THESE TWO PICTURES-- from the files of The Oshawa Times -- illustrate the need for more city swimming pools to accommodate children. The of the Simcoe Hall "--poolfitied a big gap in this field, but it does not supply the needs for the populous southeast district, where it is located, let alone the needs of the entire city. The top picture was publish- ed July 27, 1063 -- the cap- tion under it read, in part: "Due to the congested and outdated washroom and changeroom facilities at Som- erset Pool (in the northwest), a new has. been con- structed by the City at a cost Of $14,000 . . . The pool open- ed June 29 (1963) and has since been used by close to 14,000 children. Photo shows Alderman Albert V. Walker (now MPP for Oshawa rid- ing) as he officially opened the new changehouse for hun- dreds of-waiting children, Pat- rick Kennedy, City parks com- missioner, is also shown." The bottom picture was pub- - lished August 30, 1962. Its cap- , tion read, in part: "Oshawa with three municipal pools for a population of more than 62,400 -- is cramped for swimming facilities for chil- dren... A Times photog- rapher catches a line up of youngsters as they wait in the heat for long periods so they can get their turn for a cool- gh pep agbapte gu aeE Be plan anges ci -- a feat that the May- r, remaining constantly under sail, would have needed' 5,056 years to accomplish. Snug today in the sleek com- fort of jets, most passengers give little thought to the inhos- pitable sea 30-40,000 feet below' them, It was not so with early ait pioneers such as Charles A. Lindbergh and Richard E. Byrd. "PLANE OUT OF CONTROL" Rear Admiral Byrd made a 1927 Atlantic crossing soon after Lindbergh's to demonstrate, as he related in the National Geo- graphic Magazine, "that it is possible to carry a useful load of 500 or 600 pounds, three or four people, and an_ efficient radio". The Byrd log contained such chilling notations as these: "It is impossible to navi- gate ... Ice is forming on the plane ... (It) got temporarily out of control." mee a Trans-Atlantic Air Service'! (Marks 25th. Anniversary -- Flying the Atlantic was be-|ness, it weighed only 84,000 elty on June 28, 1939, when Pan|Boeing's ifrst inter-continental urated the first regular passen- service fro Sesion, Long Yelnnd, t - 7 en in a steady swelling of strength to open a new era in travel. Dixie Clipper carried a crew of 12 and 22 paying passengers. Probably none was calmer than Mrs Clara Adams, of the Bronx, already a seasoned air traveler. Today, Mrs. Adams recalls that the historic 1939 flight was "very swank'. Once, during the 49-hour journey to Marseille via the Azores and Lisbon, she tried to rinse ink from-her fountain pen -- and found herself using a "es that dispensed only lemon- ade. LADEN WITH SEA GEAR In the beginning it was un- thinkable to airlift passengers across the sea in a craft that was less ship than plane. Pan American's Dixie Clipper, a Boeing 314, was laden with sea- going gear, and it suggested a streamlined galleon attachéd to a wing. (Despite its massive- rt Wash-javiation, that 'newspapers now lifted) jist Atlantic and Pacific clipper' movements along with those 'of! £45"! american World Airways inaug-|707 jet.) Ocean air travel attracted the m the United! venturesome, and luxury com- steamers". At the outbreak of World War Two, the Nation's domestic air-| # lines had only five beng re f le! four - engine airplanes sui for flying the ocean along the clippers. By 1945, however, daily military flights across the Atlantic num- bered 52. The era of routine ocean-hop- ping for every man opened Oc- tober 26, 1958, when Pan Ameri- can inaugurated daily transat- lantic jet service. The trail- blazer, a blue-and-white Boeing 707 that had been christened America a few Fae earlier by|@ Mrs Dwight D. Eisenhower, carried 111 passengers. These