\ Only three families live Paradise. Seven years ago the federal government tried to open the area for homesteading, but no- body was interested and the three elderly couples lived on undisturbed in a lush valley. Paradise is shown on the road maps as Riverview Gardens. It sits just off the Mackenzie Highway 18 miles south of here and just north of the Alberta border. It was Mme. Vanier, wife of the Governor-General, who re- named it during the recent vice- Only 3 Families | Live In Paradise HAY RIVER, N.W.T. (CP)--|as inltents of clear plastic. --his rhubarb resembles minia- ture palm trees. vantages of cooking on a camp stove and preserving by the light of a coal-oil lantern, but she wouldn't leave. their wings in the Ground Ob- server Corps and spend much time listening and watching for aircraft. home brew which he makes for ! tomatoes growing under| But even in the open air his vegetables grow to a giant size Amy admits there are disad- They read a lot. Both have And Joe is known for his regal tour to the area. [his own use "because I haven't Lack Of Fat Is Problem For Cubans HAVANA (CP) -- The key word in Cuba today is "ma teca." Translated from revolutionary regime with sticky problem. For the first time in its 25-year history, the regime has had to impose ra- tioning. Families will be restricted one pound of lard and one pound of cooking oil monthly for eac member above the age of one the year. the Spanish it means lard, or fats. Manteca--or the lack of it-- has presented Fidel Castro's caused such consternation as the lard shortage. The word '"manteca'" is per- pect that Cuba's dollar shortage may have as much to do with this as any real or imagined em- bargo. SUPPLIED BY REDS They note that shortly after the talk of an embargo was first heard here, the government an- N- nounced that a shi t of 22, foods, for instance rice and sal- ads, with vegetable oil. PIGS FROM CANADA | The government says the | shortage will be over in 18 months. It is feverishly building up the country's pig stocks, mostly through imports from Canada. In the meantime, a high- powered campaign {is being 000 tons of lard was coming from Communist countries. Cuba does not pay dollars for its purchases from the Soviet bloc. It pays in kind--sugar, to- bacco, fresh fruit. Shortages have been cr ged to get people to do less frying and more of other types of cooking. Recipes for plates that do not require fat in the cooking have been appearing in the newspapers. An indication, perhaps, of the 's obsession with up all over the place in Cuba during the last several months, as the U.S. embargo on most ex- ports sinks in. But none has haps the most oft-heard word in | local lexicon. Everybody {talks about how difficult it is to to Cuban peopl fried food is the fact that one newspap Revoluci deemed it expedient to print in- structions on how to make poached eggs on toast. |Attempt To Check Mine Disasters account for about 20 per cent, |gas explosions which cause 10 per cent and flooding of pits causing about 10 per cent. FACE HAZARDS A spokesman for the min. istry's mine bureau said that there were only 125 government inspectors for 622 coal mines in the nation, including 75 mines owned by leading coal mining companies. The coal mines are mainly situated in Kyushu and Hokkaido, Japan's northernmost island, and of the nation's 1,810 pits, 560 are liable to gas ex- TOKYO (Reuters)--The adop- tion of scientific safety devices and the closure of hazardous coal mines are part of the Japanese government's attempt to minimize coal mine disas ters. In Japan, coal mine accidents occur, on an average, from 50, 000 to 60,000 times a year kill- ing between 600 and 700 miners. During the first three months of the year, 226 coal miners died, including 71 killed in the worst mine disaster in Japan since the Second World War, at the Kamikiyo mine in Kyushu, Japan's southernmost island. plosions because of the large PLANE GRAZED CAR DEPEW, N.Y. (AP)--A pri- This is going to hurt. Cubans obtain it. People queue up for normally consume an extraordi-| long periods to get a pack of it > narily large amount of fat. and often have to go