THE WEATHER OFFICE says a disturbance west of the Great Lakes is producing cloud and showers and this WEATHER FORECAST weather will spread into west- ern Ontario today and the re- mainder of Ontario tonight and Sunday. It will be mainly Bright Today Clouding Later sunny in Quebec today but Sunday will be cloudy with showers. ~--CP Wirephoto Gets Call From Brother By GRACEC MILLS AJAX -- Mrs. D. M. Fenn, 105 Kings Crescent, had a pleasant surprise when she received a| phone call from Malton Airport, | By JOHN E. BIRD Canadian Press Staff Writer ROLPHTON, Ont. (CP) -- A king's ransom in water sits in a shed near here on the bank of the Ottawa River. Watchmen keep a close eye on this fortune--stored in 339 stainless steel drums--but there are no armed guards to cope with would-be bandits. While the water is worth $4, 500,000, it is of no value to any- one unless he is prepared to spend many millions in build- ing an atomic power plant. "We don't worry very much about thieves," said Michael Barron, a member of the nu- clear power division of the Hy- dro - Electric Power Commis- sion of Ontario. "The stuff weighs about 85 tons for one thing and you wouldn't be able to sell it. It would be more sensible to try to make a dollar out of stealing a battleship." The water in the shed is not ordinary water but expensive heavy water which will be used Known as Nuclear Power Demonstration, the $32,000,000 plant is being built jointly by Atomic Energy of Canada Lim- ited, Ontario Hydro and Cana- dian General Electric. The heavy water in the shed was produced by an electro- lytic process at the Savannah, Ga., project of the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission. It will be used in NPD as a moderator to make the atomic fission process possible and to transfer heat from the reactor to turn ordi- nary water into steam to drive turbines and electric genera- tors. Heavy water looks like ordi- nary water but has a different composition. Ordinary water is made up of two parts of hydro- gen to one part oxygen. Heavy water is two parts heavy hy- drogen to one part oxygen. The Americans charge $28 a pound for heavy water and a study now is being made to de- termine whether this cost could be reduced if production started in Canada. This likely will take place if the NPD plant proves that heavy-water, natural - ur- in the experimental nuclear power plant nearing completion at this remote centre 150 miles| northwest of Ottawa. Heavy Guard Watches 'Hot' Water Storage will remain in the shed until the calandria or energy heart of the NPD reactor is delivered by Canadian General Electric's Peterborough, Ont., plant. It had been hoped that the NPD plant would be in opera- tion by mid-June. However, the start-up date will be delayed as a result of unforeseen welding problems in the construction of the aluizinum calandria or tank. The calandria will contain 132 uranium fuel rods. These rods will produce the heat that will be used to raise steam to pro- duce electricity. J. L. Gray, president of Atomic Energy of Canada, said the NPD project is about three months behind schedule. How- ever, it was expected that con- struction would be completed by midsummer and that fol- lowing tests the plant would be in operation before the end of the year. NPD will have an output of 20,000 kilowatts of electricity and a capacity of 28,150 horse- power. Tt will not produce power at a cost competitive with coal - burning electric sta- anium reactors produce elec- tricity economically. | The drums of heavy water tions but is expected to provide the information to make future plants of its type economic. THE OSHAWA TIMES, Seturday, Mey 6, 1961 3 CITY AND DISTRICT CONSERVATION SPEAKER Ralph W. Harris, a well known speaker and authority on Ontario's current pollution problems, will be the speaker at the meeting of the Rotary Club of Oshawa. He will speak