included a screen actress, a family of five, and a 17-year: old schoolboy who had saved money for the trip unknown to his parents. ing plunge. This picture was taken Wednesday afternoon outside the Rotary Park pool, Swimming periods are dras- tically cut during the hot spells to accommodate more children." The reference to three City pools in 1962, in- cluded the wading pool at Rotary Park. The City now has four pools -- Simcoe Hall, Rotary, and Somerset -- if the Rotary wading pool is in- cluded as one unit. FORT ERIE ENTRIES MONDAY, JULY 7 FIRST RACE -- Purse $2,000 ($2800 claiming) Laudio, Cuthbertson x: Take a Gandef, Fitzsimmons 110 Also Eligible: Air Champ, Burton, 110; Diese! Fleet, Robinson, 105; Chop Susie, Harrison, 105; Seromar, Turcotte, 1057 Mary Elizabeth, Harris, X112; Wanless, Cuthbertson, XXX112. SECOND RACE -- Purse $2900. Allow- ances. Ledge filles, 62 Furlongs, Cool Fool, Gomez 113 Regal Fashion, Harris A-X103 Capricious Miss, Gomez 123 Miss Armedam, Waish 108 Pink Jewel, Walsh 108 No Vacation, Fitzsimmons 108 Recent Years, Harris X108 Smart Flyer, Robinson 108 A--V_ Martin Jr., C E and ¥ D Simmons Entry THIRD RACE -- Purse $2200. Maidens, two-year-olds, foaled in Canada, 5¥2 Fur- tongs. Harvonian, Burton 118 Now | Wonder, Turcotte X113 Roman Harold, No Boy 118 Lord Beverley, z 118 Super Flow, Remillard 118 Butterscotch, Fitzsimmons 118 Robinson 118 Auntie Nora, Harrison, 108 FIFTH RACE -- Purse $2900. Atlow- ences. Four-yeer-clds and up, foaled in 6 Furlongs. 'Winlsteo, Harris X116 Gay Pageant, Harrison 121 Windkin, Turcotte X114 'Warriors Day, Fitzsimmons 116 - The Grest, No Boy 119 QUINELLA BETTING Maple Way, No Boy 105 Wedded Bliss, No Boy 105 SEVENTH RACE -- Purse $3000. "Coun, try Club of Buffalo" Allowances. Three- year-olds and up. About one mile on turf Burnt Roman, Fitzsimmons 121 Swerve, Shuk 119 Tres Suave, Turcotte X108 Safety Man, McComb 119 EIGHTH RACE -- Purse $2200. "'Fron- tier Handicap Series No. 1, Four-year- olds and up. About one and one-sixteenth Miles on turf course, Bobby Brier, Waish 119 Brigitta Skol, Fitzsimmons 118 Trust Him, Leblanc 121 Chance Cover, No Boy 118 Raven Wing, No Boy 117 Guaicaipuro, No Boy 117 Deal Me Aces, No Boy 1'6 X--5 Ibs. Apprentice Allowance XX--7 Ibs. Apprentice Allowance XXX--10 Ibs Apprentice Allowance POST TIME 2 P.M. Captive Whale Ottawa Surgeons Try Grafting Severed Foot OTTAWA (CP)--A team of Ottawa surgeons Thursday per- formed a unique operation on a nine-year-old Bouchette, Que., girl in an attempt to save her left foot which had been coiit* pletely severed about an inch above the ankle. he doctors said the foot-dt- taching operation performed on Suzanne Lafontaine was accom- plished with new equipment de- veloped recently by the Na- tional Research Council to sta- ple together severed veins and arteries with metal clips. They said there is about a 33- per-cent chance that the opera- tion will prove successful. It would be another 24 hours be- fore they had any definite indi- cations of its success or failure. The young girl's foot was sev- Moves Home In Vancouver VANCOUVER (CP) -- Moby Doll slipped into her new home Friday night, squealing loudly and casting angry eyes at her captors. The sleek killer whale, first ever kept alive in captivity, was moved into a_hole-in-a- wharf pen after a 10-hour opera- tion that involved the navy, of scientists. She finally slipped from a floating drydock and into her new pen. The 17-foot, 2% - ton killer whale was harpooned off the Gulf Islands between here and Vancouver Island July 16. Moby Doll had been berthed in a floating drydock here while} scientists pondered what to do with it. Friday's seven - mile ride across the harbor was unevent- ful. But when it came time to move from the drydock into a new pen cut from an old naval wharf, the game began. Dr. Vince