without. \yate plane grazed an automo- leaves. Bluebells and briar roses party hung back when the tour] The government blam es| Cooking oil is just as scarce or more so. At a shop in one of |bile while making a forced land- grew in the poplar and Spruce wert through the valley and "American economic aggres-| ling 'on the Ee near forests and she said: copied out the recipe. |sion" for the present embar-|the market places, there have) g y "This is Paradise." | During the growing period |rassing situation, claiming that|been scenes of near-riot as peo-|this Buffalo suburb Sunday but The three couples who live/Joe and Amy work from early the U.S. is maintaining an un- ple actually fought one pool. st injuries were reported. Con- there are John and Pansy Cam-|morning until what passes for|announced embargo against ex-|to gt a can of oil before theirad Wieffenback, 27, of Wil- eron, Joe and Amy Krause and dusk. {ports of lard to Cuba. {supply should run out. Len and Delphine Web. In the off-season Joe cuts| The U.S. has traditionally | Cuba imports most of its cook- | John and Pansy are content wood with a neat but compli-| ' i to grow enough food to live on piicated do - it - yourself saw.|peen Cuba's sole supplier, sell- ing oil from Spain, but it also and sell enough to cover the|mill which draws power from allt this country 98,000 tons a makes some of its own. other necessities of life. [1926 - vintage tractor. But he : | The Cuban people like their i | Cave-ins top the list of the leadi 1 mini . vinlage : ; : ! a car driven by Mrs. Janet Tay- s top the list of the leading coal mining companies | The Krauses conduct experi- doesn't like it. : |X is a fact that shipments food fried, 50 they use a lot of lor of Buffalo. touched th ¥ {causes of mine disasters, being|took precautionary measures ments for the federal agricul-| "T do enough work during the from the United States have fal--many times the one pound uttalo, touched the pave: | osponsible for about 50 per|against mine accidents and di- ture department. |summer--I shouldn't have to ceased or practically ceased. monthly now to be allotted. ment, spun around and swerved cent. These are followed by ac-!lapidated mines were closed |work in the winter. Some observers however sus-|They also like to douse certain'into the mall. |cidents during transport which down. THE COMMUNITY PAGE FRIENDLY NEIGHBORLY SERVICE A GUIDE TO VALUES IN OSHAWA & DISTRICT Their Paradise is a segment of land around which the Hay River curves like a hairpin! Cold drains from the soft, allu- vial soil into the surrounding river and there is none of the CHICOUTIMI, Que. (CP)--|years ago for the use of the|permafrost usually found about Outside a makeshift wigwam on chief and his family. three feet down in that part of a birch-rimmed shore of Lac: He prefers the solitude of the the country. Sebastian, an 89-year-old In-|bush, with his wagwam placed, The July rainfall they supple- well-meaning friends build a|rippling water plays tag withito the fields. new home for him and his|the shoreline of his beloved| There is a three-month grow- family. |lake. ing season--three months of 20 Philippe Xavier, grand chief| The Xaviers have lived in the hours of sunlight a day with intention of moving into the new. northwest of Quebec City, since|grees. As Joe Krause says: house, being built to replace a|1876, making their living] "You can almost hear things ramshackle abode erected 353|through farming, hunting, trap-|grow." | In recent years their closest|found the Prairies to windy for ifriends in the outside world his liking and moved up grad- {have been Clement Dufour, a ually into the Peace River area . NO SHOPPING PROBLEMS, NO PARKING PROBLEMS, come as Tidal Nature | Jean-Joseph Sa, Dayw of berta. h h |St. David de Falardeau each| That got too crowded and he OU are w H LONDON (CP)--Few reputa-| voted money towards the pro-built a 30:foot boat. He and y en you shop at your local merchants. Your shopping tions in British politics have|ject. Price Brothers Limiled do- : \ . | lumber. landing in Hay River from the ease is guaranteed when you shop with your local merchants, tidal regularity as that of Sel-| Old Chief Philippe, while ob-|North in 1946. Wyn Lioyd, now chancellor of jective to kis ismily movivg| Amy, Dork near Madison, no need to dress up, no irritating traffic tie-ups, no parking prob- Only three months ago--when he be allowed to spend his re-\woman in the area. . 