The Fernwood Trio are pic- tured above. Left to right they are Ted Parrott, David Mac Millan and Bob Cunningham and they will be Feature Per formers at the Hootenanny Asks Higher Training TORONTO -- A call for high er training standards for ele-< mentary teachers, was voic Thursday by E. C. Lo president of the Ontario " ers' Federation. Mr. Longmuir addressed th annual meeting of the OTF today. "Ontario is lagging behind other provinces in the improve- ment elementary teacher train- fxg." Mr. Longmuir said "There is growing belief in the idea that university training is a@s necessary for -eleme teachers as for secondary teachers." (At present, elementary Ts require a mim m of ene year's teacher training to begin their careers. Secondary teachers require a BA degree and one summer séssion at Teachers' College. Addit qualifications and experier are needed for alvancement.) es Mr, Longmuir called for minimum of three years of aca demic - university training { elementary teachers, and hope the annual meeting of the OTT would request the minister o education to establish a com mittee to investigate means of amproving the training of ele mentary teachers. He said the first requirement for education is a well -t teacher, trained b ically and professi The president @s. part of its raising educa the OTF earma curriculum past year. Earlier in the day voted to sponsor a con m 1964 on automated tea studies along with i Chick Plan m a ind would in ¥ h ries: of carefully- d d st S and ques tions are ged to form a iearning sequence, The student works at his own rate, indepe: dently of t teacher, answer- ng questions and checking his ary|* has been u sales n man had broken TRAIN ROBBERY With coats tossed over them concealing them Roger John Cow liam Boa! are br bury, Buckinghamshir compleiely y and Wil- +) Was Grid Game Aids Drive In the cold at Alexandra Park : last night the Chairman of the Oshawa.Civic Auditorium Build- * ing Fund, Terence V. Kelly col- \ lected $240. The amount came ' from the collection and two spe- cial donations from fans not on the payroll deduction plan at any of the local plants, In thanking the participating teams, MacLean's Esso and Oshawa Tony's (the game was won by Tony's 5-3) Mr, Kelly said that the enthusiasm of sports fans in the city was) greater than he had ever an- ticipated. Frank Foley and Ev Edwards, managers of the teams, came in for special plaudits for bringing the teams together for the game. | Chairman Bill Kurelo of the Target Day Committee met yes- terday with Chief of Police Her- bert Flintoff as he completed arrangements for the many events culminating it is hoped with the donations from industry which will put the project over SECOND SECTION the top, "Extra duty," said the Chief and he ad-) vised citizens "'where possible to) park downtown and walk to the) four events, the Hootenanny at the Kinsmen Community Centre, the softball game at the Kins- men Civic Stadium between the NHL Allstars and Oshawa Tony's, the dance at the Chil-| dren's Arena and the concert at the McLaughlin Bandshel) featuring the band of the On- tario Regiment," MEET TONIGHT | Two other events are sched- uled before Wednesday. Tonight) the Oshawa Hawk-eyes meet) the Kitchener Waterloo Tigers at the Kinsmen Stadium and Sunday afternoon the first) professional soccer team to visit) Oshawa in thirty-three years,| Toronto City, will play the Osh-) awya All-Stars commencing at three p.m. 300 On Tour At Parkwood About 300 members and) friends of Oshawa Chamber of} Commerce visited the beautiful gardens of Parkwood, the home of Col, R,.'S, McLaughlin on Simcoe street north, Thursday' evening. Among those who welcomed) the visitors were Douglas Blore, superintendent of the grounds,! Mc-} lanthra, and Jack English, Col, Laughlin's secretary, Members) of the grounds staff conducted) the party round the various gar- dens The Fern-| The first call was at the sun- graduates of jdial gardens, where there was and have |a magnificent show of various rofessipnally |beds of cannas and blue and to Oshawa [red salvia, lined with alyssum rium Fund jand cherry tart petunias, After v. ng the sunken gar- $1,000,000 mark wood Trio are O'Neill Collegi toured Canada ind are ret p the Au Man Held _|!9 Bullet Holes In Woman's Body KITCHENER (CP). -- Nine- teen bullet holes were found in the body of Mrs. Margaret : man' Mary Hudson, 42, shot to death of the cold on a downtown street July: 23, a Riggs & preliminary hearing was told club at aP- Thursday, today, police) Pathologist Dr. W. J, Arm- strong said a bullet through the mmoned by alheart and lungs caused the rd glass break-\woman's death ing in the vicinity of the Club} George Hudson, 48, the dead Bayview, 1200 Byron street)woman's husband, is charged south, Whitby jwith capital murder, When police arrived, they dis-, Louis Reitzel, 28, of Water- covered a broken window in/down said he saw a man and a he clubhouse and heard some-|Woman Standing together near hing moving inside. 