Penfold, assistant cura- tor of the Vancouver. Aquarium, spent almost two hours in a small, flat-bottomed boat urg- ing the ever-circling mammal into its new surroundings, The first job to be done by scientists is to find out whether Moby Doll isn't really a Moby Dick. Scientists also plan a series of tests including data on the 'course. Montedeb, No Boy 114 Leblanc 114 in War, Rogers 116 killer whale's heart, brain, Group Asks Electric Arm Cash Help MONTREAL (CP) -- The Re. habilitation Institute of Mont- real appealed Friday for $30,- 000 to buy Canadian rights to a bio-electric artificial arm de- signed by Russian scientists. The institute, calling the in- vention revolutionary, said it has the facilities and personnnel to construct, improve and put the arm to practical use. What is needed is $30,000, the price the Russians have put on Canadian rights. Once in pro- duction, it will cost an amp- utee about $300. Dr. Gustave Gingras, execu- ered by a hay mower at the La- fontaine farm at Bouchette, some 70 miles north of Ottawa. The girl was taken to nearby Maniwaki hospital, where ar- rangements were made to move her to the Ottawa General Hos- pital. Dr. Fergus Ducharme, ortho- paedic surgeon at the Ottawa hospital, told officials of the Maniwaki hospital to retrieve the foot which was still at the farm, inject it with anti coagu- lant to prevent blood clotting and refrigerate it. _ The operation was conducted in two stages. In the first stage the surgeons attached the foot to the leg with metal pins. The main veins, arteries and nerves running from the leg to the foot were then stapled together. If this operation restores enough circulation to the foot to keep it alive, further opera- tions will be necessary to con- nect smaller nerves and blood vessels. HOLD 13 HALIFAX (CP) -- Thirteen Cuban refugees who walked off their Havana-to-Prague airliner while it refuelled at Gander, Nfld., a few weeks ago are be- ing -held here, an immigration department official said Thurs- day. The official said the refu- gees arrived about two weeks ago and have filed applications for permission to entér the United States. BUFFER KILLS GONALES, Calif: (AP) Standing in a puddle of water, 18 - year - old Michael Garcia plugged in an electric buffer to polish his car Thursday. He screamed once and fell dead, CAPSULE NEWS TORONT O(CP) -- Harry A. Collins, 30, of Hamilton, a prin- ter involved in the current dis- pute with the three Toronto daily newspapers, was fined $50 Friday for creating a disturb- ance outside the Globe and Mail offices. Police said he ob- structed a truck leaving with the first edition produced after the stoppage July 9. Collins is a linotype operator for the Tor- onto Daily Star. WILL TRANSLATE OTTAWA (CP)--Works. Minis- ter Deschatelets announced Fri- day his department will install a translation system in the pub- lic galleries of the Commons. He told the Commons the move will enable visitors to the Com- mons to hear debates in Eng- lish or French, Canada's two of- ficial languages. FORESAW FUTURE MONTREAL (CP)--A_ 28- year-old salesman, who bought a home near St. Vincent de Paul Penitentiary "so that my wife could be near me if I ever got arrested," was sentenced Friday to four years in prison. Jean-Paul Bundock also was fined $3,000 or another year in prison for his part in a $360,000 robbery last August at the home of industrialist Guy Foisy in suburban Longueuil. CHOSEN AGAIN CHARLOTTETOW N (CP) -- Ralph S. Staples of Ottawa Fri- day was re-elected for a 12th one-year term as president of the Co-operative Union of Can- ada at the first meeting of the new board of directors. The election followed the annual congress of the CUC, national association of English-language co-operators. ; SEEK BOOKS EAST ORANGE, N.J. (AP)-- Warrants for the arrest of 26 borrowers of overdue library books