@ THE OSHAWA TIMES, Soturdey, February 24, 1962 ¥ | Canadian Boys | Flock Towards Scout Program ,Criminal Activity Up RAGLAN TROOP CELEBRATES SCOUT WEEK Celebrating Boy Scout week | Lord Baden Powell, founder of throughout Canada ure two members of the ist Raglan Troop. Holding a picture of the Boy Scout movement are Scout Neil Brown (lefi) and Cub Thomas Mahaffey. Both | will be attending the second annual father and son Boy Scout banquet at the Raglan | Hall tonight. --Oshawa Times Photo Young Drinkers Violinist Featured Triple In Year Following is Chief Constable|sult of traffic accidents on our R. T. Parker's report whichjhighway. was accepted by the Police! "Two men died when their Commission for Pickering automobile was driven into the Township: path of a train; a young girl "This year has been one ofjdied when the automobile in rapid development in the area|which she was a passenger went and from all present indica-jout of control and turned over; tions, we may expect eveniin the ditch, pinning her under greater changes in 1962. "We have seen Bay Ridges grow from an idea into a com-) plete community with all mod-| the roof. "A man died in a similar ac- cident when pinned under the roof. |Charlton, Oshawa. Guests at the At Rotary MRS. A. L. HOOEY BOWMANVILLE the weekly Rotary luncheon meet- ing on Friday, Rubinoff and his violin were special guests. Make-ups at the meeting were: New Richards, Charlie World, Robert Brown, George| meeting were Don Armstrong, Bowmanville; Ed 'Says Township Chief PICKERING (Staff) -- Crim- inal activity in Pickering Town- ship during 1961 increused over the previous year. The annual report of Chief there were 212 accidents and 65 injuries. The damage to vehicles | in- volved in accidents in 1961 total- ed $61,518 and the totai damage | jin 1961 as only one woman was jarrested as compared with six jin 1960. There were 19 juveniles jtried in Juvenile Court. 17 fewer jthan in 1960, OTTAWA ( CP) -- Canadian boys are joining the scouting movement in droves but the growth is chiefly among the younger lads and scout officials| are concerned about the appeal of its program for older boys. to other property was $1,655.) Comparab!i2 figures for were $62,929 and $2,535. Constable Reginald T. Parker points out that of the 319 crim- inal code offences known to the department in 1961, only 110 were concluded by police action. For the same perind in the previous year 174 criminal code offences resulted in police ac- In 1961 no persons in Picker-| : ' 1960 ing" Township. were committed) Today's more - sophisticated |to a mental hospita) resulting/teen - agers are apparently los- TEENAGE DRINKING eee police investigatiun where-/ing interest in the knee-pants- TRIPLES as in 1960 two persons were 4nd-campfire style of scouting. Criminal Code charges laid committed. | Since 1959 a special subcom- by the Pickering police in 1961 | mittee of the national executive were ore gs A Pe ee a tate a lected from| 2% been studying this trend 3 year and the ihway Traffic) e total fines collecie | w. rse it. Hon of 269 known offences. --_ act charges also were down, |convictions on Pickering Town-| Gavan nd 5 ao . Cala a Chief Constable Reginald T.! Liquor Control Act charges| ship Police charges arauunted tO! srontreal th : aided ale © Parker, in his report, estimates! were up, especially in the teen.| $19,990.09 -- almost $3,000 more| ontreal, the group has asked that at least three additional] age category which tripled over|than in 1960. {for voles time to complete its constables will be réquired in|the previous year. Property stolen in the area| Complex task. order to provide the service that! Following is a summary of during 1961 totaled $17,936.46 --| It has rejected for the mo- will be expected from the de-| the charges laid under all Acts an increase of more than $4,000)ment suggestions that the tra- partment. during 1961 with the 1960 totals|over the previous year. How-/ditional short pants be discarded On the other hand, persons in-|in brackets: ever, the police recovered more/as part of a general modern- jured resulting from traffic ac-| Criminal Code -- 176 (201);/stolen property than in 1960|ization of the uniform, cidents