7 hotel seconds before the ma ndiately calle) for) Shooting. They immediately calle! for "I heard what sounded like assistance from the Wihitbylsrackers then saw lie partr t an t On- nf " rile ce Department and the On-\ oman falling," he said. He rio Provincia] Police : ; : said he chased the man down iW hen the officers en ered the the street about 30 feet, caught sae vo pee Poors hiding /him and took him back to the ynde able nve scene. Constables Ken The hearing continues si torssiet"=) Campaign To Conclude because he get ing of $1,000,000 for a new Ci Aulitorium on Wednesday, 21. We have already, $760,000 The followig een scheduled 1, A tabloid track meet for children of. Oshawa by the Oshawa Recreation Asso- ciation |. 2. A Tel-a-Pledge -- an oppor- ~jtunity for the people of Oshawa ,'to "phone pledges to CKLB- to Mt he allowed help us reach the objective to force teact nto unwise 3. Oshawa's first Hootenanny, or hasty decisions." featuring Oshawa's own Fern- : "-- ----. }wood Trio and the Chanteclers reatured on U.S, television, with Elaine Stewart. 4.: Teen Dance at the Chil- On Charge WHITBY (Staff) -- A trying to discovered h na Whitby cold and wanted to Marsh, 49, of s being held ~harged with Arthur Ontario tudents develop warns not events have the sponse dren's Arena, featuring the Lin- colnaires. 5. Band Concert at Mclaugh- .lin Band Shell, featuring the On- tario Regimental Band. 6. Free Car Wash at Auto Magic Car Wash on Bond street West, where a donation to the Auditorium Fund will entitle the donor to admission to a softball game; with Oshawa's Tony's (featuring Chicago Black Hawks' Bobby Hull as starting pitcher) playing the NHL All- stars, featuring Nevin, Harris, Murphy, Horton, Mahovlich, etc. |, cheques, fi 7, Presentation of which it is anticipated wil] put the campaign over the top These will be mainly from in- dustry §. Interviews celebrities and | throughout the evening 9. Golf for celebrities at the jOshawa Golf Club from 12.00 noon to 6.00 p.m 10. Press reception at 4.30 p.m at the Oshawa Golf Club civic FORMER PITCHER KILLED " FORT LAUDERDALE, Fia {(AP)--A car struck and killed former major league pitcher Kar] Drews. #4, Thurs day as he tried to flag down a passing motorist Police charged the driver, Earl Rich Louis Bro wns. Philadelp {Phillies and Cincinnati Reds. j the! baseball as den and the rock garden, the formal garden attracted atten- tion, There was a wonderful dis- play of floodlit fountains and pools with beds of cannas, be- gonias and achyranthus and an- nual borders. At the kitchen garden a wide variety of vegatables was to be seen, while in the Italian gar- den there were beds of altern-| the ter-) The beds on race at the side of the house were of standard geraniums. In the tea house alongside the} people! formal gardens many were interested to see how the fountains and the lights. play- ing on them were operated. Delegates from the Anglican Congress in Toronto are to visit Parkwood on Sunday afternoon, Improves For Parts OTTAWA (Special) -- The United States" market for Ca- nadian-made automotive parts is more promising now than even before, Ian V. MacDonald Canadian consul and trade com missioner in Detroit, says this week, Mr. MacDonald says that sev- eral factors have contributed to a situation where some ag gressive salesmanship on the rt of Canadian parts manu could lead to sub- increased exports » include the fact that auto production in the United States is at record heights, the U.S. tariff is being -progressively lowered, the Canadian dollar offers an attractive discount, Canadian wage rates and raw naterial are lower in many instances, and there are customs incentives for U.S au- tomakers to buy in Canada The U.S. auto makers and those manufacturing utility ve- facturers costs hicles and trucks are