on conservation with special refer- ence to pollution. CAR ROLLS OVER An Oshawa man was injured shortly after midnight, Friday night, when his car rolled over three times on Wilson road north, near Rossland road. Maurice E. Hearns, 22, suffer- ed back injuries. Damage to his car was estimated at $500. The car had come to rest on its four wheels. IS INJURED Kingsley Wootton of Oshawa was admitted to St. Joseph's Hospital, in Sarnia following a car accident. Mr. Wootton, manager of the Oshawa branch of Consolidated Truck Lines Limited for the last 10 years, left Oshawa Fri. evening by car. He failed to make a turn in the road as he neared Sarnia. Mrs. Wootton left Oshawa ear- ly this morning to be with her husband in Sarnia. Nixon Raps Howard Griffen, youngest son of Mr. and Mrs. S. N. Griffen, of Py from Queen's Theological Col- lege with honors. this community, was employed at the office of the General Motors, Oshawa, previous to his decision to enter the ministry. He received his BA degree at MacMaster's University in Ham- ilton in May, 1958. was married to the former Miss Barbara Hunter, of Port Perry, and, on the completion of his course, was stationed at Wolfe Island United Church as the stu-|said dent minister for the past three years while attending Queen's. He has two children, Deanna ceremonies will be held Port Perry United Church when ||| Jack will receive his licence. || borne, of Whitby, will officiate, | on behalf of the Oshawa Pres- || bytery. | ed at Chalmers United Church in Kingston. Will Become UC Minister PORT PERRY -- Mr. John will extend congratulations en behalf of the congregation. He is the first boy born and educated in Port ever to become a minister of the United Church. After his he will be sent to a Mission charge to preach for two years. He is a Franson of Mr. Charles Mackie, of Oshawa. TORNADO KILLS THREE ort Perry, recently graduated "Jack", as he is known in Sakata a wi cials Friday night. ® eor two homes ay ed and damaged, police official In the September of 1957 ne in the] TAILORING MOVED: FROM 4 ALSERY ST. 50 KING ST. E. [OVER REGENT THEATRE) The Rev. Dr. Stanley L. Os-| On May 31, he will be ordain- || A special invitation has been extended to him to preach in his home town at the Port Perry United Church on the 11th of {June when the Official Board to say her brother had arrived CAPSULE NEW S Cuba Flop CHICAGO (AP) -- Former | vice - president Richard Nixon, in his first speech on national | issues since his defeat in the United States presidential elec-| tion, lashed out Friday at the, way President Kennedy han-| dled the Cuban situation. | "Whenever American prestige is to be committed on a major scale," Nixon told the Execu- tives Club, "we must be willing| to commit enough power to ob-| tain our objective even if all our| intelligence estimates prove| Wrong. I "Putting it bluntly, we should CELEBRATING HAND-TAILORING BIRTHDAYS som : wishes to the following resi- dents of Oshawa and district who are celebrating birth- days this weekend. Those who celebrate to- day are: Arthur Gladman, 38 Cadillac avenue north; Mrs. Andrea Chesboro, 733 Lakeview; Charlotte I. Lang, 280 Division street; Marilyn Demareski, 509 Crerar avenue; Mrs. Mary Diskey, 275 Pard road south. Those who celebrate on Sunday are: Mrs. Don Peel, | Employment Opportunities (Civil Service of Canada) *MEDICAL OFFICER (PATHOLOGY) (with o licence to proc- tise medicine in a province of Canada, and o number of years of related experience), Veterans Affairs, London, Ont. $9,940-$11,200. Competition 61-750. *MEDICAL OFFICERS (with o licence to practise medicine In any once province of Canada), National Health and Wel- fare, various cenires. Competition 61-746. ASSISTANT SUPERINTENDENT OF GENERAL REQUIRE- sesssnnas | is visiting her daughter in New Jersey, N.E.A. for a few weeks. Mr. and Mrs. Michael Mec-| Ewan, and little