesday, April 26. Can-| cer society branches at Whitby, Bowmanville, Port Perry and Brooklin indicated their drives| for funds will also be on April| 26. | Society members were concern-| ed with the public's miscon-| Doug Reynolds, claims super- visor and Miss M. Blakely, su- pervisor of office services. --Oshawa Times Photo UIC TO CHECK OVERPAYMENTS Thirty-two Oshawa workers | will appear before two mem- bers of the regional insur- | pervisors are: John Hanewich, supervisor of the employment branch; Mrs. M. Baxter, su- | pervisor of female employment; | ance branch of the Un- employment Insurance Com- mission in Oshawa today. The meeting has been call- ed to discuss overpayment of unemployment insurance in 1958. The two officials have brought their files to investi- gate the matter. ception that money was being) [spent on conventions and ban-| |quets. In reality members pro-| |vide their own expense money. |The recent convention facilities | at the Lord Simcoe Hotel in To-| |ronto were provided free of {charge by the hotel management. {They agreed that administrative] | costs in the Ontario County organ- building permits for February, i 5 Ontario County Cancer Society at||gs J their headquarters on Atholl? tofal was recorded a year street east, Wednesday evening. Ivaluesat $132,980. conducted by the Oshawa Kiwa-| permit for a newsprint storage nis Club on behalf of the Oshawa building. Estimated value of con- Building In February Totalled Only $88,525 street office, will pairs; a $500 permit was issued. Proposed cellar alterations to single family dwellings resulted in permits being issued to L. Baliski, Bloor street east; Crags, RR 2, Bowmanville; and S. Paparella, Chadburn street. Respective value of permits was $600, $750 and $500. Appleby and Bolahood, Simcoe street south, received a $500 per- The city engineer's record of 1960, shows a total value of $88,- for all permits, The lowest 0, in February, with permit The Oshawa Times secured a struction is $41,000, K. Dubyna, Pine avenue, re- ceived a permit worth $17,000 for L. Brown, Pearce, Simcoe street north, and J. Kauffman, Wilson road north. undergo re-iand dryer service. Five permits were issued for repairs to single family dwellings. Three permits, for $500 construc- tion each, were issued to J. Hillcroft street; H. C. Adams, Harmony road south, got an $870 premit for his repairs. M. Allison, Brock street east, received a permit, for re- pairs, valued at $720. a new duplex. A factory addition for Fittings Ltd. necessitated a permit for| mit for alterations to a washer Charlton Transport, Stevenson | road south, will build a new of-| fice. The company was 'issued a permit worth $2500. | E . Office alterations to Anca Phar-| (0) £ X maceutical, Simcoe street south, | call for a permit for construc-| tion estimated at $2500. | "Canada's Part in World Re- A $5000 permit was. issued to fugée Year" will be the subject the Genosha Hotel for repairs to/of an address to be presented at the building. |a dinner meeting of the Cana- Principal Investments, Rich-|dian Club of Ontario County, on mond street west, Toronto, got a| Monday, Mar. 7, in the Piccadilly {ization were less than four per|gis00 permit for the erection of a| Room of Hotel Genosha, at 7 p.m. |cent, Jack Menzies said that most of the funds raised by the Cana- |dian Cancer society were used for |research. He said that he heard the figure 82 per cent quoted in | Toronto as the amount percent- |age wise on every dollar that is {earmarked for research. Mrs. Nichol of Whithy suggest- ed that all branches use the Osh- | awa telephone RA 5-9941 as the {central clearing house for tele- phone calls. ' BOWMANVILLE BOY Takes Cattle new sign on Stevenson road south.| Speaker for the evening will be | The United Auto Workers Bond Peter Casson, who has' come to |Canada as the special represen- tative of the United Nations High Refugees plained | Bl D Commissioner. for Refugees. Mr. Onors [Casson is in Canada to assist the {Canadian Committee for World B ] N d d (Refugee Year to aid in the ob- a Y ee e {taining of its objectives. | |" Born in London, England, of Ca- | A special appeal for blood|nadian parentage, Mr. Casson, at donors for today's blood donor the age of 15, was sent to Liech- |clinic was sounded today by Don|enstein where he worked with a |H. Howe, president of the Oshawa peasant family and for the next Red Cross Society. |four years, travelled on the con- "There is a serious shortage of|tinent learning languages, visit- |blood that poses a real menace|ing facories and industries, and to the life and health of the com- selling translation rights of Brit- munity that would be sharply|ish books. underlined if a person were to die| During the war, Mr. Casson because of a lack of blood," Mr. commanded a battery of the Mari- Howe