3 : 4 |was provided but a narrow !og| Grant of the parade. At left is | Major W. Clarke, commdnding of the student militia. In the lower picture Col. »McGinnis congratulates Trooper John Fields who was declared the all-round trooper of the 1962 Student Militia. --Oshawa Times Photos A LARGE GATHERING of families and friends of the Ontario Regiment Student- Militia were present at the | annual passing out parade | held at the Ontario Regiment | Student Militia Holds Passing Out Parade | five-week training course for 45 secondary school students from Oshawa, Whitby and the Bowmanville area, In the up- per photo Col. J. A. Mc- Ginnis, inspecting officer, is seen talking to Trooper J. Gaatch, during the inspection Fortytive secondary school|"You have a task to perform; Trooper Bill Kennedy, of Osh- students from Oshawa, Whitby|in the Toronto area," said he. awa, was presented with . an and Bowmanville have com-|He also urged the boys to stay award as the outstanding troop- pleted a five-week militia train-| with the regiment. er in Group One, Outstanding ing course and are now trained| Later he told a Times re-jtrooper in Group Two, was militiamen with the Ontario|porter he thought it was remark-|Arthur Matthews, of Whitby. Regiment of Oshawa. jable what the --oe as hg sme Ah es Eom |duced in five weeks. '"'The|the all-roun rooper 0 e coh saree' reisunes (MOOS: on this course, with the|Student Militia 1962, friends and ex-army members| *ception of two, are products} The course under the leader- crowded inte the Oshawa arm-|0f the student militia.course of|ship of Maj. Clarke and sec- ories Thursday evening to see|'WO years ago," he said. "Sixjond in command Capt. Reg. the student militia of the On-|men who at one time took the Gutsole began July 3 and will tario Regiment participate in {course were commissioned as/officially end tomorrow . when passing out. parade. officers this year." the boys return -their training Among the passing out cere-| '1'm sure this great nigh t)kits. : monies were: a troop parade,|Makes an old soldier's" heart 100 APPLIED : mounting of the guard, dres s|SWell with pride," said Maj. W.| Applications started coming parade, inspection and general] Clarke, who for the past five in for the course as early as pia she jweeks has been in commmand.|February. All told over 100 ap- Inspecting officers were Col,| Militia training is the finest plications were received but F pe McGinnis Maj. W. C.|in the world and the future ofjonly 45 were chosen. Require- Paynter, and Lt. N. M. Hall,|oUr country will be in your;ments demanded boys to be ADC of the Ontario Regiment|bands," he told the boys.|between' the ages of 16 and 19 of Oshawa "Every time I see a batch of|and physically fit. : : these young men, I feel quite) The student militia is an CITE PRIMARY ROLE proud," he added. "'larmy endeavor, originating. in Col. McGinnis addressed the| Maj. W. C. Paynter told the|Ottawa and has been in effect boys, pointing out their pri-|boys they were doing an excel-|for the past six years. It con- mary role is not only to. aid injlent job for their country. '"'I/sists of two basic elements of national survival but to be| am very proud to have you in training--general military train- future leaders of this country.lour ranks," he said. jing and national survival. Abandoned Child Father Fined $50 TORONTO (CP) -- George Unmarked Cars On Road Patrol Marked and unmarked OPP; Last year seven people were cruisers in Peterborough dis-|killed and 28 injured on roads trict will be reversing roles this | patrolled by the OPP during the weekend. August long weekend, | | officer | .|othy Morrison, also of Oshawa. Bhe Oshawa Times SECOND SECTION FRIDAY, AUGUST 3, 1962 PAGE NINE Open House Held At Day Camp Site More than 200 parents andjging and descend the fastesi. friends of 88 "'pirates" last night)Mr. Southwell later pointed out|/French, Jim Holland, James toured the Oshawa Recreation|that the campers had construct-|O'Malley, Mark Adams, Doug Centre day camp _ grounds,/ed the rope ladder themselves. Maorrison, -- Gordon An- Taunton road west, and only one! The pirates were then tolajdress, David Zygocki, Dick father fell into the creek! |that somewhere on the grounds|Howson, Eddie Luke, Kevin The pirates were boys ranging|a treasure chest of gold-covered| Kirkbride, Garth Johns, Brian in age from six to 12 years.