son, Scarboro,| visited with Mr. and Mrs. Cliff Mills, Beech Street on Wednes-| day, before leaving for Ireland early next week. | Mrs. E. Wellfare has returned | from & two weeks visit with| friends in Belleville. She reports flower gardens are more ad-| vanced down there than they are| here. | Miss Joan DeGeer, Beatty Ave., was released from the Ajax and Pickering Hospital on Wednesday, where she has been since severing the first joint of the forefinger of her right hand a week ago. Miss Degeer works on a stripping machine at Fed- eral Packaging, and caught her finger while testing the cut on some paper. OBITUARIES TORONTO (CP) -- Official'buton, Kirkland Lake, Tim- from London, England, but forecasts issued in Toronto at/mins - Kapuskasing, regions,| would be leaving again in three § am. EDT: North Bay, Sudbury; Sunny to-|hours. Betty, her husband Doug " Synopsis: A disturbance west day. Becoming cloudy tonight.|and the children, left in a hurry, 1) of the great lakes, is producing Sunday mainly cloudy with oc- arriving at Malton in time to an extensive area of cloud and casional showers. Little change have dinner with her brother, asy 1 showers in that region. This/in temperature, winds light in- Captain Harold Carey. Capt. weather is edging slowly east-|creasing to southeast 15 to 20 Carey pilots a 707 Boeing Jet ward and will begin affecting tonight. {Passenger plane for BOAC. Ar- Western Ontario today and| {riving with 130 passengers. spread eastward across the re-| Forecast temperatures: |through some alteration in or 0 an mainder of the province tonight) Low tonight and high Sunday [Schedule, the plane had to re- and Sunday. {Windsor ....seess gy [Wn i tres hows wich did Western Lake Erie, Western not allow for a stopover to come . tot! ti i i Cloudy with intermittent rain Sh Thouas Reese >» lto Ajax. However the Fenn's| OTTARA (CP ) = Canadion fired, and the Commis news beginning this afternoon, YTS |had the pleasure of inspecting Sportsmen ave i oy Sal ending Sunday afternoon. | "the monster" as they termed| ting visitors' vis as ' pid DOCTORS TO MEET much change in temperature, |p. ~ it before leaving for home. {a tourist promo ak oy Fri : winds east 25. anton Mrs. P. McWhirter, Mary St.,|Communist country said *1-| TORONTO (CP) -- The five- Eastern Lake Erie, Niagara, St: Catharines ... {day. They can carry their guns q,v Ontario Medical Associa- western Lake Ontario, eastern| Orono Lake Huron, Georgian Bay, Feterborough | White River regions, Hamilton|irenton . . | London, Toronto: Increasing Killaloe . cloudiness today, becoming Muskoka . cloudy with occasional showers North Bay this evening. Sunday cloudy Sudbury .. with intermittent rain. Not Earlton much change in temperature, Kapuskasing .... | winds east 15 to 25. White River . Eastern Lake Ontario, Hali- Moosonee . Of "Tocsin" Although Oshawa was not a This alert came from Army designated target area in Fri-/Command at Oakville. day's Exercise Tocsin (alarm| At 11 a.m. the country went bell) 1961, indirect effects of/on a national alert. the Canada-wide "nuclear at-| Six minutes later, the Osh- tack" were evident here. awa Police Department receiv- This message was received atled the alert and at 11.09 City the city clerk's third floor, City Treasurer Harold Tripp picked Hall office at 2.17 p.m. yester-|jup his telephone and heard the| day: alert signal -- "Whiskey Jack". " Mayor Christine Thomas got| her call one minute later di- recently from the Police Depart-| ment. vacuee stream heavy through Oshawa. Should bomb hit Toronto, be prepared to take care of injured. Alert Oshawa hospital." { (City MOH Dr. C. C. Stewart] was notified at 2.22 p.m.) Thirty-five minutes later, Lt.