warned. [time Royal Artillery in the Prospects for the clinic do not South West Pacific. Immediately appear too bright according to after the war he became assist- Red Cross Clinic officials who|ant to Lord Kilmuir, who was PETER CASSON | (a) To focus attention on the refugee problem and to promote {among the people of Canada a sympathetic interest in the plight the | after 18 years. The certificate is signed by the chief commis- sioner of the Employment In- surance Commission, Col. J. G. Bisson. --Oshawa Times Photo |former cadet, now an instructor, residents of this small Lake Erie early French explorers. Ken "Pete" Peterson. _ |fishing community which hasn't Pete joined the squadron in always had sole claim to the 1953 and as a cadet he reached name, the rank of sergeant and received his Air Cadet Wings, His duties are many. He another Port Bruce in Bruce teaches electricity, engines, navi-| Township near the site of a nu- gation, and meteorology. Pete|clear power development on also is in charge of showing Georgian Bay. films and acts as an assistant to, The present Port Bruce in FO Beaton in the stores, {Elgin County is a long-estab- In 1958 Pete took the cadets to lished fishing 'port and summer camp at Clinton for a two-week resort midway on the north shore period while last year he spent of Lake Erie between the Detroit the whole summer at Clinton as and Niagara rivers. a sports officer. In the early days the port was Pete, like CO FL Gilbank, at- named Lewisville by a family of nology and next summer hopes/ada and settled in Elgin County to go to Trenton as sports officer, /@bout 1820. Talent Contest Is Planned At a meeting of the Bathe Park Association last week, members 1830s an English- capital trying to la shipping centre. He went broke lin 1835 and returned to England GETS NEW NAME The port then became known to local residents as Catfish Har- Port Bruce May BRANTFORD (Special to The ¢ Times) -- Don Welsh, 17-year-old § president of the Durham County ; 4 4-H Club, has placed first in a ¥ i } |three-way tie with another boy 4 be 1 and girl in the All-Canada Hol- stein Junior Judging contest Judge Honors : which has just concluded. t A | Don, with Jean LeLacheur, Georgetown, P.E.I.; and Delmar Ford, Milton Ont., each scored {138 out of a possible 140 points. A total of 579 4-H boys and girls | from all provinces but Newfound- |land took part. There were 24 scores of 136 points, representing the provinces of Prince Edward Island, New Brunswick, Ontario, { Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Al- ; |it sets its collective have put in a strenuous two or| three weeks of planning and preparation for the monthly clin- ic. Registrations are down ! |this "has invariably pointed to a poor clinic as far as results go," | lone official said. The clinic is slated for St. Greg- ory's Auditorium and will be open from 1.30 to 4 p.m. and from 6 to 9 p.m. Volunteer donors {who have overlooked arranging : lan appointment need not hesitate] to visit the clinic for there is suf- "1 |ficient staff to care for the casual ¢ |donor, "The magnificent response last i {month indicates that Oshawa is capable of reaching its goal when |chief prosecutor at the Nurem-|.f refugees throughout burg trials. Later, he was private) world; 2 gho secretary to Sir Oliver Franks,| (bh) Through its publicity, te nd British Ambassador at Washing-| pejp those participating organiza. ton. {tions which are already engaged For seven years, Mr. Casson|in refugee work, to raise more has been with the United Nations money than they would normally High Commissioner for Refugees be able to do; and and in June of this year, he| (c) to establish a central fund played a large part in the launch-/to which contributions can be ing of World Refugee Year in made for United Nations refu- Great Britain. |gee programs. Prior to his trip to Canada,| "Canada's Part in World Refu- Mr. Casson spent a few weeks gee Year" is a topic of vital in- |visiting various refugee camps|terest and importance to all peo- |and projects in the Lebanon and ples and especially Canadians. It Jordan area. While in Canada, he|is hoped that every member will assist the Canadian Commit-|will attend and bring a guest to tee in the implementation of the hear an authoritative talk on a following objectives: lvery important problem. ity Get Namesake PORT BRUCE (CP)--One Port |bor since it was at the mouth of| Bruce in Ontario is enough, say the Catfish Creek, so named by classes a group of judges at fairs [select an All-Canadian and a Re-, 'wii the village had a serve, their composite opinion re- harbor dredged 11 feet deep and presenting the official choice. berta. The Junior tion of All-Canadian Holsteins. By 1850, |400 feet of wooden docks, a big] From photographs of the A move is under foot here to package