|chocolate coins was hidden, The|McNeeley, Paul Bryant, Ber- They were . demonstrating the|crews dashed into the woods and|nard Hurst, Doug Smith, Maur- games and skills acquired at the|returned with the spoils within ajlee St. Pierre, Peter Hamley. camp this week under the di-|few minutes. The ship 'shook! rection of Grant Southwell. _|with laughter as Mr. Southwell] BUCCANEERS Before the visitors arrived for|said: "'you weren't supposed lo) p the annual open house, the/find them already. It was sup- 3 campers consumed a cauldror| posed to take 20 minutes!" of 'treasure chest" stew in true} a pirate style. Ingredients of the| REFRESHMENTS SERVED | ancient recipe included: skulls|, Activities slowed down for re- (potatoes); emeralds (peas); freshments. Fifteen gallons of gold nuggets (corn); sea moss| Tange drink and 20 dozen (ground beef); and, of course,/donuts were served by the pi- Tony Sloggett, Mike O'Malley, blood (that's ketchup). nares to thelr parents, Eddie Adams, Dick Nicholson Wendell Brewster, director of] David Banehum: frank Clesiel "BOTTLE OF BLOOD" recreation, and Robert Miaki Bian Sinith, Ken fHarris. The deck (camp: areas was| mond, recreation committee|cpeEWw FROM PORT ROYAN swabbed and everyone was|/member, | extepded their greet-| p ul Sloggett, Captain; Ross ready for parents' night to be-|ings to the parents and thanked a Pest' Mat e gin. Almost everyone that is, be-|/them for showing interest in the cause there were the usual last|activities of their sons. Frank| minute arrangements to be) Davis. speaking for the parents,| made, For instance, the bottle|congratulated Mr. Southwell and low, Danny Stinson, Wayne Am- of blood had to be filled andjhis staff, Adele Planeta, Carol] prose, Robin Smith, Mike Shaw, placed by the log book,' ready/Ann Wood, Bill Flegg.and John|Rodney Brady, Peter Sietl. for signatures of guests. Flegg, on the most successful! Richard Moffatt, Robert Dul- bh avis, Ist Mate; Peter Bryant, nd Mate, CREW -- Robert Kirkbride, Eric Stone, Michael Parker, Ricky Wigmore, Bill' LeBlanc, Lanny Stone, John Popko, Peter VanDerdum, Rodney - Mantle, W. Riley, Douglas MacDonald, siluk, 2nd Mate. As the parents of each pirate|day camp and open house yet, becco, Jim Dyl, John Moore, arrived they were quickly iden-| Quiet fell over the camp as| Harvey Barber, Ken Greer, Jim tified and taken on private con-|award winners were named.|McHugh, Mike Fairhart. |ducted tours of the grounds. Be-| Following is a list of the win-;, ------------------------ |fore the parents could see the ning crews and _ individual 2 ports (huts) constructed by their) Mates. C S t F jsons, they had to somehow] Chief Camper Award -- Greg- ar ea Ire cross the creek. A sandbag dam/ory gy sae Ao Presented by . outhwell; Chief Crew| kl 0 ll d jacross the creek proved irresist-|Bars and Sports Bars -- crew Quic y ue e able to several old buccaneers/IU, presented by John Flegg;| The Oshawa Fire Depart- until -- SPLASH! Craft Bars -- Crew II, Present+| ment answered an alarm. at A means of crossing the creek|ed by Adele Planeta; Hunter] 10.31 p.m., Thursday when a jthat stayed popular was ihe|/Bars -- Crew I, presented by|bus fire at King and Simcoe rope and pulley system. Passen-|Bill Flegg; Camp Award Bars --|streets yas reported. The fire gers using this convenience in-|Crew IV, presented by Carol] was doused with the fire ex- cluded a father holding his little| Ann Wood. ltinguisher from the bus. | daughter. Pd anes are as follows:| A car seat fire was also ex- " -- aul McVety, Captain; Ver-!+; ie sday: SKILLS DISPLAYED non Walters, ist Mate; Rich-|war'patked ins iot at i7d Following the tour of the ard Hamley, 2nd Mate. Stavansoh's road: north |Srounds, several of the pirates) Crew -- Conni Seitl, Frank) There was one ambulance jdemonstrated their archery| Maitland, Ralph Maitland, John call in the period from 8 a.m |Skills by deflating colorful bal-|Code, Bryan Roberts, Cecil Lea-|. da tod a.m. today oe jloon targets placed on the oppo-|vens, Roger St. Pierre, Jim ee ee site bank of a creek. Activ-/Snow, Stephen Willbank, Rich- ities moved from beside the| ard Brown, Richard Corbett, | Two Months For Theft of Pen ereek into the creek for the! John Jenkins, Lonny Dunn, William J .Hynes, 21, of King- Mike Gregory from the army, was appre- hended last week in the Hotei Genosha parking lot. At thai time he was rifling parked cars and had stolen a ball-point pen. Magistrate Ebbs said that what Hynes stole was not im- portant. "You would have pick- Highest score for two wins| jwent to Mr. and Mrs. Victor| Highfield, of Port Hope, closely} (followed by last year's winners,| Bob Gallagher and Mrs. Roy Mann, both of Oshawa. George Read and Mrs, Jack| |Biddulph of Oshawa had _ the! highest score for one win with 51 points. Teams from Lindsay, Peter-| borough, Whitby, Oshawa and) Bowmanville districts competed| shark relay. Christopher Hurst, Geoffrey) This was a colorful display Healey, Barry Peaver, Stephen| also. Teams lined up on the|Novak, John Catheline, Mar k| one pirate from each crew| charged into the water and|BLOODIES == ston, was sentenced to two to the other side of the creek!» 