- Col. F. S. Wotton, Oshawa and Ontario County Emergency Measures Co-ordinator, sent this situation report to City Clerk Roy Barrand: | "County headquarters manned tion business administrator (11.14); Assessment Commis- MOH Dr. C. C. Stewart (11.16); City Engineer Fred Crome (11.17); and Frank Shine, Sep arate schools administrator (11.15). Mayor Thomas was first to WELLINGTON COLLINS The death occurred early Fri-| |day, May 5, at Fairview Lodge, Whitby, of Wellington Collins, |formerly of Blackwater. In fail- Others who were notified: J.|ing health for the past two years,|y,, "United States immgration Ross Backus, Board of Educa-|Mr. Collins was in his 73rd year. authorities next week, it was | Born on Scugog Island, he |was a son of the late Denis Col- lins and the former Jessie Short. | He was a resident at Fairview |Lodge for the past two years. | Mr. Collins was a member of {the Pentecostal Church and a member of Branch 43, Royal the right to the border and get a visa on the spot, said Stanislaw Marjanski, head of the govern- ment travel bureau in Warsaw. WILL BE HANGED NELSON, B.C. (CP)--George Belik, 75, of Creston, B.C., was convicted Friday of the sno death of Mrs. Elsie Strebchuk in her home at nearby Creston last October. Mr. Justice H. A. Maclean sentenced him to be hanged Sept. 19. CAR CLIMBS POLE LONDON, Ont. (CP)--Three young women jumped about six feet from a car Friday after the vehicle climbed up the guy wire of a hydro pole. Miss Mar- ilyn Onn, the driver, said a front tire blew out and the car slid its entire length up the wire. A tow truck, a wir truck and a ladder truck were needed to get the car down with- out damage. CATCH WANTED MAN MONTREAL (CP) -- Jacques Levasseur, No. 1 man on the Montreal police list of fugitives, has been arrested in Miami, |Fla., and is to be deported here {learned Friday. The 23-year-old | Levasseur, sought since he |escaped from a prison van tak- ling him to court Aug. 30, was | picked up on a vagrancy charge in the Florida resort Thursday. REMEMBER DEAD | NEW YORK (AP)--The offi- tion convention, opening here| Monday, will bring together 2,-| 000 doctors to exchange ideas, | learn of new techniques and| discuss the physician's role in| the modern world. Speakers in-| clude Dr. R. M. Parsons, Red 1022 Mohawk street; Isabel Askew, 352 Highland aven- ue; Patricia Dancey, 326 Rogers road; Douglas Par- rott, 210 Windsor street. Phone NO. RA 3-3474. Deer, Alta., president of The Canadian Medical Association. | PRESIDENTS AGREE GETS DIPLOMA Among the students from {Oshawa at Ryerson Institute of WASHINGTON (AP) -- Presi-| Technology who received their dents John Kennedy of the|diplomas at Yorkminster Bap- United States and Habib Bour-|tist Church, Toronto, yesterday, guiba of Tunisia agreed Friday was Walter Smith, son of Mr. that the Algerian problem and Mrs. J. L. Smith, Roxbor- not start things unless we are| prepared to finish them." And,| "we must never talk bigger| than we are prepared to act."| This, Nixon said, is the lesson| to be learned from the recent] abortive rebel invasion of Cuba. After the speech, Nixon was asked if Soviet Premier Khrush- chev and Kennedy should hold a summit meeting. He said it might have one value since the Russian leader may have been | misled by Cuba and Laos. "If they sat across the table] from each other," Nixon said, | "Khrushchev would know that| Kennedy is not a man to be| should be solved peacefully on{Ough avenue, who graduated the basis of self-determination With honors in Metallurgical pushed around." for the Algerians. A joint com-| munique issued after the sec- ond conference between-the two |presidents, said they further agreed on the right of all na- "ns to rema'~ neutral CHURCH GROWS {cial National Roman Catholic| |Directory for 1961 shows a 47.04 | {per cent increase during the! last decade in the number of enrolled Catholics in the United By STUART LAKE Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP) -- Canadians States. The publication reflected fought and died to protect the a total