were issued Friday by East Orange: municipal court. This was the second time in three years that library officials had to enlist the aid of detec- tives in tracking down delin- quent borrowers. SINK BOAT JYAKA LUMPUR (AP) -- A Malaysian patrol boat sank an Indonesian raider craft, killing its three-man crew in an en- gagement just off Singapore Friday night, the defence min- istry announced. It was the first known sinking of an Indonesian vessel since Jakarta announced its crush -Malaysia campaign more than a year ago. REPORT HEAVY FIGHTING GENEVA (Reuters) -- Heavy fighting causing many dead and wounded has broken out north- west of San'a, capital of the re- publican: regime in Yemen, the international committee of the Red Cross said here Friday. the international committee said its tent hospital north of the fight- ing is crowded to capacity with wounded fighters and injured civilians. RUSSIANS GET ESCORT MIAMI, Fla. (AP)--The radio operator aboard a cruise ship said Friday he saw a destroyer and two navy- planes escort a Russian cargo ship away from tive director of the ins'itute, told a press conference he and three associates had just re- turned from a visit to London and Moscow to examine the new artificial limb. He said the limb has the po- tential for several different mo- tions and actions while present artificial limbs are awkward and produce only one or two basic movements. The Russian limb is driven by a small mo- tor. based in the hand and con- trol is maintained by electric signals picked up by electrodes in contact with arm and neck blood voice and chromosomes. muscles. electrocuted, police said. the Florida Coast. Art Owens, ------------ ALL WORK | A'. Futty | H {GUARANTEED Wor ot as cM Mail Orders Promptly Attended te LORDS 12 Simcoe St. S. Se THURE. 8 FRI. 9 PM JEWELLERS -- 728-1812 Printer Fined During Strike radio operator aboard the Or- ange Sun, said "almost 200 pas- sengers" saw the Russian cargo vessel about six miles off Gov- ernment Cut, entrance to Miami Harbor. FINDS $2,200 NEW YORK (AP)--Michael Candal, 14, who likes to wander along the river bank, dipped: his hand into the Hudson River and found a bottle stuffed with $2,200. Michael Candal Sr., a restaurant counterman, and his wife, parents of nine, turned the money over to police. If there are no claimants, Michael will get the money. RADIATION HITS MAN CHARLESTOWN, R.I. (AP)-- Police cordoned off. the United Nuclear Plant Friday night after an employee was taken to Rhode Island Hospital suf- 'fering from radiation poisoning. Plant officials said there was a "release" in the plant of radio- active material, but that it had not gone beyond the walls. In hospital in fair condition was Robert Peabody, 38. QUAKE RECORDED UPPSALA, Sweden (AP) -- The Uppsala Seismological In- stitute registered a powerful earthquake Friday in the area of the Kurile Islands northeast of Japan. Dr. Marcus Baath, head of the institute, gave its magnitude as 7.25 on the maxi- mum-10 Richter scale. PATROL AMBUSHED CARACAS (AP) -- Guerrillas ambushed a military patrol in Falcon state Thursday night, killing an army lieutenant and two soldiers and wounding two soldiers and a policeman, Fa- con, on Venezuela's northwest coast, is a hotbed of Communist activity. : ENVOY ARRIVES PEKING (Reuters) -- Mo- hammed Yala, the first Al- gerian ambassador to Peking, arrived here Friday by train from Moscow to take up his post, nearly two years after Algeria established diplomatic relations with Communist China. LARGEST BABY MISSOULA, Mont. (AP) -- A woman here gave birth Thurs- day to a boy weighing 16 pounds, four ounces. Dr. Steven Preston said he has been delivering babies for 25 years and this was the largest by about four pounds, Delivery was by Cae- sarean section. JOBLESS TOTAL DOWN LONDON (AP)--Britain's un- employment fell to 317,578 this