and the number of traf-| Liquor Control Act -- 173 (142):|with the total, including prop| In a recent report the sub- fic accidents showed a consider-|Highway Traffic Act 818 erty for other depariments be |committee wrote: "Before any able decrease over 1960. |(1,056); Juvenile Delinquency ing $4,209.34. suggestions for adaptation or Chief Constable Parker point-|Act -- 9 (36); Small Vessel Act! The three police cruisers| modification can be made, it ed out that there were six traf-|-- 6 (17); Bylaws -- 185 (69), | patrolled 169,514 miles in 1961--! will be necessary to know just, fic fatalities in 1961, the same) A total of 79 charges were|11.000 miles more than in 1960./what the youth of Canada, sit- as in 1960 and that there poked rage wei 50 7, gers The es garni ag boat ting on an H-bomb volcano at two suicides whereas last year charges are pending and 49 was operated in the French-|the dawn of space travel, needs. ; there was one. |charges were given suspended! man's Bay area during the sum- "They her help first as} Macs ot Sn nee t The number of traffic acci-| sentence. mer weexenis. Bod PENCEMed! jouths and secapd to: developl pressnled Willy w wristwatch |dents investigated by the 13-| Males arrested in Pickering;many services to persons in fed adulta. eal fitted for tte aot Past President's pint de |man force showed a marked de-/Township for ail offences total-|trouble. |world in which they will have! he relin uishes his Hees of |crease with 180 accidents and 44\ed 174, an increase of four over| The craft was used mainly to} ive ry , se office a Peasidint of the Hol- jinjuries resulting from the acci-|the previous yea reduce careless activities on the} : ? ' |dents. However, the females behaved) water and also as a rescue ve- EXPAND PROGRAM a ; pers ips | In the same category in 1960\themselves more than the men/hicle when required. | While this basic study con-| pppoe yond ot cnr yf i stein Friesian Assoc:ation of | Boy Scout Week Feb. 18-25. Scout strength has more than 'Hope And Doubt (Pope Backing: | DEATHS |being broadened steadily. It's) \reflected in the observance of By THE CANADIAN PRESS HOLSTEIN PRESIDENT RETIRES tion, is James R. Henderson, a past-president of the Asso- ciation from Kingston with Mr. McLaughlin's daughter Janice assisting. D. S. Dunton was elected president ~~ : ~ vem '/ For S. Viet Nam ing to reinforce the use of an-| gains Use Of Latin jtrebled since 1945. The increase . ' was 25,000 in the last three| Montreal -- Air Vice-Marshal r,s . "Tr D\__ Sapk.| W |Adelard Raymond, 72, one of VATICAN CITY (AP)--Seek-| years ome gb reat these ithe key figures in the develop- SAIGON, South Viet (AP)--There is an undurrent of|guess the total at from 13,000 hope mixed with doubt in this/tc 20,000--from or five times the |potentially explosive corner ofjnumber two years ago. They the world where East and West/control the countryside through are fighting a shooting war witha campaign of organized sub- jincreasing ferocity. jversion and terror. Govenment |. "The United States is finally|forces hold the towns and vil- living up to its responsibilities|lages and venture out at their in Southeast Asia," szys one|peril. veteran Asian observer |HOPES LOST IN LAOS Others are not convinced. | Neighboring Laos. through Some Vietnamese and West-| which thousands of Viet Cong in- jerners doubt the United States/filtrate South Viet Nam. pre |will face a military showdown|sents a problem of another here if it might invite Commu-|sort. The U.S., its hopes for a nist Chinese aggression and risk|strong anti-Communist regime general war in Laos dashed, has come out Nam, combed with guerrillas. Officials) cient Latin in the modern world, Pope John has reaffirmed the importance of. Latin for 'the nature and mission" of the Ro- man Catholic Church. New instructions on the use of Latin in seminaries were con- jtained in an apostolic constitu- tion signed Thursday by the pontiff and made public Friday. The constitution -- called "Veterum Sapientia" (Wisdom of the Ages)--said the church lsustains the old lansuage be- jcause of its universality, en- durability and nobility, making it a link between the past, pres- ent and future. The