Catholic population of right to vote but only relatively he 13, few 470.022 over the 28634878 of right 42,104,900--an increase of 1951 and a boost of over last year. PLEASED WITH TEST nual conference decided take advantage of this especially in municipal Delegates to the council's an- to CHICAGO (AP)--The first use make public apathy toward of Sabin oral live polio vaccine |civic affairs one of their m ain in a community-wide immuniz- studies in the coming year. ation program in the United Norman Dowd of Ottawa, re- Canadians Don't Use Vote national and international af- |fairs. |USE AS PROTESTS Chairman Norman Hebert of Ottawa said Canadians use their |votes as protests--"when things) |are going good, they don't] 1,233,589 ejections, the Canadian Citizen-| Vote" {ship Council said Friday. The council said its new cam- | paign will not duplicate the 'get! lout the vote" drive waged by Chambers of Commerce. It will attempt to find out why people |don't take a closer interest in |civic government and how they) {could be persuaded to use the MENTS (with many years of recent experience and a g knowledge of modern military material and supplies, as well os of governmental ond military logistic organizations), National Defence, Ottawa. $9,940-$11,200. Competition 61-265, "RESEARCH PHARMACOLOGIST (with Doctor's degree in pharmacology, biochemistry or a related science, and @ number of years' experience in directly related research), National Health and Welfare, Ottawa. Up to $9,800. Competition 61-2153. ELECTRICAL AND MECHANICAL ENGINEERS (to work on electronic components; equipment and systems; environ- mental testing; planning and control of methods and pro- cedures; acoustics illumination and nuclear radiation; power generation distribution, utilization and storage; standards for electrical equipment), Inspection Services, National De- fence, Ottawa. Salaries for qualified Electrical Engineers up to $8,700 -- Mechanical Engineers up to $7,860. Write to Civil Service C ission, awe, ing In- 1 -- In (Elec formation Circular 61-115 spection Services trical) or 61-1201 -- In: Services (Mech ECONOMIST (university graduate with broad related experi- ence to undertake studies and continuing analytical pre- grommes in the field of Unempl t Insurance), Unem- ployment Insuronce Commission, Ottawa. $8,120-$9,800. Competition 61-2256. FINANCIAL CONTROL OFFICER (with progressively respon- sible related financial, administrative ond accounting ex- perience), Office of the Ci issi of Peni Ottawa. $7,920-$9,300. Competition 61-266. *ACCOUNTING RESEARCH DEVELOPMENT OFFICERS (must be certified members of a recognized accounting organi- zation, or university graductes with specialization In ce- counting, business administration, commerce or finance), Transport, Ottawa. $7,920-$9,300, $7,260-$8,340 end $6,420-$7,140, depending on qualifications. Information Circular 61-922A, "RESEARCH CHEMISTS (with Doctor's or Master's degree and some related experience, to undertake independent research on problems relating to the chemistry of wheat, flour, dough and related products), Board of Grain Commissioners, Win-= nipeg, Man. Up to $7,860. Competition 61-2154, SUPERVISOR, LEASED LANDLINE SERVICES (with several years' experience in the field of landline services includ- ing rates and tariffs, contract negotiations, evaluation of 188, 10.15 a.m.; also city and coun- receive the "Red Eye" warning Canadian Legion. Durin, 1 'e wi, ™ ty EMO units. Eighteen muni-|-- Take Cover -- at 11.43 a.m. |First World War, he ros Phin ig JAP) The ira. cipalities in county .phoned by Two minutes later, Mr. Bar- overseas with the 75th Battalion. tion in honor of Canadians who 11.35 am. jrand, city EMO chairman, got| He is survived by a sister, fell in The Netherlands during Evacuation heavy throughithe call and alerted all depart- Mrs. E. Shine (Levenia), of the Second