taking a positive interest in Canada as a upply. They have adian industry fully accusomed to U.S through their service uto firms in Can- th sive fast delivery)" anding modern planis rable locations which n some ¢ 1S. supy The emergence of the pact car created early com- pessi- ' ses surpass those of)" OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, AUGUST 16, 1963 PAGE NINE police will be on) © World The Rt, Rev. Assistant Bishop of Lahore Pakistan, is to be a pane Trans-Canada PANEL SPEAKER Chandu Ray, Cyclist Here On his West day. He left way from Vancouver to Halifax byjese students were well bicycle, John Woolliams, across 22, ofjed about Vancouver June Ihe did North He decided to Anglican Guests Visit City speaker today at the Anglican Church Congress in Toronto, --(CP Wirephoto) List Speakers For Sunday Delegates from the Anglican} The Congress opened on Tues. Congress in Toronto who are/day, August 13, and will con MB ~~ a din |tinue until Friday, August 23, trict on Congress Sunday, Aug-/The meetings are being held F ust: 18, will be the guests of/daily in the Royal York Hotel. Col, R. S, McLaughlin. that day/ Among the special events still at his home, Parkwood, on Sim-'tg be held are a festival of coe street north. church music, to take place in Next Sunday's speakers, andst, Paul's Church, Bloor street the churches in which they will east, Toronto, tonight and next preach, are: Monday. This will be present- St, George's Church, Oshawa,|ed by a choir of 80 voices under Right Rev, Henry W. Bains,'the direction of George Mays ; MA, Bishop of Wellington, New bee, of St. George's Cathedral, meneet Christ_ Memorial,| Kingston, Ont, Oshawa, Right Rev, E, ' ; ' Henderson, DD, Bishop of Bath At a missionary rally in and Wells, England; Holy Trin- Maple Leat Gardens Sunday ity, Oshawa Right Rev Perci-|CVenins the speakers will be vl W Gibson, BA BD Bis. the Right Rev. K. D. W, Anand, hop of Jamaica: St.' Matthew's BA, Bishop of Amritsar, India; Oshawa, Rev, R, J. A, Lindsay, the Right Rev. ag Koh, MA, Burundi,. Africa; St, DD, Bishop of as ge Marks, Oshawa, Professor Sara- Malaya, and the Right Rey, J. C, Vockler, OGS, Th.D,, kai, Japan; St. John's, Port)),; ; : ' |Bishop of Polynesia, A choir of Whitby, Rev. Bernard Rasa- 750 voices will take part. fimanantsoa, Madagascar; ; Recten's, Pickicting Ria Rex'! The Choir of the Royal School Dillard M. Brown, Jr, Bishop of Church Music, of Addington Coadjutor, Liberia, West Africa, Palace, Croydon, England, "The Church's Mission to) under the direction of Gerald the World" has been chosen as| Knight, has sung at matins and the main theme of the Anglican|evensong in St, James' Cathe Congress. About 1,000 delegates dra! and this will continue from have come to Canada from all| Monday to Friday of next week, over the world to consider the} A special exhibition, "Chris- church's future -on the religious, |tianity and the Arts," is being political and cultural frontiers,)shown at the Royal Ontario the challenges they present and|/Museum and the Toronto Art the organization required toGallery is 'showing a major meet them. lexhibition of religious art. Market Reflects Canada)Orient he found that the Japan-/a reliable barometer of political inform.|opinion in the United Kingdom, | America and|Not only does it Summerland, B.C., made he got the impression that they/state of the country's economy, a short stop in Oshawa Wednes-/knew more about Canada than/but with the present alignment ake the of political and hopes to reach the end of trip to set matters ri his journey in September. Mr. Woolliams, an agricultur.|at the same time as Mr, Wool-/ assessment om the University|liams and Mr, White were visit- world of : museum, /Chances of winning the next was election. al graduate f of B Oshawa stop fellow studen Edward Wh student assistant at King Street Jnited Church. Mr. White and/liams, Industrial Commissioner|@ period of some uncertainty he also took the opportunity offer the City of Oshawa; Mau-/has sh Columbia, By an made the)! the to visit a former) t at the university ite, who is making a tour of the new Cana-jrice Hart, ch dian Simcoe stree Ss Was accompanied on i les 16, anc Wooll gb t he only a race and visiting other mism about the parts business,', Mr.MacDonald says, but it hasiag. jinn actually epened up new possi bilities. The increase in the number of auto models has re- sulted