Pope put down these younger boys. There are 167,200 Wolf Cubs (the eight-to-11 age group) compared with 106,200 Boy Scouts (11 to 18) and 4,500 Rover Scouts (18 to 23). Scouts are branching out into a wide range of new activities. They are studying winter scout- ing.and survival, assisting wel- fare agencies, operating ham radio stations, helping train re- tarded children. New Scout troops have been established at Canadian NATO bases in Europe and in remote northern communities such as Frobisher Bay and Cape Dorset. Plans are under way for the ment of the RCAF during the Second World War; after a pro- wonged illness. Toronto -- William M. Daw- son, 57, president of United Ci- gar Stores Limited who joined the company in 1924 and be- came president in 1949; of a heart attack. Hollywood -- .Halliwell Hobbes, 84, a British character actor who started his screen career in 1929 and retired six yeas ago because of a heart ailment. Trinidad, Colo. -- Rev. Jos- eph Samuel Garcia, 102, be jlieved to have been the oldest | | living Roman Catholic priest in| qa' INTRODUCING Hearing Glasses MAICO @ New Hi Fi Clarity @ New Exciting Designs Others, looking across the bor-|in support cf a neutralist coa-| der at Laos, fear the United|lition government there, if one) States may yet settle, at some|can be formed. future date, for a political com-| Negotiations have becn going), rules, among others: sure that no one under their |fourth Canadian Rover Moot to |be held near Trois - Rivieres, |Que., Aug. 27 - Sept. 4, and for ithe 11th World Jambgree in Greece in July, 1963. @ New Big 4 advantages get FREE BOOKLET--write MAICO the United States. | Toronto -- Dr. Charles Gor- don Fraser, 77, Harbord Colle- giate physics teacher for 40 Church officials must make uthority, 'for the mania of ern services and improvements./ 'Two men died in a very vio- A new drive-in theatre is near-|Jent head-on collision. ing completion and a second) «These tragedies do not have drive-in theatre has had all oft) happen, but frequently wel the preliminary grading finish-/a+e reminded that the differ-| ed. ence between a minor injury} "Plans are being completed|and a fatal accident often de-| for a stock-car race track and pends on a very small quirk of| arena. Two separate shopping fate. | centres are under construction) «Our safety campaign in the and may be expected to open in| schools was intensified this year| the late spring. and all 15 public schools were} "These projects and the con-|visited at least twice during the| tinued expansion of Bay Ridges|year, and all grades were lec- will require additional police ser-|tured on various aspects of safe- vices during this year, which 'ty, wil] stretch our present facili-| " «we distributed several thou- ties to the breaking point. jsand book covers and pamph- "T feet that it will be neces-jlets to the students, and organ-| sary to engage three additionallized a project to give reflective! constables this year in order to|bicycle tape to the students at| provide the service that will be/about one third of its wholesale} expected from the department) value, "While criminal activity in| 'We were assisted the area is not primarily a/matter by the Rouge Hills major problem, we have exper-/Pickering Lions Club, whose! ienced a sufficient increase to|members donated the bulk of; warrant assigning two officers|the money required, | to this work and to establish! "Oyr radar speed timing unit} an investigation unit whose was operated at various loca-| function will be a decided de-itions for a total of 24814 hours terrent in this field and 216 speeding summonses} ACCIDENTS DECLINE {Were issued as a result of this| | Due to the nature rd ibe area, the bulk of our endea-| 'When these figures are com- vors are directed to traffic en-/Pared with 261 hours of opera-| forcement and traffic safety|tion in 1960 with 461 charges work. laid, we find that almost twice} "I am pleasech to note that|as many charges were laid per| the total number of accidents/hour of operation in 1960 as in has declined below the figures for the last two years and the, 'This fact, coupled with our number of persons injured has) reduction in accidents and injur- also