4 : he olvered is firet budget maining years in his wigwam.| "We spent two days in a lems. Come just as you are, at just the time you want to come. It after moving out of the foreign skiff during the 1951 flood," Joe dd a; d I . . mes xt for Liovd: | LIVE Theatre [aions. The ice was coming right adds up in dollars and cents, too, for convenience sake, «always Now, only days after Lloyd's through the bush past the cabin. h | : 4 austerity measures to deal with We weren't afraid of drowning, Ss op at your OC stores. but that ice ean crush you." gre rumblings from the part; paitaful. | PRINCE GEORGE, BC.| " ; | They cheered little when the|(CP) -- A handful of amateur ar was When Joo amd Amy new chancellor unveiled a pro-| enthusiasts, gathered around|ge i pocket books of most Britons. |live theatre to this city in north. . Both the Labor opposition and| central British Columbia half a ios, lomatoss, gL Liberal members have once| dozen times a year. ries, rhubarb and anything else! again made him a primary tar-| But they learned -- the hard they feel like planting. Cereal | |Macmillan--in their eforts to dents will take their theatre in hd | 'discredit the government. {the winter and leave it in the| 73, ust havent the room, to! is is hardly a new position|summer when the fishing's| i v Th ne | {experiments for the federal gov-| for Lloyd. He survived one of] good. | given a politician Whes és for | Producuon, sald Marlene Ong-| eign minister he had to defend man, a long-time member and T lks Of R 1 the government's Suez policy. |active participant with the a 0 e "Lloyd's position in Parlia- Prince George Players, an ing," commented The Observer, in 1946. | As Aged Woman a London Sunday newspaper,| "We should have known| soon after this. better," Mrs. Ongman added.| HOLLYWOOD (AP)--"It was' Tory MP realized the failure of support all sorts of things in the| Warner and Mervyn Leroy had the Suez policy and Macmil-| winter, but all this activity quits|--and they talked me into it-- lan's silent reversal of that pol-lin the summer time." That's Rosalind Russell talk- icy, Lloyd had to pretend that! Since 1946, the group hasiing about her current role as a| semed almost to believe it' {paid-up members, about half of falls in love with a Japanese| whom are quite active. Fromiman in Majority of One. | CALLED LUCKY : the beginning, they paid their| But Roz's joy is nothing com-| Only two years before Suez own way from gate receipts to| pared with that of Warner's and | "luckiest politician of the year." the high school auditorium --|in the part. This was in 1955 when he was| that is until the June loss when| producer director Leroy lifted from the obscurity of 2 the Players had to stage a car-|showed a reporter some of tie jor post to the limelight of| washing bee fo balance the | iim, Those who saw the Broad- amount of methane which they contain. Inspectors, the spokesman (added, go in fear of their lives when they visit pits to see whether regulations are being obeyed, for there is always a possibility they may be killed in rigged mining accidents. The spokesman said that the She saw a garden blazing with pansies. Strawberries lay large and soft under huge |been able to find anything to {match it in the stores." A mem- ber of the governor-general's The death rate in the mines, which has declined in the last decade, is believed to be still one of the highest in the world Safety measures are almost neglected in small mines, espe- cially when the coal mining in- Susley is passing through a pe- » . " |riod of depression, according to liamsville, NY, the pilot, told the ministry of international number of coal mine disasters police his single-engined plane trade and industry. Petroleum had decreased since 1950 when developed carburetor trouble. is replacing coal as the nation's|the Coal Mine Security Law {The plane skimmed the top of | major source of energy. |came into force. Under the law, CHIEF WON'T MOVE Likes Solitude Of Home In Bush NORTH OSHAWA Plumbing and Heating ANDY NAGY'S BODY SHOP 24 Hour Towing Service Radiators Repaired and Re-cored. PHONE 728-4451 STEVENSON"S ROAD SOUTH RICKSHA Closed All Dey Mondey Take-Out - Delivery Dining SUDDARD'S C.C.M. and RALEIGH BICYCLES Sales--Service--Parts Keys Made PHONE 725-3979 497 SIMCOE ST. SOUTH Textile & Carpet Mills Discount House SPECIAL! EXTRA HEAVY TWEED LARGE CHOICE OF COLORS 498 sq.yd. » » "aan 725-1611 FAST 24-HR. SERVICE NO. 1 FUEL OIL DNIPRO OIL CO. LTD. 190 BLOOR ST. EAST PHONES 728-0762 723-7789 Allen Robinson, Prop. SPEEDY SERVICE, REPAIRS, IN. STALLATIONS, ALTERATIONS, ALL COPPER PLUMBING JOBS. PHONE 725-3715 52 WAYNE AVE. 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Phones Bowmanville MA 3-3922 or MA 3-3353 CLT PT Systems We Feature ® SAMSON TV TOWERS PHONE 728-8180 OSHAWA T.V. 361 Gibbons $e, HOWIE'S B-A SERVICE Lubrication--Washing Tune-up--Towing Open 7 a.m. to 11 p.m. Also Weekends PHONE 725-5337 SIMCOE ST. NORTH GIA. FIORINI CONTRACTOR © Industriel © Commercial © Residential FREE ESTIMATES 76 BEATRICE 725-4647 dian chief watches glumly while| close to the spot where the ment by pumping river water | of the Montagnais tribe, has no(Lac Sebastian area, 285 miles|temperatures up around 90 de- |ping and fishing. Joe was born in Chicago, Reputation Has Chicoutimi fur merchant, and|of British Columbia and Al- Amy took the long way around, risen and fallen with almost/nated the lumber. the exchequer. |into the new home, insists that| Wis, was the third white office--the Tory backbenchers' says. "We even had some beer E the nation's economic ills, there| In North BC. {MOVED TO RIVERVIEW | AY : ns. gram aimed at hitting the| Grandmother Gibbons, brings| There they grow corn, pota-| get--along with Prime Minister way--that Prince George resi- crops would grow, but Joe and| the severest batterings ever "We lost our shirts in a June ernment. These are crops Suck ment was appallingly humiliat-| amateur drama group formed "At a time when nearly every| "People will work hard and|a wild, crazy idea that Jack nothing had gone wrong, and grown steadily to today's 30|65-year-old Jewish woman who he had been described as the|productions staged, generally in|yeroy's. Miss Russell is superb | SUNDAY 12 Noon till 12 Midnight Phone 728-1676 42 KING ST. WEST of the political tree. During the years folowing Suez his position improved grad-| ually and noticeably. Less than | a year ago he was made chan-| cellor. ; t This year the pundits were touting him as a strong posi-| bility for the prime minister's office. : But with the deepening eco-| nomic crisis the country faces, there are an increasing 'number of expressions of sobering sec:| ond thoughts. ] The opposition salvoes, strengthened by the growing unity of the Labor party, are having a telling effect not only put on the seats in the rear as| wel old Wilson, the Labor party's shadow chancellor, is} enhancing his reputation as the| Commons' most penetrating de-| bater by tripping Lloyd up with semingly effortless ease. ATTACK UNDER eT" Lloyd interjected in. delivering his midsummer cure for the economic crisis. "pm not afraid of the word, he sald to the accompaniment st cheers. oe Wilson in the eco- ic debate the next day. "How can the chancellor go on talking bravely about a five- year plan when his own bud- get hasn't stood up for three months?" i : Throughout Wilson's rapier at- tack, Lloyd sat impassively with his fet on the table beside the box. Le res like yesterday's (the crisis budget) is about the stif- fest a minister can face--more go than a budget, when jeers be the Telegraph. 