Although the temperature and humidity were oppressive in the Oshawa area during NOT TOO HOT TO SHOW OFF the opportunity. for athletic types to demonstrate~ their ability. Seen here is James Campbell, 18, of 245 Annis street, lifting 170 pounds. Bev- OA ho Se SUERTE picnic spot before his parents Seton ensages * i Scarboro Drowns In Rouge A nine-year-old boy was drowned on a picnic outing with his parents at Rouge Hill Sun- day evening. This was the only tragedy to blacken a near perfect weekend in the Oshawa area. The boy was Gary Gunn, who lived with his parents at 266 Centennial road, Scarborough. He drowned in the Rouge river, near a bridge at Graham Park. Gary "was playing near the missed him. A full scale search was made for him before the body was found in the river. TEMPERATURES SOAR Temperatures soared into the nineties over the weekend bring- ing thousands of people on to the lakeshore, into parks, the countryside and the roads. Everyone seemed to want to tS Apergerg Boy get away from the city for a suntan -- or sunburn. But despite the miles and miles of cars heading for cot- coe Gish y hate pn gan yamtin egy > aeanalt hechiat dead oe The Oshawa Sines SECOND SECTION Ie absopomsan nies mec Nee eee OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, JULY 20, 1964 PAGE NINE tages in the north, Ontario Pro- yincial Police reported only 11 small accidents in the area with only one injury which was of a minor nature. PARK CROWDED Lakeview Park was crowded with picnic parties, sunbathers and dozens of young fellows who wanted to throw a baseball about despite the scorching heat Swimming pools and river swimming holes were so full ft was almost impossible to swim and many people braved Lake Ontario which was still very cold. Oshawa Fire Fighters had a quiet time with no grass fires -- an unusual situation in the hot weather. erley Daniels, 18, of 166 Athol street east, seems amused by the display. --Oshawa Times Photo the weekend, they provided Toronto Is Cheapest Used Car Market TORONTO (CP)--The farther you are from Toronto when buying a used car the more you are likely to pay, accord- ing to a dealer's rule of thumb. Toronto is the centre of the country's most _ inexpensive used-car market and upward variations in price outside the city range as high as 17 per cent more in British Columbia. Elsewhere, the price varies in direct proportion to the dis- tance from Toronto except in New Brunswick and Nova Sco- tia where the prices, at five per cent higher than in Toronto, compare with those in southern Ontario. Quebec, Northern On- tario and Prince Edward Island prices are about seven per cent higher than Toronto's. Prices are 15 per cent higher in the Yukon, 13 per cent more in Alberta; 12 per cent in the Northwest Territories, 10 per cent in Saskatchewan, nine per cent in Newfoundland and eight per cent more in Manitoba, the guide indicates. lished six times a year by the Federation of Automobile Dealer Associations of Canada listing average prices of used cars im the Toronto area and estimating the percentage dif- ferential in other parts of Can- ada. The federation points out that its prices are averages and include estimates only from used-car dealers who are also franchised new-car dealers. While prices -are generally governed by distance from Tor- onto, they tend to fall below the provincial average in a metro- politan area, sharper big-city competition accounting for the difference. . And sometimes cheaper long- distance rail delivery of new cars may bring the price of used cars down in a region farther from Toronto than one where new autos are delivered by the more expensive truck route, Albert Bear, past president of the federation, says it's difficult to tell when it becomes econom- to buy a used car. But many) people do it, often combining it| with a vacation or business| trip, he says. The federation groups dealer associations across Canada. The 4,900 franchised dealers sell more used cars than new ones, says A. E. Cress, the federa- tion's executive vice-president. The prices and percentages in the booklet are calculated exclusive of local taxes and ex- tra equipment on standard models. : Figures in the boaklet would mean, for instance, that a 1962 Chevrolet Bel Air with four doors and six cylinders selling for an average of $2,085 in Tor- onto