shown a very favorable de- ies, tends to show that we have! crease. jachieved a good measure of! "Six persons died as a re-\success in our traffic enforce- ment work, "TI feel that we must continue to concentrate a great portion of our effort in this field to fur- jther reduce this unnecessary jand tragic waste on our high- |ways. in this of Harvard Denies Church Charge BINGHAMTON, N.Y. (AP)--GOOD DARK ROOM A Protestant missicnary has} "The addition of our photo- revived reports that warfare|graphic dark room and its equip- among native tribes in Dutch|ment in 1961 has been of great New Guinea was encouraged by/assistance in our work during a Harvard expedition, »f which|the year and promises to be a Michael Rockefeller was ajvery worthwhile investment in| member, so that fitms could|the years to come. | | be made of the fighting, | "Our departmental equip-; Harvard officials calied it ajment at the present time is as | | on in the capital of Vientiane newness," writes agamst the Oshawa, guest of George Charl- ton. Absent members were Wil- liam Coggins, William Morri-| son, Garnet Rickard, Don Rit-! son and Art Ribey. The following members made| up their attendance: Ross Strike! at Forest Hill, Don Morris and| George Stephens at Whitby. | Congratulations were given to} Don Morris on receiving a one year perfect attendance pin. Winner of the hockey draw was Fred Vanstone Sr. All 'members are reminded to attend the district confer-| ence, March 1 - 3, at the Royal York Hotel, Toronto An inter-club meeting will be| held on March 26 at the Lions} Centre. This will be an attend- ance meeting and there will be no meeting on March 23. All members are asked to Support Boy Scout Week. The meeting on Friday, February 23 will be in charge of the presi- dent's wife, Milda Morris, and each Rotarian will bring his Ro- tary Ann. The Rotary Anns 'will conduct the meeting with Ilene Van Nest acting as sergeant-at- arms. | | ENNISKILLEN By MRS. RUSSELL GRIFFIN ENNISKILLEN -- The first! meeting of Enniskillen United| Church Women was held at the} home of Mrs. L, Wearn, re- cently. It was moved by Mrs. H. Me- Gill and seconded by Mrs. M.| Hobbs that Mrs. Crawford and} Mrs. Toms look after arrange- ments for the World Day of Prayer to be held March 9 LOST HEIR PARTY A second Euchre and _ Lost Heir Party was sponsored by the Senior Choir recently in the Community Hall, Over 40 guests participated in progressive games of cards. The prizes for high scores) were won by Mrs. Grant Werry,| Mrs, L. Wearn, Mr. F. Bailey, Charles Ashton and Roberi Slemon. Those with low scores were jence of an ally. Bouckley,/promise in Viet Nam. } this week on tormaticn have THAILAND WORRIED been named premier-designate On the other side of Laos, by King Savang Vathana. Thailand is worried that U.S.| "Agreement has been blocked pressure for formation of a neu-| so far by the right-wing yovern- tral Laotian governmeni may|ment of Prince Boun Oum and lead to Communist control. Two/his military strongman, Gen. weeks ago Thai troops were;Phoumi Nosavan, who moved up to strategic points| their faction to fiil the vital posts| along the long border withlof interior and defence in any Laos to guard against Commu-' coalition cabinet. | nist infiltration The United States anrounced In South Viet Nam. the United| Feb. 16 that, for the second time States seems committed to de-|in two months, it was delaying fend the country agains the at-|a $3,000,000 monthly payment to tacks of Viet Cong puerrillas|the Boun Oum government in backed by Communist North|an effort to speed up formation Viet Nam jof the coalition government. The U.S. has 4,000 troops inj Without the aid funds, | the South Viet Nam and e# -new|/80Vvernment is hard pressed to command was set up recently|Pay its 60,000-man army with Gen. Paul D, Harkins as| January funds also were held its chief. His command piovides|UP until Boun Oum agreed to at- the framework for direction of|tend a Geneva confererce with U.S. combat forces it ihat be-/S0uvanna Phouma and the lat- comes necessary ter's half-brother, Prince Soup- | | | use of Latin in religious instruc- |tion and liturgical rites. | Seminaries and religious in-| stitutions in countries were La-! tin is falling into disuse may recreate professional seats for Latin and, if necessary, in- crease Latin course ana reduce!