4 8 ced with cheers," | : a Conservative Daily |think we're giving them cul-| « the foreign office, a top branch budget again | They haven't been able to acquire permanent production quarters because support has not been that good in this city of - 15800, 'but they have: ac- cumulated props, 'scenery and other equipment which they| store in various locations, in-| cluding the crowded one - room clubhouse located in a residen- tial back yard. IN DRAMA FESTIVAL Quality has improved consid erably over the years. This year, for the first time, the Players entered the regional competition for the Dominion |Drama Festival, being one of| | i sof the government front bench |SiX groups selected from ni entries in B.C. "But it's a costly thing," said Ms. Ruth Pennock. "It set us back about $600 and that's a terific sum to a small group like ours." When they stage productions here, Mrs. Gibbons said, the Players usually have a three- night run that draws about 1,000 persons and puts enough money in the bank to meet expenses until the next production. Mrs. Gibbons, because she is the oldest member of the group and the one with the longest service, has been dubbed the Players' Grandmother. Mrs. Gibbons, who generally directs the plays, Mrs. Ong- man, an amateur painter in ad- dition to her work as make-up artist and sometimes set de- signer, and Mrs. Pennock, who acts and directs, said the city has other arts groups, too -- the Art Society, Light Opera Society, barbershop group, a jazz club, folk singing club, choirs and film society among |them. "But the people here don't |ture," said Mrs, Ongman. way hit with Molly Berg and Sir Cedric Hardwicke as the aged lovers--and can imagine no ore else in the parts--are in for a| pleasant surprise. i Sir" Alec Guinness plays "the Japanese. Roz says: "Every day's a joy working with this greatest of actors." Roz, who saw the play on Broadway, said she never once considered the part for herself, She had to dye her hair grey, pad herself to look like a matron and develop a walk that made | her 'a pedestrian Whistler's| | mother. | | | {IT'S CRAZY' | On top of that, she does it all] with a Jewish accent that could {have gotten her on Molly Berg's lold radio and television show, |The Goldbergs. | "I don't mind playing a char. acter part," Roz said. "I've al ways considered myself a char- acter. I did Craig's Wife when GALT et MOVING STORAGE We are now agent for MOTORWAY TRANSPORT and HILL THE MOVER ALL LOADS Fully insured and handled ef- ficiently by union men. Storage ond Packing. Phones: OFFICE----728.4619 RESIDENCE--728-3371 153 CONANT STREET J. Gow, 248 Annis CARTAGE $3.00 order with. FREE « Merchandise or Service « FREE SEE IF YOUR NAME IS IN ONE OF THESE ADVERTISEMENTS This page is a weekly feature of the Oshawa Times for a 26-week period and there will appear in the advertisements each week the names and addresses of people living in Oshawa and District. Read the Advertisements in which you found your name and present it within one week along with a sales slip to the Oshawa Times Office, showing that goods or services have been purchased from ANY of the advertisers on this page and you will receive absolutely free a $3.00 order to be spent for merchandise or services with one of the advertisers on this page. Winner must advise which advertiser they wish to spend Patronize The Business Firms On This Page LEE BISHOP RADIATOR REPAIRS Cleaning & Recoring New end Used Radiators PHONE 725-1633 42 BOND ST. WEST MOSIER SHEET METAL ESSO and GAR WOOD HEATING UNITS Sales--Service--Parts PHONE 725-2734 292 KING ST. WEST I was only 23--and she was a middle-aged woman." But she still can't understand | why Warner and Leroy were s0/| insistent upon casting her. { "It's wild, and it's crazy," she repeated. : But not really. Roz' Auntie] Mame is the biggest money-| maker in'Warner's history. Le-| roy already has her set for the| Ethel Merman role in the movie | version of Gypsy. STEPHENSONS' GARAGE || SPECIALISTS IN frame straight- || ening, wheel alignment, gen- eral repairs and headlight ser- vice, PHONE 725-0522 15 CHURCH ST. FREE To The Customers Of The Week This Could Be You 1 ORDER INVOICE WILL BE DRAWN One day Hermione Gingold brought a teen-ager on the set| to meet Roz for the first time. | He was from her home town of | Waterbury, Conn. | "He lived near our home in {Waterbury and 1 suppose has| {been hearing all his life about a | |glamorous neighbor. When he met me, he couldn't open his {mouth," Roz said. 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