World War was held Beaverton, No. 7 and 12 high-/ment heads. or Oshawa and a brother, Arling- Friday. Holland Liberation Day ways and No. 2 at Oshawa di-| School administrators called ton, of Toronto. at the Canadian military ceme- States Friday was termed tired Canadian Labor Congress "highly effective." Not a single executve secretary, said the cast of the disease developed fact that relatively few citizens among the 181,784 persons in the vote in most municipal elec- vaccinated group in Cincinnati. tions doesn't seem right in (democracy. | | "Voting is something we| {fought to get and now fewer) {than 50 per cent of the people care who's in the mayor's of-| To Broadcast Church Service (ict piss omios te srr. Calvary Baptist Church, A Woman delegate said she Centre and John streets, Osh. feels this is true generally, but awa, will take over the regular/00t in Ottawa where Mayor Sunday evening broadcast sery-| Charlotte Whitton's running bat-| ice from 7 to 8 p.m. over tle With controllers, aldermen, CKLB. The service will come Contractors and newspapers over the air "live" from the fine kept the public deeply inter- auditorium of Calvary Church. ested in local government. I The pastor, Rev. W. Niven/LACK CHARLOTTES Aitken, is looking forward to re- "But there are not enough] newing acquaintance with rs -- : friends made in previous broad- Charlotte Whittons." Council casts. He has plans for intro- Executive Director Alan Clarke | ducing the church and the mem-|0f Ottawa interjected. bers in a friendly way to the] Mr. Dowd said he feels that radio audience and wishes to! the ordinary ciitzen is apathetic) establish a real contact with because he feels helpless--con-| those who for sickness and|sidering that his one vote isn't other reasons are unable to at-'going to change things. i tend church in person. He «we have to find places] wants such regular listeners to where the individual impact can feel that this is their opportu- be felt and point them out," | nity to enjoy 'Radio Fellow-'Mr. Dowd said. ship. : Jean Boucher of Ottawa, dir-| The old - fashioned gospel ector of citizenship in the citi- hymns will be sung and various zenspip and immigration de- musical groups will add color partment, said he believes Ca- to the service. Mr. Aitken will nadians are more interested in! introduce a guest preacher on CITY OF OSHAWA Sunday night in the person of! Jack Ringer, an outstanding ge ---- missionary speaker from the] 'Afghan Border Crusade. SALE OF FIREWORKS i hereby give notice to oll merchants of the City of Oshawe that By-Low number 3809 prohibits the sale of fireworks in the City from Jomwery Ist to May 9th inclusive and from June 1st to December 31st inclusive in any year. The by-law provides that eny person whe fuils te comply with the pro- visions of the by-low shall be guilty of an offence and licble upon conviction te e penalty. {right to vote. Council delegates also asked |for a study of "the threat of big {government to the individual." MOTORING? T0 TORONTO MONTREAL OTTAWA WINDSOR CLEVELAND DETROIT NEW YORK Reserve in Advance HOTEL & MOTEL SPACE NO EXTRA COST Donald Travel Service MO 8-3304 circuit loading, cost analysis and experience in co-ordinat- ing the provisions of various classes of landline services), Transport, Ottowa. $7,500-$8,700. Competition 61-927. = "HEAD, PUBLICITY SECTION (with many years of experience in the field of publicity, several in a position of senior responsibility for broad publicity programmes), Canadien Government Travel Bureau, Ottawa. $7,260-$8,340. Com- petition 61-380. MECHANICAL ENGINEER -- FOOD PROCESSING (to assist in the design of -fish handling, holding, and processing fa- cilities including water and waste disposal, power and steam generation and distribution, refrigeration, dehydration and drying equipment), Fisheries, Ottawa. Up to $7,140. Write to Functional Requirements