4 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, July 18, 1960 REMAINS OF ANCIENT FIREPLACE PLACE are being carefully dis- interred at the Indian diggings in Pickering. In top picture, Douglas Adamson, a U of T stu- dent who has been three sum- mers on archaeological explor- ations, is shown. He is assist- ing Beverley Berry, a third year Queen's University stu- dent. Fireplaces, such as the one being uncovered, may be found in an almost straight row down the middle of what was long house. Traces of the out- line of the walls have been : | Scientists Probe Site . Of Prehistoric Village PICKERING (Staff) -- One of the largest and most important archaeological projects ever car- ried out in Ontario got underway for the second year last week, as Royal Ontario Museum scientists re-opened excavation of the pre- historic village site in Pickering township. Walter Kenyon, Royal Ontario Museum archaeologist, said expected to uncover at least an other third of the 1000-year-old village this season, and discovery of ritual burials and other impor- tant features was probable. The village, named the Miller site, was discovered in 1958 when a power-shovel, looking for gravel deposits, opened a bizarre burial pit containing 11 skeletons ar- ranged in a geometric design. Last year, a crew under Ken- yon's direction, found the pall sade around the village, four more burial pits, houses, dumps, firepl and th ds of arti- facts. This site at that time was humorously described by Mr. Kenyon as "one of Canada's first sub-divisions." The scientific importance of the site is based on the hope that ! the inhabitants of the village will prove to be the cultural ances- tors of the Iroquois, whose orig. ins are at present uncertain. The site was opened to visitors n mid-July last year and more the work how the i than 18,000 came to see in progress. Students s he|this year include a baby rac- visitors around the diggings and the artifacts on display, The crew, working under Mr, Kenyon, varies from graduate university students to high school students. All live in a tent camp site close to the diggings. A vari- ety of musical instruments and a nearpy swimming pool make off hours pleasant, Camp pets so far coon, a cat and a puppy. A goat has arrived to provide milk for the raccoon. The crew works a long, hard day in fair weather but enjoys the fun of campfires and sing songs after dusk. A few study in the evening, but chess and limericks are the fad this season. LED EXPEDITION The Miller Site excavation is a part of the Royal Ontario Mu- seum's continuing research pro- am in Canadian archaeology. arlier this year, Kenyon led an expedition to Fort Albany on James Bay, and work next fall may take a field party to the site| of burial mounds in north-western| Ontario. A erew is now working in Serpent Mound Provincial pars on Rice Lake, The excavations at the Miller Site will continue until the begin- ning of September. Further work may be done there in 1961, The thousands of specimens recover- ed each summer are analyzed at the museum during the winter months. Conclusions from these | | By JUDITH AYER Canadian Press Staff Writer LONDON (CP) -- From hear- | say, Helen Winston is the sort of woman you would have expected to be tall, imposing and quietly | efficient. | So the fact that she is small {and pretty and runs around in {a flurry of telephone messages comes as a bit of a shock. | But Miss Winston, high - pow- {ered 29-year-old from Toronto, | does get things done. At different | times she has worked as a wait- |ress, actress, film publicist and | TV producer. Now she is in London produc- {ing a film, It is a labor of love. | FORMED OWN COMPANY The film, Hand in Hand, con-| | cerns the friendship of two chil- | dren, one Roman Catholic, one | Jewish, The cast includes Dame Sybil Thorndyke, John Gregson {and Finlay Currie. | When Miss Winston talks about | her film, the hustle of show busi- | ness fades away and her attitude |is one of quiet dedication, as fo| | some solemn cause. | "I read the outline for the| | story six years ago in Hollywood | ahd promptly fell in love with it, [So I bought it with the idea of eventually making it into a film." With this in view, she came to |Britain a year ago and formed | her own company. |ON SCHEDULE | "It is almost as if the film | were blessed. We have been very! marked off. Just a few feet from this spot, two human teeth, in excellent preserva- tion, were found on Sunday. In lower picture, Mrs. Joan Vas- tokas, wife of the assistant field director, is painstakingly sift- on it. There was a slight snag with the title--it was originally called The Star and the Cross-- but we sorted that out. "We have brought the picture in under budget and under sched- ule, but it is