/ other studies. | Religious instruction must be in Latin. The constitution gives the Va-| tican's congregation of semi-/ naries and universities the task) of setting up an 'academic in-| \stitute of the Latin Janguage"' to keep the language up to date with new words when needed. The papal document notes jthat Greek also should have a place in religious instruction |"adequate to its importance." | is carried to outlying seas, such as the Chukchi and East Siber- ian seas, and into the strait be- tween Spitsbergen and Green- land, The Russians estimate that the Central Arctic Basin re- ceives 102,000,000,000 cubic me- tres of water a year--62,000,-| 000,000 cubic metres from the Atlantic, 36,000,000,000 through Bering Strait and 4,000,000, |000 from continental drainage. | The outflow of this water oc-| curs mainly through the strait! between Spitsbergen and Green-; land -- 71,000,000,000 cubic me-| tres--and the straits of the Ca- nadian archipelago -- 31,000,-) 000,000 cubic metres. Arctic experts here say the Russian scientists have not ac-| tually measured the through the straits of the Cana- dian archipelago but have; merely made a calculation based on certain assumptions. Quantity of outflow had never been ,checked. i CARDS SIGN COACH ST. LOUIS (CP) Wally Lemm, who coached Houston Oilers to the American Football League title last year, Thurs- day was named head coach of St. Louis Cardinals of the Na- tional League. He succeeds Frank (Pop) Ivy, former Grey Cup winning coach of the Ed- years. Parry Sound, Ont.--Marshall the Northern Electric Company Limited in Winnipeg; of a heart attack, monton Eskimos in the Western Conference of the Canadian League. Ivy resigned last sea son with two games left. A. Wilson, 58, zone manager for) HEARING SERVICE 850 YONGE ST., TORONTO WA 4-2317 Address eee eee se eereweeene TOWN sccseserverene ve OT-MV 2-24-62 eens Can Be Yours In A Highly Profitable BP SERVICE STATION @ SUCCESSFUL SALESMEN, agents, office supervisors, plant foremen and emplo stations have joined BP in @ THESE PEOPLE hove exceeded their old incomes, Earnings of $6, ore not uncommon. insurance civil servants, yees of service 1961, expense. men who 000 to $8,000 @ TRAINING is very extensive ond at BP's @ LONG-TERM LOANS cre available for have the qualifications te succeed on their own. YOU CAN START AS MANAGER WITH A SALARY AND BONUS UNDER A REVOLUTIONARY NEW RETAILING PLAN Opportunities in Peterborough, Belleville, Cobourg and Metro Toronte (P) Phone Mr. W. Mellveen, RI. 5-2831, Peterborough, Ontario, or write BP CANADA LIMITED, BOX 514, PETERBOROUGH, ONTARIO "baseless charge' and said the} Dutch government had "investi- gated rumors started by mis- sionaries'" and found them to be without foundation | A spokesman for Governor} Nelson \Rockefeller, Michael's| father, said the youth was at- tached to the expedition as an unpaid art collector ana did not! have photographic equipment. | Rev. H. M. Lake, 36, on leave} until July from the Christian and Missionary Alliance Church in New Guinea, said Thursday,| however, that he could "speak! with authority' because some! natives from the area in which he worked took part in the bat- tles "We know that some were killed," he said, addirg that na tives were offered stee! axes. to| renew warfare with traditional enemies. The. anthropologists wanted "to get movies of every pos sible phase" said | | Michael Rockefeller, 23, was|patient services. Dr. John Neil- lost last November when a boat in which he was riding of tribal life, he|an e "lb modern and efficient as any in the province and compares fa- vorably with many larger de.