freight warehouse and leading contenders in each class, protest the proposal to establish|several other buildings erected |the 4-H boys and girls make their All-Canadian and|third in the Calf Club and in 1958] along the docks. The settlement selections for also had flour and grist mills, a| Reserve All-Canadian. water powered lumber mill, | | steam-powered sawmills and was surrounded by a flourishing farm community, In 1855 a group of pioneer settlers organized twin villages|y 2 J on Lake Huron about 12 miles VARIED. INTERESTS north of Kincardine and called 3 : them Port Bruce and Malta. |e Durham 4-H Club, {placings. rancis Jose is the leader, Judging Contest held in connection with the selec- § « In each of the 14 regular show DON six second in the Durham Grain Club and third in the Calf Club. He has twice previously been | was first. In addition he was high These are then compared with/ Man in the Durham County Live- the official choice, the winners stock Judging Competition in being those closest to the official 1959, Winning the A. Sum- |mers Memorial Trophy, and was {a member of the second prize team at the Inter-Club Champion- Don is 17 and is president of ships in 1958, being the top con-| Audrey, of which testant on dairy cattle. He| They both flourished until a firey "fio "Ge Anos AREA "¢ONTARIO COUNTY WINNERS No attempt was ever made to rebuild either settlement but a move is under way in ing second in 1955. another Port Bruce. It is intended (second in to accommodate some 1,200 con-|Club and Durham struction workers who will be engaged during the construction of the power plant and those who! » will follow to operate it. | Air orce were informed that John Zaporo- zan would hold an amateur tal- ent contest with prizes and that the proceeds would go to the club It was decided at the meeting that the membership fee should remain at one dollar and that| membership cards should all be in by June 18, the date on which the park is to be opened. Wes Ogden, of the CRA staff, qian Grenadier Guards will cele- was present and demonstrated brate next June 3-5 the 20th an- brass and aluminum work to ap- niversary of mobilization for the proximately 20 members who at- Second World War ended. : Originally an infantry regi- The meeting was held in the ment, ny Guards became g association's club house under armored unit a few weeks after President Andy Huecul. mobilization and served as a tank copa regiment in the Northwest inte fr Europe campaign. The Guards 0 I reverted to infantry just before 4 avors returning to Canada after the |war More than 3,500 soldiers served in the regiment during the war ur anes They are scattered in all parts of the country and officers say Planning board has approved that so far they have traced only in principle, four-lane intersec abo 1,000 for the regimental re-| tions, but only for intersecting » streets shown as major streets oi dustory Uf He gion, cos on the city's. major street plan. |poen' written by Col. A. F. Du- 2 AW straight through lan esi official army historian of would be flanked by left and right the First World Wa. It may be t : : urn lanes. y in print in time for the ceremo- A road width of 86 feet was nies next June. | discussed for these intersections| 1 | but Planning Director G. A Fou NDED IN 1807 Wandless and Ald. Finley M The regiment traces its origin Dafoe agreed that a 100-foot min- back fo 1807. One of the founders imum should be sought was James McGill, the Montreal | The board will recommend that fur Lader Who Fave his name to sufficient road allowance be set However the roy recognizes 1 y i rol] ; which in 31 eS divisions the official establishment of the ctFests ng major canadian Grenadier Guards as of 4 |1859. The regiment is an. over-| 8 s o ! teven on road and King street|seas affiliate of the Grenadier was cited as an example of aniGyards, a unit of the Royal section which would benefi Household's Brigade of Guards in Iral- London fic counts: have shown this to be After training as a tank unit in greatly in need of a Canada in the early part of the speeded up traffic flow. war, the Guards went overseas! om such a four-lane plan 1 location Canada Grenadier Guards Veterans To To Celebrate Anniversary MONTREAL ' (CP)--The Cana-|in the autumn of 1942 as part of be held in Oshawa Sens Friday. | een ar-| | ranged by the Ontario group of| Meet Here the 4th armored division of the The convention has 1st Canadian Army. | It landed in France July 26,/the RCAF, and 420 (Oshawa) 1944, seven weeks after the inva-| Wing will be the host wing. sion of June 6 and served in Bel- through Germany to the city of Murdoch, Oshawa lawyer, Bremen legal adviser for : group of the RCAF Association, BATTLE HONORS Delegates to the gagements at Falaise, the Rhine |erossing, the Twenthe Canal and the Hochwald Forest Ceremonies here in June will include a regimental dinner and a church parade at Christ Church Cathedral where the regiment's old colors will be placed for safe keeping Queen Elizabeth presented new colors to the Guards in a cere- mony on Parliament Hill in Ot-| Saturday, Mar. 5, there will be tawa last summer. Wartime com-/morning and afternoon business manders of the regiment were [sessions in the Piccadilly Room the late Lt.