would be about $2,450 in British Columbia, $2,275 in New- foundland and $2,225 in Quebec. Similarly, the 1962 model of the four-door, six-cylinder Ram- bler American, selling for an average of $1,275 in Toronto, would cost about $1,350 in Prince Edward Island, $1,375 in Manitoba and $1,400 in Saskat- The guide is a booklet pub-'ical to make a trip to Toronto'chewan. Birthdays Big Events In India BOMBAY (CP)--As a rule, Indians think that birthdays should be celebrated only in the case of children. The general philosophy is that the older a person be- comes, the less need there is to reming him of the fact. But there is one important exception to this tradiiton. A politician's birthday is a great occasion in India, especially if he is a minister either in the federal capital or in any of the 15 states. In all, htere are some 250 ministers in India. So, there is perhaps not a week when some part of the country does not see an: organized out- burst of sentimentality over the fact that a particular min ister has become a yeal older. . The ruling Congress party has issued many directives to its followers that ministerial birthday celebrations should be avoided in the interest of national austerity. But if any- thing they are becoming live- lier and livelier. The smaller the state, the bigger are the birthday cele- brations, RAISE FUNDS f The usual practice is to form a birthday celebration committee to raise public funds for the garlands and the processions. The more discerning among he. ministers have disp d with processions and are con- stent to receive a steady Stream of followers, each of whom winds a rose garland round his neck. One provin- cial minister is said to have received 900 garlands on his 67th birthday. Often, a birthday souvenir volume extolling the minis- ter's services to the state, to the nation and to the cause of humanity is brought out for the occasion. The ministerial birthday is a shrewd occasion for gatg- ing political strength. Poor attendance at a birthday cele- bration almost certainly means the politician is losing ground, At Trenton Base TRENTON The Royal Canadian Air Force Station Trenton Flying Club will hold an open house for interested visitors on Sunday, July 26th club officials made known to- day. The Club, which is affliated with the Royal Canadian Fly- ing Clubs Association, began operation at RCAF Station Trenton in 1956. Initially equipped with three Aeronea single engine aircraft the club has now graduated to two first line aircraft one a 90 horsepower Champion Tri- Traveller and the second a Champion 85 horsepower 7DC. Both aircraft are fitted with two way radio which is a club necessity as the Trenton Fly- ing Club operates out of a military aerdrome. The club aircraft are both decked out in the club livery of red, white and blue. The 7DC CF-FMR was ori- ginally fitted with floats but last fail the floats were damaged in a landing away from base so} that the club at the present time lacks a water capability. The floats are now being re- paired and with any luck at all on wheels with skis available for the tail-wheel fitted FMR. NIGHT. FLYING The club is authorized for night flying; instrument flying F. Cowle, 1159.29. and can train up to and includ-| ing commercial rating. The RCAF Trenton Flying Club is a non profit organiza- tion and can provide flying facilities after hours and on weekends to service men, their dependents, department of de- fence employees and selected civilians of the local area. members will be on hand to explain and demon- strate the club equipment and there will be three draws made for free flights over Trenton) and Belleville. STARTS AT 2 P.M. The Club open house will be- gin at 2p.m. and conclude at 6 p.m. It is emphasized that this is not air force day at Station|Struck by a car near the inter- Station|section of King street east and) be| Victoria street. Trenton. The RCAF Trenton Flying Club will open to visitors who are in- Johns-Manville Sales Are Up NEW YORK Sales of Johns-Manville Corporation for ithe first half: of 964 were $216,718,000 compared with $189,- 099,000 for the same period of 1963, C. B. Burnett, president, reported today, For the year to date earn- lings were $14,727,000 compared with $11,202,000 for the first half of 1963. Earnings per share were $1.73 compared with $1.32 