2 ish rg pr et months in the county jail by where balloons floated near the Rodhas ik rae ate; Magistrate F. S. Ebbs today. water's edge. Each pirate haa) 2odnaryk, 2nd Mate to break one balloon (kill one| . lay. | 2) Guideposts The highlight of the games and skills demonstration was li the rope-ladder relay. Two| C ippe y ars |crews competed to see who! , ~---------- |Bowmanville OPP detachment|ed up anything in those cars," reports that two motorists clip.|said the magistrate, jd |ped off a total of 21 highway} When asked why he was dis- Ss aWa alr | guideposts in two separate acci-|charged from the army after dents Thursday. Charges have|six months' service, Hynes o The first occurred on Highway|the discipline." In rop y 401 at the Ontario - Durham} 'That's obvious from your re- pra § line. Police say the|cord," said Magistrate Ebbs. : f driver was Roy James Duncan, | eS Onc (Staff) a of 59 Buckingham avenue, | An Oshawa couple came up with! Oshawa. There were 14 posts| W Sh : '4 Women shot lawn bowling tournament play-| Damage to the vehicle was esti.| ed here Wednesday. Mr. and/ mated at $900. In H K |Mrs. William Joyce, of 119 Osh-/ The second accident occurred| ong ong awa boulevard north, captured! on Enterprise Hill, near the} HONG' KONG (Reuters \the Carter Family Trophy with| junction of Highways 35 and 115.| : : |three wins and a total score of|Seven posts were knocked over ona boat believed carrying il- ; 5 legal immigrants from Commu- The runners-up, also with|Thomas Joseph McCabe of 470 niet chiha' killing two women three wins, but with a total/Gilmore street, Peterborough. | and wounding a child. score of 53, were Gerald Oat-|Damage to the car was esti-| A government spokes- {way and his partner, Mrs. Dor-| mated at $500. man said a police launch and } n |junk in colony waters off the CELEBRATING |Chinese coast and ordered it to stop for a search. BIRTHDAYS Instead, the junk tried to ram jthe police vessels three times, wishes to the following resi- the spokesman said. After dents of Oshawa and district |. : A < who are celebrating their Figg said, forcing the junk -- a On boarding it they found 77 wee wat |persons, including 32° women W8y BYgnUe: and 14 children, all believed to |be illegal immigrants seeking bank and on the whistle signal) McHugh. | Hynes, "recently ~ discharged shark) in the course of the re-| jcould climb the 10-foot rope rig-| BOWMANVILLE. (Staff) -- |been laid in both cases. said: 'I couldn't get along with top honors in a mixed doubles|knocked down at. this point. | Hong Kong police today fired 56 j|here, Police say the driver was |police speedboat spotted the Congratulations and best warnings, the police opened 293. Ridge- Phone 723-3474, CREW -- Gary Brabin, Gary} Leon Jenkins, Captain; Mike) / The area includes the counties Until now the marked (black and white cruisers .stood the traffic watch on long weekends while the unmarked (all-black) | vehicles handled general duties,| including crime. Starting tonight the all-blacks " will patrol the highways in search of traffic violators. while the marked cars will handle routine calls. An OPP spokesman confirm-/ ed than ah announcement made) in Toronto by Commissioner W. H. Clark that unmarked police} cars '"'probably'"' would be used on traffic detail this weekend. FINAL DECISION | The commissioner said the} final decision would rest with} district inspectors. Peterbor-} ough District Inspector Allan! Stringer has already made his decision, What is more, the about-face may be of a permanent nature./ Asked if the measure would) apply only this weekend, Staff} Sgt. Stan Palmateer replied: "No, they are starting this} weekend "A permanent changeover may depend on the success of the new measure. An OPP spokesman in To- ronto refuted suggestions that/ unmarked cruisers are unfair) to the motorist. 'This isn't a ALARMING INCREASE Michael McGuire of Oshawa!" 'he double draw event: * Said Insp. Taylor: "There has,Was fined $50 Thursday for) been an alarming increase in Sending an eight-year-old boy to) the number of accidents dur.