too early to say yet when it will be released." Miss Winston's varied career began before she was 18. After a year at the University of Toronto, she went to Holly- wood because she wanted to be an actress. A book about her life to date now is being written. WANTS TO LIVE She sat on a baroque chair ("Isn't it ghastly? None of the furniture is my own!") in her flat, ate lettuce ("I'm on a diet") and outlined her philosophy of life. "1 usually do everything I want to do, I want to get as much out of life as 1 possibly can. That was what appealed to me about act- ing. I thought I could subordinate my personality in playing differ- ent roles. But I find I can't; I have got to live it myself." Flaborating, she said she con- siders faith, thought, awareness and love the most important fac- tors in a successful life, And what is the final aim of this dynamie young woman? "Right now, I just' want to live. 1 suppose you would call it a lust for life, And when the right man comes along I want to get mar- ried and raise a family." | Canadian Woman Exhibition Produces Movie Jucky and some of England's most talented people are working Displays Rare Relics [ PICTON, Ont. (CP) -- General {Robert E. Lee's campaign sword and a seven-foot, 15th century {English pole-axe are among the {items in a privately owned mu. |seum near this Prince Edward Couniy community, Cyril Nicholas, Picton linotype |operator, began collecting an tiques 30 years ago. When the hobby began to crowd the family out of their home, he moved the collection to a modern bungalow 10 miles southwest of here near the Lake Ontario waterfront, | ticles were gathered at little cost | from attics, | min ati Most of the museum's 1,400 ar-| excavations may add consider- ably to knowledge of Ontario's pre-history. Visitors may come to the Mil- ler Site anytime from 9 a.m. to dusk, seven days a week. To reach the site, which is situated on the Valley Farm road, travel No, 2 Highway one mile west of Pickering Village and turn north at the signs posted. The site is one mile north, If coming from the west, Valley Farm road is half a mile east of Liverpool on No. 2 Highway. Ajax Hospital Statistics Statistics for June, 1960, at Noted Architect/ Small Boy Found Invited To B.C. {Near Brush Blaze KINGSTON (CP) VANCOUVER | fir { | | ho Villeneuve eral hundred e F me of Three fire| woo (CP) -- The|departments Saturday combined verted by firefighters. BEAR PR.» hoe Jot SPU BS 4 LIRR, 4a of Mt. Chesney seve yards from the hile fire threatened the Mr. and Mrs, Walter Inough, but flames were di- o ; or aw University of British Columbia's their efforts fo control a fierce board of governors will be asked|brush fire at McAdoo's Lane, by the school of architecture to/two miles north of here. invite the Swiss architect Le During the blaze police and, Corbusier to design UBC's new volunteers scoured the area of|ic¢ ngt-devotninational chapel. |tinder-dry grass and small pines|ary e decision was made unanl-ro. 5 gour.yearold lad, missing|ii mously at a school symposium on| . | the architect's work on a motion|from his home. They found Peter cas | Canadian listening from WXCHANGE PROGRAMS "e CBC's International Serv- markings its 15th annivers- in 1960, each year gceiyts to 200 exchange programs for broad. ting services abroad. by Prof. Fred Lasserre, The 73-year-old Swiss, whose given name is Charles Edward Jeanneret, gained world renown for his buildings in South Amer- ica, Europe and India. His best-known project is the huge city complex he designed for the Indian government as the new capital of the Punjab at Chandighar. Le Corbusier has also been commissioned by Harvard Uni- versity to build an arts centre. The MAN WITH Ajax and Pickering Hospital are: Total in-patients admitted, 228; number of babies born, 43; total out-patients, 355; in-patient X- rays, 123; out-patient X-rays, 242; laboratory in-patient treatments, 773; laboratory out-patient treat- ments, 32; blood transfusions, 15; or operations, 36; major oper- |ations, 19; ear, eye, nose and |throat operations, 57, Swimmers THE GOLDEN ARM FRANK SINATRA ELEANOR PARKER and Big Cast F. Richard Black, 0.0. Is pleased to announce the open- ing of his office for the practice of OPTOMETRY at 174 Harwood Ave. S., Ajox {In Shopping Centre) BOTH FEATURES ADULT ENTERTAINMENT ALL-TIME GREATS! WILLIAM HOLDEN TO THRILL YOU !