| partments | I wish to express my confi- dence in our present staff who have performed their various duties very well during the year and have handled each sit- uation in a business-like and| tactful manner. "While some of our officers! have much more experience than others, I have found that even our newest additions to the department are conducting themselves in a_ professional manner and are enthusiastic in their work." MAY UP PROGRAM WINDSOR, Ont. (CP) --The| commissioner of the Ontario| Hospital Services Commission indicated here Friday the fed-| eral - provincial hospital insur- ice program may be extended cover certain types of out- | | son said an extension of the pro- cap gram would take in such serv-|bout, sized off the south coast of New ices as follow-ups to emergency | Lasnier Guinea in what were described|treatment and treatntent not re as shark - infested waters. j |quiring a stay in hospital. j | | Ashton. | Canadian Poets Mrs. E. Wright, Mrs. F Trewin,,mond Souster, Miss Gail Stainton and Douglas| Jay Macpherson At the moment all U.S troops) hanouvong, hatte ie Pro here. are listed as non-combat | deni Rs at ant military technicians, in ' structors and support forces s Several have been killed. Drift Of Ice As for the threat or Commu nist Chinese invasion, it is pos- C ] ] t d sible that the Communist fear a cu a e a get war - Viet Nam . . more than the United States B § t t , Military experts here say y cien 1S Ss the Viet Cong have gone out of neath : : their way not te stick indiyj.| OTTAWA (CP)--Soviet scien- dual Americans. tists calculate that there is a general drift of-ice in the cen: POSES BIG PROBLEMS tral Arctic basin from the} The United States faces grave|shores of Siberia and the Ber-| problems in Southeast Asia, aling Strait across the North Pole) key one being the question ofjand into the Greenland Sea| how to combat Commurist ex-|through the strait separating pansion without interfering with Spitsbergen and Greenland. the sovereignty and inaepend-| A paper on Arctic ice drift is included in the third volume The South Vietnamese govern-|of Problemy Severa (Problems) ment of President Ngo Dinhlof the North) published by the} Diem has made notable strides|Soviet Academy of Sciences and since Viet Nam was 'orn in two)translated and published in Eng- seven years ago. But ti still/lish by the National Research lacks the money, training--and|Council of Canada. some say leadership -- to run| Besides this massive drift of an economically stable govern-jice--at a speed of two miles al ment or stamp out the guer-|day--there is also, the Russian| rilla opposition alone scientists say, an anticyclonic) U.S. military and economic| (clockwise) ice circulation in aid to Ngo's government now is|the eastern Arctic Ocean. running at more than $300,000. The centre of this roundabout! 0 a year. is calculated at 78 degrees! i 9 P ,.{north, 146 degrees west -- or This rugged country is honey- about 700 miles west of the Ca-| nadian weather station at Isa- Irving Layton,|chsen on Ellef Ringnes Island P. K. Page,jin the Queen Elizabeth Islands Louis Dudek and Ann Marriott. DRIFTING ISLANDS The Junior Choir under Mrs.|Their poems are translated into The Soviet oceanographers| E. Wright's guidance will be|French by Georges Cartler,|,av the existence of this circu-| leading in the worship of song/young Montreal poet. lation is confirmed by the drift| for the next two months. The issue is illustrated by Ca-/of both American- and Russian-| nadian landscapes with verse! occupied ice islands in. this! |commentaries by Gilles Hen-jarea. | jault, Robert Choquette and Gat-| Some of the ice on this merry- jien Lapointe, all of Montreal.|go-round moves out of orbit and Reviewed In -- French Journal PARIS (CP)--La Voix des Poetes, a Paris review, devotes 20 pages of its current issue to Canadian poetry, Typical works are published of seven French-language poets, including Pierre Dupuy, Cana dian ambassador in Paris, and Pierre Trottier, a member of the external affairs department. | The others are Alain Grandbois, | Jean-Guy Pilon, Jacques God- Anne Hebert and Rina PREMIUM QUALITY OIL SERVICE STATION HWY. NO, 2 (Between Oshawa and Whitby) Courtesy e Service OPEN DAILY INCLUDING SUNDAY 7 A.M, -- MIDNIGHT Six English - language poets are represented. They are Ray-! 4 WARNING- Colds, Coughs, Sore Throats gargle with Listerine Antiseptic. throat instantly --by millions. Listerine full strength twice a day. Strike at throat infections before germs get a foothold. At first sign of a cold or sore throat, Listerine kA///s' germs in the mouth and Protect yourself--your family--gargle