OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, December 2, 1958 Attempt Revive Bowmanville 'Okay Extension Municipal Vote Red Cross By THE CANADIAN PRESS was given to farmers' sons, later BOWMANVILLE -- The On. Voters in eight Ontario centres|to spinsters and widows with|tario division, Canadian Red gave solid approval Monday to property, in 1917 to wives, in 1931 Cross will hold a luncheon meet- the first major change in thejto farmers' daughters and ining in the Flying Dutchman province's municipal e le ct {0 n i833 to farmers' sisters and wives motel, Bowmanville, Thursday franchise since wom en were of farmers' sons. |in an attempt to revive the now granted the vote in 1917. FURTHER . EXTENSION Sefaet Bowgile Draget | | They east ballots in favor of] At | e society has reac an| BOWMANVILLE -- All five tions evidently kept many people giving the vote for mayor and Under this year 3 Shnge cities agreement with the Ontario Hos- members of the 1958 town council |at home. y council members to all British * 1° i PPove il > vote Tay pital Services Com were re-elected to serve another! Counc. Ivan Hobbs polled the subjects 21 and over who have a gle cise 9 Jon = supply blood transfusion services ty, years with one new member (largest number of votes, 1184, fol- year's residence in the munici- C2uSters of present voters, to|to Bowmanville hospital. This has|s fil] the vacancy left by Reeve lowed by Counc, Keith Lathangue pality. [roomers and boarders and to/made it necessary to stimulate! "Carruthers, elevated. to|who recived 1085 votes. Counc The question was on the mun- OWners and tenants of properties|interest in the re-formation of| . Re-elected were Council-|0. J. Presson received 966, Counc. icipal election ballot in the cities Which do not meet the minimum the Bowmanville branch, states|jors 0. J. Presson, Ivan Hobbs, Ab Sturrock received 923, Counc. of Toronto, Windsor, London, standards. Charlotte Keens, director of pub- ;1,vq "preston, Keith Lathangue, Lloyd Preston received 804. The Brantford, Fort William, Belle-|, Ine extension, which does notllic relations for the Ontario divi- and Ab Stuzrock newcomer, Ken Nicks, polled ville and Woodstock and in Lea. include yoling for Seika] trustees sion of the society. ath Sounsilies is Ken|votes y h side, a town of 16,400 in the To- °F Money bylaws, will require a| gp,y FE Davey, president-elect| candidal ronto suburbs. Tew Sean 2 Jroparing Rn the Ontario division, will be Nicks, Joeal Shores and director Mig feicated and owed It won overwhelming support in ' fy asses: the guest speaker at the lunch- . votes every case. Toro 5 ° port 'n rolls which list owners and ten- aon to which representatives of The Sunday sports issue, like Thee, Joliet 744 and 743 te. backed it by a five to two margin, 20S : various Bowmanville organiza. the liquor vote, also met defeat. The posts of mayor, reeve, and | In other questions and bylaws tions have been invited. |The number of affirmative votes deputy-reeve, Ww all acclam. . "NO" TO AMALGAMATION - |voted on Monday, the towns of polled totalled 601 against the ieP VTEC E, Were © S hma BR The Lakehead's hottest munic- Preston, Forest, Aylmer and | TOWN OFFICE HOURS |1034 negative votes, considerably mayor was Reeve Wikrid Phe # ipal topic, amalgamation of ad- Trenton approved two-year terms 4 less than the two-thirds affirma- ruthers, as reeve, Deputy-reeve BOWMANVILLE AND DISTRICT NEWS Representative -- R, CZIRANKA -- Phone MA 3-7224 Bowmanville Returns Council Plus K. Nicks 0. J. Presson: West 1, 94; West. 2A, 107; West 2B, 94; North 1, 116; North 2, 133; North 3, 145; South 1, 133; South 2A, 43; South' 2B, 101; Total 966. 