§ Frank ! Candid ! Out-Spoken ! "THE MOON IS BLUE" ----- WITH = The examination of eyes, fitting of glasses' and contact lenses, visual training + For appoint- ment please call §| long distance | Oshawa Zenith 2-1640 (no toll charge) (evenings by appointment) 2 DAYS ONLY! MONDAY & TUESDAY Watched In Halifax HALIFAX (CP) -- The Halifax police department's water-safety patrol is proud of its record of maintaining watch on swimmers in the North West Arm, a long, narrow strip of water that juts from Halifax harbor. "During the past 15 years, within the hours of the patrol's operation, there hasn't heen a fatality of the Arm," says police Chief Verdun Mitchell. In 1946 small-craft owners on the Arm complained that thelr safety was endangered by reck- less powerboat operators, The police department's patrol was | established, Since then it has handled some 11,000 cases involving water safety. In its first year of operation it was manned by sea cadets under a navy officer but in the last few years a special police constable | | barns and store. and two lifeguards have main Ready for "a hig time" 'OSHA this summer? HOW ABOUT YOUR DANCING? DON'T LET poot dancing ruins party for you. Come to Arthur Murray's now and learn all the latest steps. You'll find it's quick and easy to learn the Arthur Murray Way. Be sureof more 7 fun.. BOX AYA WiLL YOU ACCEPT A SHOW STARTS AT DUSK "ROCK HUDSON «Ais CORNELL BORCHERS -GEORGE SANI Ae OFFICE OPEN 8:00 » Hour From Ba Play "Come Prime Wego & AND ADDED Prine" by Lig Puandole, ACTION! rooms in the county, one of the|tained vigil. The cost to Halifax earliest settlements in Upper ratepayers is $5,000 a year. anada. Some were collected at| Powerboat operators are auction sales and others were warned not to exceed the eight. hee TRIAL LESSON? gifts. Antique dealers and Canadian and United States museum offi- cials say the museum is one of the best of its kind in the conti. nent. "I ean't understand how one man could collect such a variety 1of articles," says George Seldon, former curator of the Rochester, N.Y., museum, who saw the Nicholas collection recently. Mr, Nicholas has no idea of the museum's total value but he re- cently refused a $10,000 offer for his arms collection alone. He says he will not part with a single item. ing topsoil through a quarter- inch sieve. She is being assist- ed by camp pet Albert the rac- coon, who loves to sort out the grass roots in search of deli- cacies dear to the heart of his kind Lead In Air 'May Cause --Photos by John Mills Jerry Lewis Found Secret NEW YORK (AP) -- Jerry Lewis says he once paid $25,000 for four words--and they were a bargain. "It was after 1 had a heart at- tack," he recalled, "I went to the best doctors I could find. "I asked them how I could pre- vent another attack. They told me the main thing to avold-- constant, continuous, unremitting pressure, "Those four words cost me $25,000, but they were worth it. Whenever I feel the pressure building up, now I take a break. "I learned a lesson, The secret of living longer i sto avoid ag- gravation." Jt is a question, however, how well the wire - nerved young comic has learned his lesson, He has an insatiable curiosity about life (he even watched the births of three of his five sons), and is driven by an almost ungovern- able energy. The ordinary man works 50 weeks a year. Jerry now puts in| the equivalent of 81 weeks a year| and shows n osigns of slowing down. If anything he has stepped up the pace. In his latest film, The Bellhop, he not only acts as star. He also wrote, direcetd and ro- duced i#. can match. All his pictures--25-- have more than paid their way Lewis believes he has a record at the box office. None has gone int the red ink. That is one reason he has de- ¢ided he will direct, produce-- and at least help write--many of his future pictures. "I decided I might as well have some of that money myself," he remarked, He also feels his films will im- prove if he has more authority over their content and produc. tion. "What's the advantage? Well, look at it this way: You're not as careful with your cigaret ashes in another guy's office as you are in your own home, Nobody will wo:" 'quite as hard for you as o will for yourself. "Sure I'll make mistakes. It's the guy who does ing who makes no. mistakes. achieves nothing." Jerry's inadcap brand of bu.' But he! Sclerosis Jead when he noted a striking re- semblance between maps show. ing incidence of the disease and geological maps showing miner- alization high in lead. This summer he will spend several weeks gathering 500 to 1,000 half-pound bags of soil and vegetation in England for testing in UBC laboratories. VANCOUVER (CP) -- A Uni. versity of British Columbia geolo- gist says thehe may be a connec. tion between multiple sclerosis and lead in the air, food and sometims: pails ™w { drink, y |mo som imes palls on T and) Dr. Harry Verney Warren ve- film critics, but Lewis explains|ports he has found indications of his enduring success this way: |the relationship and Is following " re i i __|up with further investigation th } owe R to fhe little people an attempt to pin it down. e kids. They aren't fickle, as