Division, Civil Service Commission, Ottawa, giving details of professional qualifi- cations and related experience, PAROLE SERVICE OFFICER, Nationa! Parole Board, Depart- ment of Justice, Halifax, N.S. $6,840-$7,860. Competi- tion 61-267. } "MANAGER, TRAVEL BUREAU OFFICE (with ao number of years' experience in the tourist industry), Canadian Gov- emment Travel Bureau, Son Francisco, California, U.S.A. §2.6c0-97,680, plus special allowance. Competition CIVILIAN REHABILITATION OFFICER (with @ number of years experience in working with disobled persons in one or more of the fields of social work, psychology, health vocational rehabilitation), Department of Labour, Ott ; $6,660-57,680. Competition 61-650. oe "COMPUTER SYSTEMS ANALYSTS (with several years of ex- perience in systems onclysis work related to the use of electronic computers, to direct programmes in complex poy- roll and cheque reconciliation programme), Department of Finance, Ottawa. Up to $7,140. Competition 61-813. "ELECTRONIC COMPUTER PROGRAMMES (for complex pay- roll and cheque reconciliction programme). Experienced personnel for senior positions -- up to $6,660. Recent high school graductes with aptitude for mathematics for training as Junior Programmers, salary according to qualis fratiors, Department of Finance, Ottawa. Competition -0i1d. CHIEF OPERATING ENGINEER (with valid first class Station- ary Engineer's Certificate, and ot least ten years' practical operating experience), National Defence, Air, Clinton $5,820-56,420. Competition £1-T2017. ne, OR, LAND AGENT (with a good knowledge of lego! documents pertcining to the ocquisition, registry and/or disposal of land), Real Estate Division, Tronsport, Toronto, Ont, $5,460-36,180. Competition 61-9186. *VETERINARIANS (university groductes in Veterinary Sci- ence, qualified for registration, to practise veterinary medi- cine in Canada), Agriculture, various centres. $7,140, depending on quclifications. Competition $1-23. HELICOPTER MECHANICS (with valid Aircraft Maintenonce Engineer's "M" Licence under category "R" endorsed for Helicopter), Transport, Moncton, N.B., Ottcwe, Vancouver, B.C. $4,860-$5,400. Competition me of La was referring] ment Tuesday PROGRESSIVE CONSERVATIVE ASSOCIATION OSHAWA PROVINCIAL RIDING ANNUAL MEETING and election of officers will be held on THURSDAY -- MAY 1th -- 8:00 P.M. UKRANIAN NATIONAL HALL 68 BLOOR S57. E., OSHAWA SPECIAL GUEST: Hon. Matthew B. Dymond, M.D. Ontario Minister of Heclth of No. 2. choice would present itself here. y servi i "Cause is Toronto evacuation. Send the children home. Or hold [ow Fungal Cuspel, Sor i Canadians are located. and Port Perry cleared for ac- would be determined by facts; . 4 : » J S'in Pine Grove Cemetery, Prince] OTTAWA (CP)--The appoint- tion. Morale good. fathered at EMO headquarters Albert. Rev. John Scarr, minis- ment of Jack Stepler, 48, asso- night that the entire country ton and his staff) : y ; z : , "dinlo. x "ded _..|will conduct the services. Province, as special adviser on went on a standby, or "diplo-| The last situation report was A TOS [press relations to Hon. George terday. {It read: "Closest bomb, Bur- 3 i i 2 {li . 1: Canada in London, was an- At 9.50 a.m. the Joint Emer-|lington at 15:45 hours (3:45), jor Chaves. Aaron Ross, 95, of nounced Friday. He was bureau fon : A | 1 Bedford R former manager (five city and five county mem- bulance and engineering service : : 5 bers) were warned to stand by on standby should help be re- bank, were held Friday, May 5 in London from 1658 to 1960. at the chapel of St. James the WANT RELATIONS ENDED |W ; ; of university students went on No Holes In Plan i Siegal Ee he was Strike Friday demanding that a son of Aaron Ross, one of the : . Fa . (lations with Cuba. They also F r » G . Sal founders of the Dominion bank. pledged to stay away from their 0 China Iain e Sauk a8 a youth. 