-Col. W. R. Halpenny|of the Hotel Genosha. Saturday of Ayr, Ont., Lt.-Col. H. A. Smith | afternoon the ladies will be taken of Victoria and Lt.-Col. E. A. C.|on a tour of the shopping centre Amy of Kentville, N.S., now aland will be given refreshments colonel and liaison officer at|by the centre management. NATO headquarters in Paris. | "A convention dinner will Commander of the militia in-|served Saturday night in the fantry regiment now is It.-Col.|Piccadilly room. After the din- G. R. Whiston. The unit has more ner, the delegates and their wives than 250 militiamen. will be entertained at a floor oR ~ gis {show which will be arranged by chairman, Bill Sutherland. air base Friday. They will then the Hotel Genosha which will be the headquarters for the two-day convention After registration on Friday the delegates and their ladies will be received by president Fred Fernley and Mrs. Fernley at a buffet supper and floor show. 86,000,000 TV SETS BERN, Switzerland (Reuters)--| There were nearly 86,000,000 tele- challenge matches at visions sete in the world at the curling club Both end of 1959, the Swiss postal de- Waterloo and North partment said Wednesday. More declared that they than half---55,108,000 North America. Russia had 3,-|invited to be on hand for the 000,000. Pobbstly Bay have can clobber [test five times previously, stand- The first RCAF convention tof | Other top winners in Ontario County with 2 score of 135 points |were Neil nes, Blackwater, Bruce| His interests extend to other YE : Au] man named Dalley spent a lot of Township to develop the Jake- | phases of 4-H work. He stood first ud J3ck Holliday, Brodin. Nei {his own money and other British front lands on which they stood, in 1959 in the Durham Potato develop it into With the intention of establishing|Club and Durham Swine Club,| , the. 'Durham Grain| Oshawa Kiwanis 4-H Club. Swine Club, | | is a member of the Sunderland 4-H Club, and Jack belongs to the 4 |mind to do so," Clinic Chairman| mes" Smelt Fishin Booming In Lake Erie CELEBRATING BIRTHDAYS Congratulations and best wishes to the following resi- dents of Oshawa and district | who are celebrating their birthdays today: Don Woods, 117 Woodcrest Ave.; Susan Chappell, 333 OTTAWA (CP)--About a dec- lade ago smelt was unknown in {Lake Erie. Now its shallow wa- [ters are swarming with them. Scientists aren't sure how they got there but they know oy re ? at home 'in the lake an ey Lakeshore = Say i |have helped Erie's fishing indus- . Ee. try, Genige Burk. 12d Simcoe |e catches in the early 749 Re, Toad 11930s were whitefish, ciscoes and |lake trout. Later, south; Kenneth Stevens, RR | : it to 1, Brooklin: Kenneth Blencoe, | 940s, the emphasis switched 1 S04 Comal Par Bid. auth; (10h, and Be BOSTEL Mes A, Dillon, 551 Kingaisie [tions the commercial fishersien Simcoe street south; "Mrs. were keeping the so - ca Ella Hanowski, 3% Simcoe |.20%0 street south; Joseph Buchyn- ski, 77 Ontario St.; Everett Hughes, RR 1, Oshawa; Mar- garet Webber, 901 Brock street south, Whitby; Wesley Down, RR 4, Oshawa; Shir- ley Hickey, 458 Albert St.; Mrs. Eleanor Mitchell, 252 Arthur St.; Bob Heayn, Prince Albert. The first five persons to in- form The Oshawa Times of their birthdays each day will receive double tickets to The Regent Theatre good for a four - week period. The cur- rent attraction is "Samson and Delilah" and "Ulysses". Reports on birthdays will be recieved only between the hours of 8 a.m, and 10 a.m. [Subsequently the course fish pop- |ulation built up, pickerel stocks declined and the industry kept going on catches of small yellow e LATE ARRIVAL Now comes the smelt, a green back that grows to about 113 inches and is normally found | in salt water. Where did they come from? Fisheries scientists say that about 14 years ago smelt were transplanted from the Atlantic Ocean to lakes adjoining Lake Michigan, for use as fodder for the native fish. Somehow, possibly through a broken dam or overflow, al- though that is conjecture, the {smelt found their way into Lake Michigan, pressed through Lake during the Huron and finally came to Erie. | g Industry Perhaps as the result of further experimental fishing and modifi- cation of the gear, as well as studies of the fish movements and concentration, we may be able to come up with much more effective equipment." Four Small U.K. Counties fish and tossing back| {coarse fish such as sheepshead.