in more short produc- tion runs and parts for these can be handled more econom- lly by outside suppliers. Some of the trend in. demand for parts includes air condi- tioning, small automatic trans- mission and the economy stick which resembles manual trans- mission without the clutch, Oth- ers in the development process are anti-smog devices, the tur- ne, fuel injection and ignition Canada-US, de- duction sharing pro- nany such imports enter the U.S. duty free and thus U.S. ce sub-contracts offer good rtunities for Canadian should be vigorously ursued, the Detroit trade com- missioner urges. the Pharmacist Need Seen In Ontario TORONTO (CP) -- Ontario coes not graduate enough phar- 1 it one to be on at all times in a hospital, Ontario College of Phar- id Thursday. was commenting © on the recom- oner's jury in at a pharmacist be n duty at General Hospital recommendation followed tesumony that a nurse made a nistake @ prescription for 'a wO-¥ ola boy and- that the Vv 2ently 1, althoug causes and not as result of the nurse's action fax Asked how the journey ley man said an exchange all times in Hamilton * take and enjoy t Automotive Museum on t south dustrial Con CNR officials n W. I, Doney railway to Oshawa by Bil al agent i David Jacques, 17 ams has an ke with 10 ges uses five of them 1g the trip into the way has been r friends. He in- nd a little time in going on tov crashes, mission, from the soon. after With he came to make the Okanogan Val- i he had been on visit to Japan as a automotive r Lyman jalso taking a party around the w Motor City's showplace, This consisted of James Wil- company's ment, A. H. Ormrod, the valves bodies death used to replace diseased aortic exchange recovery, however, isiple killed each year in boating unusual coincidence, mext year, it also reflects the Gifford iF. J representa- dicates that these uncertainties USE HEART BANK OXFORD, ENGLAND (AP)--A team of Oxford doctors is bu ing up a bank of human heart/inat there is now strong back- ives from victims of aut0ling for an improvement in the relatives' PeI-'country's economic position. | are taken of victims POLITICAL REVERSAL They student. While he was in the'valves in older persons. are prospects ame not as bad as they were some weeks ago. Al- lied with that is a feeling that, even if there is still a fear that Labor might win the election, there is less worry about what the Socialists might do Ag they |came into power, There is more reflect the confidence that the extremists in the party will not be able to carry out their schemes. An important factor in creat. ing greater optimism in the business business world is the steady improvement of the position of the Conservatives in the public opinion ge ge of these polls show that t government is Because of these factors, the * gga sudden upsurge of prices on the steadily winning back much of the ground which it lost in the Stock Exchange, coming after | previous few months. The By M, McINTYRE HOOD Special to The Oshawa Times LONDON -- The London Stock Exchange is regarded as parties, and the certainty of a general election of the the government's great significance. rman of the In-)mood of uncertainty was due to/ Restrictions Urged sion, and three/doubts as to the permanence of} rom Toronto -- the economic upsurge, as to the) manager of the/future of the government and) industrial /its chances of election success. | in- Within the last week or two,! On Water Skiing BARRIE (CP)--Police Chief -/however, the stock market ong gene en ee s \, s s 3 - 'have faded out of the picture. oe See Rig toh wpa The stock market has showed|,), Oatario lakes a substantial rally, and new is- s sues have made a spectacular -- pol Sts appearance on the market-Jo7. "he -same age limit as for ~\This indicates a strong feeling ane aoe icenéan 16 should apply, he said, He said skiers are a "severe jthreat" to swimmers and jthought it an "absolute miracle The main factor in the stock/there are not hundreds of peo- 'a feeling that the government's accidents." BREAKFAST FOR BISHOPS York Hotel before day's events Stephen Bayne, officer of the Angli- ine s Rt. Rev nutes to relax i execulive heir breakfast in Land and primate of Canada, and Rev. F. A. Cross, aide to the primate. --(CP Wirephoto) can communion in Europe, talking to Mrs. Bayne. Also at the counter are Most Rev. H. H. Clark, bishop of Rupert's 3 'She Oshawa Times --