month, lowest figure in nearly three years, the labor ministry reported Friday. This was a drop of 4,345 from June. JURIST DIES MELBOURNE (Reuters)--Sir John Latham, a former Austra- lian deputy-prime minister, has died in hospital here, the Aus- tralian Broadcasting Commis- sion said Friday. The radio said that Latham, also a former chief justice of the High Court of Australia, had been ill in hos- with} ¥- the middle of| Ottawa Fears Cyprus To Kill Peace Army OTTAWA (CP)--Will Cyprus destroy the Canadian govern- ment's lofty aim of substituting United Nations peacekeep- ing operations for national armies? The great fear in this capital is that it may. Even as the Cyprus situation worsens, officials here are dog- gedly pushing ahead with plans for a fall conference of some 30 nations on establishment of an international police force and discussing the possibility of a United Nations patrol along the 600-mile jungle border between South Viet Nam and Cambodia. Informed sources say the Cy- prus situation now has reached the point where the UN force, including 1,125 Canadians, is caught in an impossible squeeze. These are the choices: 1. If the UN force is forced to shoot to kill to keep Greek- and Turkish-Cypriots apart, its mission will have failed. The UN force is in Cyprus at the invitation of the island's govern- ment and ¢an't very well shoot Cypriots. 2. If the UN force withdraws and leaves the Turkish minor- ity to the mercy of the better- armed Greeks, its missioa will have failed. CONSIDER REACTION Moreover, if any Canadian soldiers are killed, public reac- tion in Canada to UN peace- keeping or, at least, to Cana- dian participation, would likely become highly unfavorable. T. C. Douglas, New Demo- cratic Party leader, said in the Commons a week ago that the UN is being played for a sucker in Cyprus. Opposition Leader Diefenbaker asked Thursday in the Commons: "Is it not most serious when the UN force is treated with contemptuous and cavalier disregard by (Cyprus president) Makarios?" Privately, officials say Presi- dent Makarios is making a mon- key out of the UN by continu- ing to import arms and men in contravention of the March 4 UN Security Council resolution. Meanwhile, it is considered possible that the UN's special mission to the disputed border area between South Viet Nam and Cambodia may recommend that the UN assist in demarca- tion of the border and perhaps a UN patrol. START TOUR TORONTO (CP)--A group of 37 Toronto-area scouts and four leaders begin a month-long tour of Great Britain Saturday, tak- ing with them 150 city of Tor- onto medallions and a song sat- irizing the new Canadian flag which they hope to sing along the way. The song, called Will It Ever Fly?, was written by Scout Douglas VanDine and Murray Stewart. VanDine hopes to sell it to a radio station to pay for part of his trip. CABINET RESIGNS LIMA, Peru (Reuters)--Pres- ident Fernando Belaunde Terry accepted Friday the resignation of the Peruvian cabinet 'and asked Prime Minister Fernando Schwalb to form a new cabinet "as soon as possible." Schwalb told reporters the ministers had resigned "'to allow the president freedom to form a new team." pital for two weeks. $500 REWARD For information leadi conviction of a person ng to the arrest and or persons involved in the theft of the following 12 G.E. 16" Port- able T.V. sets. Model 61-T-41, Serial Numbers 259, 260, 1375, 1376, 1362, 0351, 0352, 1359, 1360, 0364, 353 and 667. ALL REPLIES CONFIDENTIAL TO BOX "D" -- THE TIMES / Fledgling prospector Max Portz, 48, of Vancouver, tells how he and his companion, Bob Gilroy, 39, of Rossland, B.C., spent eight days cling- ing to the floats of their over- turned plane on the Iskut CLING TO FLOATS River 600 miles north of Vancouver. He said it meant certain ' death in the icy waters had they attempted to reach