|@ Movie while he took the boy's ing the first six months of this|Mother on a tour of bars. | year." Magistrate Joseph Addison} In Peterborough, S-Sgt. Pal. gave McGuire, 32, two weeks matecr said that, whereas the|to pay the fine with an alterna- unmarked cruisers were usedtive of 10 days in jail. MeGuire,| in the past to supplement the|32, pleaded guilty to the charge |marked vehicles on busy week.|0f abandoning the child. ends, the all-blacks now will be| Police said McGuire came to "concentrated on traffic". Toronto with the boy July 19 In common with other units|to pick up the boy's mother across the province, Peterbor-|from a hospital. After the three ough district OPP will have all|left the hospital, the boy was| available men and cars on duty | sent to a movie and the man| this weekend in an all-out bid) and woman visited variou$ bars. to reduce loss of life and in-| Police found the boy early jury. July 20 and put him in the care| ~|of the Children's Aid Society.| McGuire told the court that} Gets Three Months he had had a good deal to drink, | became confused and woke up| M4 in a parking lot. He said he} For Radio Theft was very fond of the boy and he| A 67-year-old Toronto man, 4d the 28-year-old woman had| who told Magistrate F. S$. Ebbs@ home in Oshawa. | in Oshawa co-rt Thursday that bait ] he was just a foolish kid when TRIO REMANDED he started his criminal activities An Oshawa trio charged with} 9 years ago, was sentenced 'to robbery with violence appeared three months in the county jail/ violence appeared in Oshawa for stealing a transistor radio in Oshawa Magistrate's court from an Oshawa store. today and were remanded to The magistrate. told Arnold Aug. 10. James Burgess, 216) that now he was.a foolish old) McNaughton street and Kenneth ee 'entry to Hong Kong. San 30 |MacDonald, 1st Mate; Ken Wa-| CREW -- Paul Roberts, Fred} Ogden, Ken Stinson, Dean Jol-! HENDERSON CONCRETE | Products, Limited, Thursday Victoria. Seen signing the company-union agreement be- became the first building con- | tween Henderson's and the In- struction trade firm in the | ternational Hod Carriers' area to have a union shop. | Building and Common Labor- | ers' Union of America, Local 597 are: front row, left. to right, Fred Beckstead, secre- | of Ontario, Durham, Northum- berland, Peterborough and tary - treasurer of Local 597 and Cameron Henderson, sec- retary of Henderson's. Back row, left to right are W. Cur- rie Henderson, director; J. H. Henderson, president and Murray Henderson, vice-presi- dent, --Oshawa Times Photo New Construction Pact Guarantees No Henderson Concrete Products|be in the neighborhood of 23- |Limited Thursday became Osh-| cents-an-hour, The package deal jawa's first construction trades|for wage increases of five and supplier firm to have a union/10 cents an hour (five cents shop. A one-year agreement be- pany-paid fringe benefits. tween the company and Interna-, In addition, the agreement tional Hod Carriers, Building| Calls for a_ five-cents-an-hour and Common Laborers' Union,|0nus paid for each hour work- Local 597 was signed at the\¢d om a shift. Henderson Company's indus-| The new agreement calls for \trial park plant here yesterday|a standard work week consist- afte n jing of five shifts of 10 hours } each, Monday to Friday. Va- PAY PACKAGE - The union-company pact calls two per cent of an employees' for a pay increase package to earnings to June 30 for a work- | extra for night shift) and com- vation pay conditions call for Strike er with up to one year of ser vice with the company. VACATION WITH PAY For workers with one to five year's service vacation pay will be 50 hour's pay at the employ- ees' rate at June 30, With more than five year's service the employee will be paid 100 hour's pay rate at his rate June 30 for his vacation pay. Every employee with estab- lished seniority will receive 10 hour's pay at the regular rate for Christmas Day, New Ye@r's Mennonites Urge Pacifist Beliefs | | KITCHENER (CP)--A Men- of the faith's international meet- nonite missionary has urgedjings held every five years, has delegates at the Mennonite/drawn an official registration of World Conference here to stress|more than 3,000. The Mennonite the faith's pacifist beliefs and|Church claims some 212,000 | Speak out against nuclear arms.