jin 1963. Sales for the second quarter of 1964 were $14,706,000 com- pared with second quarter sales of $111,109,000 in 1963. Second quarter earnings were $10,248,- 000 compared with $8,167,000 for the second quarter of 1963. Earnings per share for the quarter were $1.21 per share compared with 96 cents per share in 1963. | The General Racing Pigeon jyoung bird series last Saturday |from Streetsville, a distance of |50 miles air line. ade a very good showing. jyards per minute: |1195.18; J. Kehoe, 1192.06; Grant, 1190.19; J. and R. Irwin, \1184.61; C. Bennett, 1174.00; L. |Prescott, 1173.36; D. Bejkowsky, |1168.74; F. Stuart, 1168.00; J. jand R. Irwin, 1164.98; A. Sczu- |zur, 1163.38; A. Sczuzur, 1159.48; J. Strachan, 1158.99; C. jnett, 1153.95; L. Kinsman, 1152.42; H. Topping, 1149.80; L. Kinsman, 1149.04; E. Gibbie, 1148.11; J. Kehoe, 1147.61; J. Askew, 1118.99; H. Topping, 1115.10; E. Jackson, 1070.01; H. | 000. Council To Examine Credit Unions Plan Picnic chapter picnic of area credit unions in Cobourg July 26, have Board Plans Oshawa City Council will be| asked tonight to approve a} board of education capital con-| struction program with a total estimated cost of over $4,000,- The program covers the build-| ing of two new schools, addi-| tions to five schools and buy-) ing two new school sites, Council is being asked to give its share of the total cost over a three-year period. Large gov- ernment grants are available for all items in the program. items in the program have not been released. The highest cost single item will be the new composite Exact figures for individual} been outlined. This is the third year for the picnic, sponsored jointly by crediti unions chapters in Peter- borough. Oshawa and the Bay of Quinte area. Races and treats for children, and some stage entertainment will be part of the day's events. Area Men 'Killed In Car Crash GUELPH Two Oshawa With the temperature hover- ing in the low 90's during the weekend, residents of the Osh- awa district crowded to beaches and parks Sunday afternoon. Seen here is a view EVERYBODY HEADED FOR THE WATER DURING of the swimming pool at Geneva Park as_ bathers sought relief from the heat. An estimated 3,500 people visited the park on Sunday. --Oshawa Times Phote Oshawa Wins Tennis Match Oshawa edged Peterborough Quaker Tennis Club 3-2 in Ka- wartha Tennis League action in Oshawa. Following are the scores with 'Canadian Women Hold Many Government Posts | TORONTO (CP)--If you de- }pend on television.Westerns for {your idea of what a deputy school and site planned for Har-|area men, returning home from mony road north, just north of|a lacrosse game here Saturday, Vincent Massey school. This/were killed when the car in school is estimated at a total|which they were travelling col- cost of $3,000,000. |lided head-on with another Peterborough names first: Ladies' doubles -- Irene Bor- ecky and Catherine Toole lost to Kay Hopkins and Jenny Sven-| |sheriff should look like, you're in for a shock in several parts of Canada. You won't find the typically There will be a_ meeting, Tuesday night, of the building and planning committee of the board to receive a report from city council on its decisions. A meeting of the full board has been called to follow the com- | vehicle, Dead are George MacPher- son, 25, of 48 Tulloch drive, Ajax and John Kane, 26 of 300 Athol street, Whitby. Both men were lacrosse fans| and had travelled to Guelph to watch the Oshawa Green Gaels play Guelph. They were returning home when the sports |car driven by Mr. Kane collid- jed with another auto on High- way 6, about five miles south of Guelph, Driver of the other car, Eugene Fitzpatrick, 24 of Heavy Damage In Accidents yoy was taken to hospi- tal and is reported in satisfae- A two-car collision in the|tory condition. parking lot of the Oshawa|_ a MacPherson who worked ing Cent turda .|in Toronto, is survived by his Shopping, Centre Saturday: morn wife, Dawna Sleight, one child ing caused a total of $600. i ; nioerty Aaieee to the. autos Leslie, his. parents, Mr. and aaa: Be °|Mrs. D. MacPherson, Ajax, and ; : |sisters Irene and Margaret and The drivers were; Edna Dew-|prother Donald of Ajax. hirst, 300 Mary street north and) Resting at the William E. Peter McGowan, RR 1, Frank-/sherrin Funeral Home, High- ford. |way 2, Pickering. Funeral serv- John T. Bickle, 104 Centrejice for the late- Mr. Mac- strete and Melvina Hardie, 61/Pherson will be held -in the Aberdeen street, were the) chapel Tuesday at 3 p.m. drivers of autos involved in 8) ceryice for Sons ot Scotland collision near 366 Mary street! Macrae Camp No. 206 will be north early Sunday morning.