shore. They were res- cued soon after a search was begun. (CP Wirephoto) U.S. BUSINESS WEEK NEW YORK (AP) -- The stretch of the United States business upturn was under- scored this week by a stream of glowing corporate profits re- ports, The second quarter was a pe- riod of record earnings for many corporations. This was particularly true in the booming automobile indus- try, where General Motors Corp., Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler Corp. came out with highest-ever profits for the three months and six months ended June 30. Some of the credit for the gains was attributed to the fed- eral income tax cut effective in February. ' General Motors earned $602,- 000,000, equal to $2.11 a share, in the second quarter against $464,000,000; or $1.62 a share, a year earlier. UP 15 PER CENT Ford reported second quarter earnings of $179,900,000, up 15: per cent from the previous rec- ord of $155,900,000 in the second quarter of 1963, Chrysler earned $60,600,000 in the three months ended, com- pared with $41,700,000 a year earlier. Adding to the rosy glow were improved reports from Moto- rola, B. F, Goodrich, Celanese, du Pont, Reynolds, Metals, Kaiser Steel, American Airlines and United Air Lines. With steel production holding up better than usual in the nor- mally quiet summer season, Re. public Steel, Jones and Laugh- lin and Youngstown Sheet and Tube -- three of the United States' major producers -- an- PRESIDENT CUTS BUDGET MANILA (Reuters) -- Philip- pines President Diosdado Maca- pagal cut $2,600,000 from the national budget Friday. The money was earmarked for in- creases in congressmen's allow- ances, There has been criticism in the press about the allegedly excessive allowances the con- gressmen now receive. One magazine estimated they are getting $60,000 a year in secret allowances, - Reports Of Big Profits Bring A Healthy Glow nounced increases in first half earnings from a year earlier. The commerce department's reported cash-dividends paid by U.S. companies in June were 10 per cent higher than June 1963. The June total of $2,600,000,000 compared with $2,300,000,000 a year earlier. : Economists for the Bank of America predicted' the boom, ; already more than 41 months old, would continue at least through the middle of 1965. The changeover to 1965 cut into..the automobile industry's production this week. Cadillac, Rambler, Chevrolet and Chrys- ler shut down some plants, Output dwindled to an estimated 113,700 passenger cars from 154,999 last week. Demand for new cars con- tinued high with Chrysler and Ford reporting. higher daily selling. rates in the middle 10 ag of July than a year ear- er. NO RUM FOR TARS LONDON (AP)--Royal Navy ratings serving aboard the mul- tilateral force destroyer Biddle are getting daily compensation because they draw no rum ra- tion, John Hay, undersecretary for the navy, told Parliament Friday. Because U.S. Navy ships are dry, the British sea- men are getting an extra 3% cents a day, a defence ministry spokesman said. DENIES PLAGUE REPORT LA PAS, Bolivia (Reuters)-- Guillermo Jauregui Guachalla, Bolivian health minister, denied Fri¢ .y reports from northwest- ern Argentina of an epidemic of bubonic plague in southern Bolivia, near the Argentine bor- der. SERVICE STATION AVAILABLE EXCELLENT opportunity for right man. Good gallonage, god location, All Replies Confidential WRITE BOX 43 Oshewa Times NU-WAY RUG OSHAWA'S MOST RELIABLE By NU-WAY RUG CLEANERS, the largest broadioom deoler and rug cl WAY Jet Cleans your rugs, if necessary giving extra special stains, return leaner in Eastern Ontario. Oni NU- and thir @ second i 'ion ing them 'and new looking. Using the most ing equipment NU-WAY'S prices low... only $9.75. For for example a 9x 12" rug costs fast 3 day service call now, : 728-4681 .NU - WAY RUG Institute , Member of the of Rug Cleonen 1