|membens--some 53,000 in Can- Rev. Nelson Litwiller, sta-/@da--in 12 branches of the main \tioned in Montevideo, Uruguay, |faith. by the Mennonite Board of PLEADS FOR UNITY Missions of Elkhart, Ind., at- : cua Peer the "self-styled realists"| The multifold division of the church prompted a plea for -- s, legislators and nu- oe ee i unity from Prof. J. A. Ooster- | pln 4 clear scientists--who spend 60 , g per cent of the United States spa Pe the University of Am- Ssterdam, |budget on arms while admitting) Wa tho must ebpiah the sal Linn te ade: fence ll ne ome he ae faith between us," He suggested that if one side|"© S$. nig various egies renounced "the economically is on among other Chris- disastrous and ethically con-| "4 delegate from Frankfurt the ther Se mee getty Germany, sai that 4,0 Ae bit ' nonites in Russia are deprived same, of religious freedom and cannot worship publicly. Some worship jwith Baptist congregations and The Christian church has\others at home. failed in its responsibility, | Rev. Peter J. Dyck, a mem- said, in not combatting a situa-/ber of Frankfurt's Mennonite tion where nations are "prepar-|Council, said about 24,000 Men- ing to obliterate 50,000,000|\nonites managed to flee Russia people in retaliation for 50,000,-'before 1930, but many others of 00."" {13,000 applying for passports Mr. Litwiller spoke to an over.|that year were sent to labor \flow crowd swelled-by most of)camps: |FAILS RESPONSIBILITY Day, Dominion Day and Labor Day, provided he is at work on his scheduled shift on the work days before and after the paid holidays. £ As a condition of employ- ment, every employee covered by the union-company agree- ment must be a member of the union. Newly-hired employees will have 15 days in which to become a union member, the agreement states. GUARANTEE NO STRIKE During the time the. contract is in effect, the union has agreed there will be no strike, concert- ed work stoppage, slowdown or other such activity by the union or any of its membership. Union officials have also agreed that no strike or any oth- er work stoppage will be called while contract negotiations, for renewal or amendment are un- derway. The company has agreed to 'no lock-outs" during the term of the contract while negotia- tions are underway. In addition the union- company agreement calls for the establishment of an em- ployees' grievance procedure. Fred Beckstead, Local 597 business agent and Thomas Hudson signed for the union and Cameron and J. H. Hen- derson signed for the company. Both parties agreed that "a harmonious atmosphere was maintained throughout negotia- tions." ithe 7,000 Mennonites that have|~---------- converged from Europe and North America on this city of| 74,000, 75 miles west of Toronto. | Sea The conference, the seventh Scout Group - To Visit Bermuda Seventeen boys, members of the 8th Oshawa Sea Scouts, Starboard Section, will fly to Bermuda this Sunday for a two-week visit on the sub-tropi- cal island. They will live in a tent badd at a place called Spanish Point. Thursday night, the boys and their parents gathered at the Hillcroft Street Scout Hall to hear E, §. Alker, District Scout Commissioner, remind the young tars they will be repre- senting not only the 8th. Osh- awa, but the city, and Canada, as weil. He asked them to be good ambassadors and to keep heal- thy. THREE CHAPERONES Chaperones on the trip will be Derek Hewitt, Sea Scout skipper, and William 'Redpath and Dave St. Andrews, both assistant skippers. Last night the boys were fur- age of badges they may trade down there. ~ Money for the trip was. rais- ed by the boys themselves in a variety of ways, including a white elephant sale, collecting pop bottles and personal .sav- ings..Two of the boys are Osh- awa Times carriers. Hans Haagmans helped arrange the trip. The boys will present the carved totem pole and the framed, written legend explain- ing the carving (both seen in picture) to their host Bermuda scouts. In the picture at left: back row, from left, are Michael Noonan, Jeff Lott, Graham Monroe, Gerry Ross and Ian McGibbon. Third row, from left --Brian Houghton, Robert Lock, James Schultz and Graham Hewitt. Second row, from left-- David Spicer, Eric Cay, Peter McGibbon and Greg Brook. Front row, from left Ed Alker, District Commissioner; Derek Hewitt, skipper; Don Ross, Gerry Noonan, Brian nished with identifying sweat-|Salmers; William Redpath and ers to wear while on the island.|Dave St. Andrews, both assist: They were warned they are not|ant skippers, Absent when the allowed 'to trade certain scout|picture was taken was Donaid badges but were given a pack-' Anderson. cat and mouse game we're playing. We're dealing with peo- ple's lives," snapped Staff Insp R: L. Taylor. man. Before passing sentence, Gainer, RR 4, Oshawa, were the magistrate glanced over placed on $2,000 bail, Donald two sheets of previous convic-|Cornish, 83 Ritson road south itions dating back to 1913. 'was remanded without bail. 8TH OSHA b | WA SEA SCOUT (STARBOARD) TROOP