|hejq tonight at 7.30 p.m. Inter- Damage to the autos is esti-\ ment will be in Erskine ceme- mated at $1,300. |tery, Dunbarton. A two-car collision on Simcoe) yyy. Kane, a bachelor, is sur-| street south, near Lakeview) yjveg by his parents who re- mittee meeting to deal with any action the committee might recommend. Park Sunday afternoon, caused ja total of $200 damage to the | side in Scarborough, two broth- ers and one sister. He worked! son 3-6, 4-6. Mixed doubles -- Joan Taylor and Alexander Bell defeated Jeanette Zamonelli and Bruce Brown 6-1 and 6-3. First men's doubles -- John Osborn and Joop Unck won over Craig Pyke and Ray Petre 3-6, 6-2 and 6-2. Second men's doubles -- Wil- lard Elmsley and Hugh Young lost to Harvey Moyer and Sam Venn 4-6 and 6-8. Third men's doubles -- Ray Chow and Robert Clarke were defeated by John Lyons and Ralph McKendry 24 and 4-6. Fernhill Bridge Club High Scores Following are the winners and high scores of the games playeq at the Oshawa Tennis Club last week by the members of: the Fernhill Duplicate Bridge Club. North and South -- Mrs. E. Wadsworth and Mrs. M. Culp, 152%; Mrs. M. R. Clarke and J. Miller,.10; Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Davis, 14814; C. Lansfield and J. Buchanan, 138; Mrs. A. \awkward, butt-of-humor sort of man popularized by such pro- grams as Gunsmoke. In three places you won't find a "man at all. If you hap- pen into Red Deer, Alta., you'll find Jean 'Clara Gillette, In On- tario's Muskoka district it's Annie Bruce. And in Napanee. Ont., Vi Skitch is the deputy. The existence of three women deputy sheriffs is among the in- telligence turned up by the Ca- nadian Federation of Business and Professional Women's 'Clubs in its annual survey of women's lishments. This year's list of women in publie life, compiled by Nora Hoyt of Moncton, N.B., and published in the federaiton |magazine, reports a number of |firsts. Beryl Russell is described as e first foreman of a murder K trial jury in Vancouver and Marion Stirling of Saint John the first woman member of a murder jury in New Bruns- wick, Vera B. Myers of Fergus, Ont., is the first woman in the 110-year history of Wellington County to be appointed county clerk-treasurer., CITIZEN OF YEAR Mrs. Henry Krug of Kitch- ener, Ont., became the first woman named citizen of the year .by the Kitchener-Water- loo Chamber, of Commerce. Isobel MacAulay is the first woman president of the Hali- fax Business Association. Marianne Cost is the first merly the preserve of men. A year ago there were two women woman secretary of the French section of the Camadian Indus- trial Management Association, Huguette Plamondo the: and nis first woman vice-president of the Canadian Labor Congress. Women also continue to make progress in cracking fields for- thres--Bette A. Wilson of Cal- gary, Jean K. Begg in Halifax and Shirley Giles in Toronto. Mary Hetherington is an assist- ant manager in Fredericton. In Sandspit, B.C., Pearl Peer- son is a government wharf- inger, in charge of a wharf where cargoes are loaded and unloaded. The number of women may- ors has risen since 1962. There now are 15 compared with 12. There are 13 women in provin- cial legislatures, the same as in 1962, and there are three women MPs, down two. Women have accumulated a variety of honors. Simma Holt, Vancouver Sun reporter, was named honorary fire chief for work in publicizing fire preven- tion; Mona Wilson of Charlotte- town won the Florence Night- ingale Medal given by the In- ternational Committee of the Red Cross, and Dr. Ethiyn Trapp of West Vancouver re- ceived a citation from the Ca- nadian Medical Association for bank managers. Now there are work on cancer research . New Armada Moves In On Britain By DOUG MARSHALL | LONDON (CP)--A dangerous jand hostile armada is moving |close to Britain's. shores and ~| were: Young Birds | Stage Race ° |Club held its first race of the| © | This series is entkkely for| jbirds hatched in 1964 and for|"* Plan Open House : their first race the youngsters|' The following is the result in|' ~ S. Grant,|, S.