2 N33 ian identified as Communists are Minister Alvin Hamilton denied under which Canada would] He was a life member of Slobodiuk of New Jersey, stions that Red China has store the rest of the grain with Toronto Golf Club, Royal Can- U.S.A.; also one sister and one heat involved in a long-ers and the national treasury. let, Skating and Curling club and children and 11 great grand- Mal with Canada. At his press conference Fri. WaS 8 member of the Granite children. P hase the same the CCF leader's remarks as His wife, Isobel, died some Strong Funeral Home. High Re- we have agreed tol silly and assinine." years ago. He is survived by duiem Mass will be sung in St.| Milage nes olic Church on Monday, May 8, : agree 0 pro-| . K. AN at 9.30 a.m. Rev. J. C. Pereyma vide there is an agreement to| MES. K. KZANOWSE) Duy 464 Athol street, Oshawa died Wi follow in St. Gregory's Cem- - : ' sarin | EIETY. Earlier Friday, in the Com- Friday, May 5, at the Ontario 3 a half years of ill health. what he implied were Mr. Ar t |gue's suggestions Thursday that The former Katherine Saw- a A the Western Ukraine, the daugh- House in his announcement of!, the wheat anent ter of the late Mary and Theo- {ada 37 years ago, and has been a resident of Oshawa fer the LIVERPOOL -- A $84 million ing in Oshawa, she resided in plan for development of a 2I'| Ansonville, Ont. s would be/Pool put forward by Charles Ukrainian Greek Catholic 's and quan Clore, the financier, has been Church, the late Mrs. Kzanowski' verted Third Concession northall the schools. (Theoretically, al The remains are at the Ger- tery where the graves of 2,333 Hospitals in Oshawa, Uxbridge them in the. schools. The choice at 2 p.m. Interment will follow APPOINT DREW AIDE Col. Wotton explained Friday at Oshawa Airport by Col. Wot- ter of Whitby Pentecostal Church ciate editor of the Vancouver matic" warning at 8 a.m. yes- received at City Hall at 4.19. Drew, high commissioner for TORONTO -- Funeral service ; gency Measures Committee five megaton. Put rescue am- chief of Southam News Services of branches of the Dominion for 24 hour emergency duty. quested." |Less, Parliament St. He gied , SAN JOSE (AP)--Thousands Costa Rica break diplomatic re- jMr. Ross went to Work for the classrooms until teachers they OTTAWA (CP) -- Agriculturejion, a pipedream, and a hoax London and Toronto. no commitment to buy all/costs of storage paid by farm. adian Yacht club, Toronto Crick- brother in Europe; 10 grand- . bulaficye committed them- gay Mr. Hamilton described club. He was an Anglican. The mai Of St fe Mm a press confer- "Everyone assumes that if ® number of nephews and nieces. | 2 ¢0rge's Ukrainian Greek Cath- oi Flin Fg Wo hg el Mrs. Katherine Kzanowski, of | Will be the celebrant. Interment mons, Mr. Hamilton denied Hospital, Whitby, after ane and Be, the minister, had misiod the chuk was born June 18, 1883, in {dore Sawchuk. She came to Can- / past 18 years. Previous to liv- 1 at the time 3CTe site in the centre of Liver] A member of St. George's approved in principle by the was predeceased by her hus- corporation's development com- band, Allam, on July 12, 1958. AX mittee. The scheme includes a She is survived by two daugh- i charged new civic centre, air terminal, ters, Mrs. Dennis Diachenko oo a8sday that/and a pedestrian plateau with (Sophia) of Oshawa; Mrs. An- *£5 contract, stores above the present street drew Grenuk (Stella) of Wind: if to noth- level, flats, a hotel and a multi- sor; one son Walter of Whitby: tal a vis storey garage. fone daughter. Mrs. Lena For competitions indicated *, write to Civil Service Commis- sion, Ottawa, for details and application forms. For other competitions, except os otherwise indicated, detoils ond op plication ot in Post Offices, National Offices ond nearest Civil Service Commission Office. Please quote ber op indi 4 L. R. BARRAND, City Clerk. P x x