pMuyitiple sclerosis has crippled | grownups are. an estimated 10,000 in Canada. It "They are loyal to you as long! is a disease of the central nerv- as 'hey know you are still one US system and can affect all the of them. Aud 1 am: 1 to all thel CI es and muscles controlling ; * ) movement, za'y, nutty things they'd like t0| pr, Warren began to suspect a |do in their fantasies." | Cock Fighting Brings Charges HASTINGS, N.Y. (AP)--State police arrested 29 men Sunday in a raid on a cock fight in woods on a farm near this village. Troopers said they seized 69 live roosters, 10 dead roosters and a quantity of steel spurs with which the birds are equipped for fighting. Justice of the Peace Albert W. Farnsworth set up court on the relationship of the disease andspot | | an, g ae RS ¥ 4 % ; | This action-packed shot of | Montreal June 22 won the CP | election workers escaping | Picture-of-the-Month award for through a window during a | the Montreal Star. The $25 police raid on an independent | prize goes to Paul Lagace. La- candidate's hig room in | gace was touring the area im Go bl ONTH a police cruiser that was order- ed to the committee room of Dave Rochon. He used a Speed Graphic, Ansco Hypan | film, and shot at f11 1/200. Included in the display of early Canadiana are such rare vol- umes as Upper Canada Statutes, First Session of First Provincial Parliament, 1792 and Acts of Congress of United States of America, 1792 Scattered among the arms col. lection are a pair of hand-made Saxon iron swords, a pair of Claymore swords, African spears, Congo throwing knives, May kris daggers, Turkish vat- agans and a Punjabi brass shield. The oldest firearms are a set of English flint-lock duelling pis- tols dated 1740. RECORDS BROKEN INDIANAPOLIS (AP) Two young California girls smashed world records Friday in the U.S. Women's Amateur Athletic Un- ion swimming championships. Donna de Varona, 13, of Berke- ley, shattered the 400 - metre in- dividual medley mark to 5:36.5, winning by an inch or so from Sylvia Ruuska, also of Berkeley, who held the year - old world record of 5:40.2. Lynn Burke of Santa Clara pulled the world mark in the 200 metres backstroke down to knot speed limit. Overloaded craft are checked and all boats are required to carry sufficient life preservers A 25-foot patrol craft with a top speed of about 15 knots operates seven days a week from mid May to mid-September, Swimmers found venturing too far from shore without an accom. panying craft are likely to be snatched from the water by the patos craft and escorted back to and. ARTHUR MURRAY 11V4 Simcoe St. South RA 8-1681 Open 1 to 10 p.m. Daily Air-Conditioned ONLY 'A FEW BUMPER THIS WEEK, BUY YOURS OF THE SEASON! Guests Pilfer At Lake Louise LAKE LOUISE, Alta, (CP) --~ Light-fingered guests lift about 900 - teaspoons and light-headed chipmunks gobble up 15,000 pop- ples from the Chateau Lake Louise each summer. The Iceland poppies are sup- posed to be perennials, says of- fice manager Bill Ruff, "but the chipmunks eat the seeds and the beds of flowers have to be re. placed every year." Poppies are used for producing opium and "the seeds give the chipmunks quite a lift," he ex. plained. The maitre d'hotel, German. born Hans Marshall, gallantly calls the guests who take tea- spoons "souvenir collectors." 'We started last season with 1,800 teaspoons and at the end of the season 900 were gone." Soup spoons and demitasse cups also disappear but the tea- spoons are favorites for the eol. lectors. ANCIENT MILLS The first water-powered saw- mills in Europe appeared in the early 14th century. MGM's stirring adventure WESTWARD | THE WOMEN STAKKING ROBERT TAYLOR DENISE DARCEL a OAS Lk TODAY & TUESDAY 2 THRILLING ADVENTURE HITS! ErmnerTue Parson Sox... § OR HIS PISTOLS DID!... "STARS IN MY CROWN" JOEL McCREA [BR BILTMORE | $50 to $5,000 Without Endorsers or Bankable Security Loans Life Insured OFFICES THROUG IN PERSON A Romulus Film + A Universel-Internationsl Release LEFT. WE WILL DEFINITELY BE SOLD OUT MONEY ON ENTERTAINMENT FOR THE REST CHILDREN under 12 FREE! ALWAYS A (OLUK CLUB MEMBERSHIPS TONIGHT AND SAVE a WILF CARTER (MONTANA SLIM) AND HIS ALL STAR S HO w T.V. STARS Featuring . . . CAROL, SHEILA AND DARLA JEAN ALSO THE "ROGER BROTHERS" BAND FROM EDMONTON "e601 B.0:MILLE'S "SAMSON we DELILAN". UANiER anny Cr RACTION R- MATURE SANDERS: LANSBURY. WILCOXON SHOW 8-30 P.M. FOLLOWED BY DANCING RED BARN ADMISSION 1.00 Thurs., July 21 VRE WAY venti Wh Do Many Plans and repayment schedules to suit your budget. &= yPERIOR | INANCE 17 Simcoe St. North RA 5-6541 HOUT ONTARW LAL LLITTRR EH EXCL PRIVATE \ 0} \'} a ENTERTAINMENT MICKEY TERRY DAN ROONEY - MOORE - DURYER, in AN ALBERT ZUGSMITH PRODUCTION! verte MIMIEUX see CONWAY TWITTY FAMOUS MAYIRE