}F autos involved. The drivers) at the Dunlop plant in Whitby. Nick Maiboropa, 189) funeral service for the late! Rossland road east, and Richard) y;. Ke will be held Tuesday, | Austin, of Port Hope. July 21, at 10 a.m. atgthe Mc- Police said both autos were|Dougall-Brown Funeral Home, |southbound just before the|Kingston road and St. Clair | accident. javenue Toronto. Sheridan and Mrs, M. Drew, Y% |this time nobody is nonchal- East and West -- J. Brady and L. Barkell, 169; Mrs. C, Nel- son and D. McCuaig, 153; Mrs, M. J. Heron and J. Patterson, 141%; Mrs. C. Wild and Mrs. M. Dowdle, 140; Mrs. P. Fran- cis and Mrs. J. Foster, 137% . Tour Niagara Area Sites Leimsner, 953.15; H. Leimsner, 916.40; E. Jackson, 892.13; D. Bejkowsky, 849.96. A two and a half-year-old Osh- |awa boy suffered a broken arm jand chest and knee abrasions |Saturday evening when he was | William White, of 36 Athol good condition after treatment terested in flying or a east, was reported in training. Visitors will be taken on a tour of the control tower and |by a doctor. | The car driver was John W, the club should be back on the|number 10 Hangar while they|Marjoribanks, of Leaside, Ont. water next summer, Both FMRiare at the club. Refreshments) and CF-MNX affectionately re-jare available at moderate c»st\the child dashed from between) ferred to as "ham n' eggs" by|at the nearby Air Movements|two cars parked on King street] the control tower crew are now/Unit snack bar. « Mr. Marjoribanks told police least and into his' path. jon a _|left Hotel Genosha at 8 a.m. in _| will be taken on a tour through The French Canadian ex- change students and their En- glish partners in Oshawa are tour of the Niagara Peninsula today. The 56 students wo chartered buses. They will see the falls and Fort Niagara and the Sir Adam Beck Hydro Electric Plant at Queenston. They are scheduled to leave Niagara for Oshawa around 9 p.m. The trip has been arranged through the Oshawa Junior Chamber of Commerce, and its exchange committee of Tom Kirk Don Netley, Tobie Couture, ig Ypshaw and Omar Brad- ley. Tuesday, July 21, the students will be on their own. On Wed- nesday a tour through the Can- adian Automotive Museum is scheduled and on Thursday, July 23, they will be treated to an airplane ride over Oshawa and the surrounding district. | | ENJOYING THE Heat waves such as has gripped the Oshawa area for three days are often a burden for small children. However, if they have a beach -or a backyard swimming pool in which to paddle they enjoy the | Opportunity to get out of doors CONVENTION STARTS READING, Pa, (AP) -- The fe. 4 fifth quadrennial general con- : * bau jvention of the Evangelical 4 P :|United Brethren Church opened Saturday night at Albright Col- SUMMER HEAT lege with some 1,000 delegates from Canada, the United States, Europe and Africa, The keynote address was delivered by Dr. Gayraud S. Wilmore Jr. of Phil- adelphia,-a Negro who is ex- and get a tan. Seen here is nine-months-old Jane Fet- ting, Lakeshore road, seen Sunday cooling off 'with a jantly playing bowls. In the seaside resorts, at any rate the authorities are being stung into action. Police are busy warning all bathers, and emergency casualty stations are going up on the beaches. Name of the invaders? Portu- guese men o' war -- large, purple-hued jellyfish with sting- ing tentacles that sometimes reach 40 feet in length. Despite the name, coined by British sailors centuries ago, the jellyfish doesn't come from Portugal. Scientists believe it is a group of creatures of both sexes hanging on a float that. sticks three or four inches out of the water. Sometimes the cunning jelly- fish deflate their floats, sink un- der water and become menac- ing submarines 0' war. CAN BE DEADLY The venom of.the man 0' war is about as strong as that of the cobra but fortunately it doesn't inject anything like as much as a snake would. burn or a_ powerful electric shock. It is really dangerous for small children or people with weak hearts. The jellyfish usually revel in warmer seas than those that flow around Britain but every few years there have been big invasions. Holiday resorts hate them because the threat deters tourists. from visiting the sea- side. There is one_ consolation though. Tradition