| Pp n rms OAKHAM, England (Reuters)-- Folks hereabouts are fuming over a heartless plot hatched by bu- reaucrats in London to do away with England's four smallest | counties, | A special government commis- sion advised in a report released | Tuesday night that Rutlandshire, | Huntingdonshire, the Isle of Ely |and the Soke of Peterborough should be swallowed up by big | neighboring counties for adminis- trative purposes. But the people living in the [pastoral peace of this west- |central English district say they |won't give up their ancient status | without a struggle. The views of some 20,000 coun- Wing 420 has been honored by gium, The Netherlands and|the appointment of Gilbert L. J as| the Ontario] convention Its battle honors include en-|from points throughout Ontario will arrive by air at Downsview be transported by RCAF buses to Olive Ave. | | Has Densest Now the fisheries department re-|try folic living among the rolling DO Sar Of el or ging hills of Rutland, tiniest of Eng- spawning runs, They also have | 1and's 43 counties, were put by a brief run in outlets from Lake| Chief Magistrate David Daven- Ontario. |port-Hanley here in Oakham, the "sg, Eri t .| county town, melt and lake Eile so lo "The people of Rutland will Accepts Job In Toronto Population Newly revised population dis- | tribution maps of Oshawa show | Olive avenue to have the high- est density with over 70 people to the acre. General centre of this city's population is located on Bruce ether like rk and beans," | ib . ar publication, [fight to the last rut," declared 5 Daven-hanley. HEAVY SPRING RUN | Catching them during the ECHOES DETERMINATION spring is no trouble. When they| In Huntingdon, county council congregate the fishermen can|chairman William Brown served land more than the packing|notice that the 69,000 people of plants can handle. But it is a|his county will fight the reorgan- short - lived feast. Soon the fish |ization proposals 'to the bitter disperse to all parts of the 9,940- end." An employee of the Robson street. Leather Company for more than 120 years, H, Franklin Brown this week tenderad his resignation to laccept a position with one of |Canada's oldest tanning com- panies in Toronto. Mr. Brown has held the posi- tion of plant manager with the be Oshawa firm for eight years and | (commencing the middle of this month will take a similar posi- tion with Wickett and Craig in Toronto An active member of the {Rotary Club of Oshawa, Mr. the first president of the Cana- dian Tanners" Production Club were 1n 420 Wing's curlers. The public is and is a member of the Ameri-|to 3094 can Leather Chemists Associa-| ition, llarge increases such as these. The maps are calculated with | Square-mile lake. the aid of assessment records] In an attempt to spread the and have been revised yearly for catch over a longer period, the The Isle of Ely's council chair- man, T. W. Anthony, scorned lthe proposals as "impracticable." the last five years by the plan- scientists have experimented Suc-| The Ely area gets its designation ning hoard. cessfully with a mid-water trawl, | Suburban areas of the city show @ Danish fishing innovation dat- |a density of 20 persons to the[iDE back to 1948 and now proving acre, The centre of employment is Mill street. This was determined | by figuring the flow of people about 800 to 6,000 pounds. In each| Pacific Coast. | | Two areas of Oshawa have|catch was smelt. The rest was shown' great increases in popu- coarse fish and small quantities) [lation in the last five years. In|of vellow perch, white bass and| Sunday afternoon will sce two/Brown has been active in var-|one area, in the north-west part|yellow pickerel. the locallious phases of the industry injof the city, figures jumped from| But although th : | Kitchener</which he has® worked. He was 232 to 4740 gures Jump aifongh) the smelt. futire} looks bright, federal officials are| Another area in south-east Os<h.|cautious. L.S. Bradbury, director awa shows an increase from 921 of the department's industrial de-| velopment branch, says: Individual catches range from |; 'isle' from the days when it was [swamp and fenland. Now |drained, it is rich fruit-farming |useful for herring fishing off the|;,. Peterborough"s mayor, Mrs. ary Swift, appeared to be re- signed to the idea of the soke-- i i cas bout 97 t | A from their homes to their jobs.|case about per cent of lan old word meaning free terri- |tory--losing its identity. But she asserted that her town should be named administrative centre of the wider area in which it will be swallowed up. The commission, set up two years ago to streamline regional government, proposed a series of Sub-divisions help to explain! "We must remember that The Siministvative changes through- experiment still is in its infancy. out Central England.