has it that when the jellyfish come, Brit- ain is in for a long warm sum- mer. After the coldest, wettest June in years, that prediction could -- at least for those who never go near the water. FLUSH GASOLINE Oshawa Fire Fighters were called to wash gasoline from the road at Elmgrove avenue ecutive director of the commit- tee on religion and race of the Presbyterian Church in the| U.S.A. | rubber tube and a bucket of water, Oshawa Times Photo near the shopping centre, Sat- urday morning ,following a car accident. They also answered THE BOOK CORNER For Far By THE CANADIAN PRESS --Thee's no reason to be- lieve we're on the verge of a new ice ag.e But there have been several ice ages in the past and it's therefore possi- ble, indeed likviy, that one might occur in future. ~-There has been a warming period in the Arctic and it's been suggested that if it con- tinued the melting ice would raise the sea level so much that all coastal cities of the world would be flooded. How- ever, there are indications the peak of the warming period has already passed. --At Resolute, oa Cornwallis Island in the Queen Elizabeth Archipelago, the ground has been shown to be frozen to a depth of at least 1,300 feet --Unlike moths of the south, which are night - flyers and have large eyes, the moths of the Arctic have small eyes as a rule and fly in the sunlight, or when the sun is low on .the horizon near midnight. These are a few of the ob- servations in a new government publication, The Unbelievable Land (Queen's Printer $2.50), a series of essays that eloquently tell the story of the Canadian ' ; North, and along the way ao aan pi hy rye out a misconception or two. TALKS BY EXPERTS This is an optimistic book about the land that encom- passes more than one-third of Canada's total area even though it has a population of only 37,000, It is an edited version of a series of 29 talks by northern experts broadcast over the CBC's northern service There's a foreword by Gov- ernor-General Vanie: in which he dismisses the pessimism of those who doubt there is a fu- ture for the land north of the 60th Parallel. His feelings are shared by Gordon Robertson, former deputy minister of northern affairs and now secre- tary of the cabinet. "Our history has been replete with predictions of doom and disaster," he says in a post- script. '"'Our country has a long record too of having much of it dismissed as useless, uninhabit- able and sterile. . . . We today seven routine ambulance calls.;would be. wrong to give too Bright Future North much weight to hasty and pes- simistic conclusions about the North." The 140-page book is attrac- tively illustrated, the photo» graphs divided into three sec- tions--the land, the people, the flora and fauna. In the text the various authorities discuss top- ics as diverse as the reasons why man shivers in the cold, the phenomenon of the North- ern Lights, the nature of sea ice and marine life in the Arctic. One disclosure is that the ice- worm, often thought of as a myth and long a subject of humorous Arctic poems and ballads, really exists, Dr. Tho- 'mas N. Freeman of the depart- ment ofagriculture says it is a small black worm closely re- lated to the earth-worm or comi- mon fish-worm. " The Unbelievable Land coh cedes that in the lagt 10 years Canada has made sure no one can challenge her sovereignty in the North, but it suggests more could be done. "The poeple of the U.S.S.R. are past the great days of ex- ploration, they have overcome the old senseless fear of the far north," writes Dr. Trevor Lloyd, chairman of hte depart- ment of geography at McGill University. be . ve now feel at home there and can, I think, show us in Canada much that could help in our own northern develop- ment." Noted Comedian Concert Feature This Tuesday night's. concert at the McLaughlin Bandshell will again feature Doug Romaine as master of cere- monies with the orchestra under the direction of Bernard Tier- ney. The orchestra will feature Gord Coupland in a number made famous by the late Clyde McCoy, "Sugar Blues", plus a medley of tunes made famous by Glen Miller. * These concerts are sponsored by General Motors of Canada Ltd. and The Toronto Musicians Association with a grant from the Trust Fund of The Radio and Transcription Industry. a Fass "EG e Be SSeE FSHSTESSRS VW ee Se Fitres = OD