3 Ivan B. Hobbs: West 1, 108; West 2A, 114; West 2B, 103; North 1, 141; North 2, 158; North 3, 148; South 1, 169; South 2A, 113; South 2B, 130. Total 1184. Lloyd Preston: West 1, 82; West 2A, 94; West 2B, 82; North 1, 105; North 2, 114; North 8, 124; South 1, 131; South 2A, 47; South 2B, 115. Total 894. Keith Lathangue: West 1, 98; West 2A, 126; West 2B, 109; North 1, 121; North 2, 138; North 3, 150; South 1, 157; South 2A, 71; South 2B, 120. Total 1085. A. H. Sturrock: West 1, 84; West 2A, 107; West 2B, 106; North 1, 105; North 2, 124; North 8, 140; South 1, 114; South 2A, #4; South 2B, 86. Total 923. Ken Nicks: West 1, 87; West 2A, 87; West 2B, 80; North 1, 90; North 2, 106; North 8, 118; South 1, 119; South 2A, 43; South 2B, 102, Total 832. Glenholme Hughes: West 1, 60; West 2A, 71; West 2B, 63; North 1, 115; North 2, 72; North 3, 71; South 1, 125; South 2A, 73; South 2B, 94. Total 744, Wesley Fice: West 1, 61; West 2A, 79; West 2B, 71; North 1, 99; North 2, 93; North 3, 80; South 1, 119; South 2A, 55; South 2B, 86. Total 743. Sunday Sports: Yes, 601; No, 1034. $29,943 Grant For Aged Home TORONTO (CP)--A total of ; 3 4 | ici i | NVILLE -- In order to Som A y joining Fort Willlam and Port for municipal office-holders and! BOWMANVIL 0 tive majority required to permit . : P-- y i a a Arthur, failed its first test. Fort the city of Stratford gave a de- assure better service the town jig introduction, Pavia gh a .| Only one ward reported a ma- y " ; i "no" ; th. lid] ./hours of business. The new sys. CHAMPION INTERPROVINCIAL HOLSTEIN HERD - [vias "oomug sc" we Chins wily andre by his of Bune" Tit oo, Colm, rd rors, | Bei ni, ong nach o I he tor to St. Joseph's Hospital now un- C2 Hy of negative voles, and did not improve much until a a On Holstein field- was adjudged champion herd | at the Royal Winter Fair. Fluoridation of municipal water der construction, but Guelph rate- \P-™- Ody 423 per cont oc 1050 of 4 in the province for several years, grant the Sisters of St. Joseph were from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. with | the eligible 3856 voters turned out| Official tabulation of results is ener and won a slim 4,895-t0-4,652/a home for the aged. lunch. Under the new system year term of office a larger turn-| The results for each of the ship, which surrounds the North-| Regent Theatre to a supermarket the day. lexpected, but bad weather condi-|as follows: John Mills, Representative -- Phone Ajax 426 lern Ontario mining town of Kirk-|chain was turned down at Brock- . {Dec. 8 and Owen Sound Dec. 13. have the building kept as a town El R W 11 ntest Plans Made Eight communities now fluori- | auditorium. ect eeves 1 Co decay -- Brantford, Brockville, Ratepayers at Galt said "uo" hd hd and Tisdale l0 a $475,000 city hall project but] By THE CANADIAN PRESS | At Pickerin WA B Tomy Tn. it, «hw LARRY g WA. azaar CHIEF ISSUE emphatic "yes." A move to re-| Aylmer--John T. Millard PORT HOPE -- Sixty-nine-year-| e Budge, 4, the J 7 [from 10 members passed by a Campbellford--George Free tered the contest for the reeve's|of other towns of a similar size -- Departi s- 1s ts ; AJAX -- The December meet- chief interest, however, in along| ) y oat held tom of un Th yo ii Fo Motley spoke 'in warm ing of the Women's Auxiliary to|list of topics which came up for'| narrower margin. |Clinton--W, J. Miller eat now held by Reeve Read across J | . ua cil Monday. About 100 persons at-| over 5000 ulation ia On nomination night, a special town with its neighboring municipali-| Hospital will be held. Monday, | Two years ago Toronto and aldermen to 14 from 21 and oper- Marmora--W. A. Shannon P pop tario a 4 ea : Min Mr. Carry who has had three year and that Port Hope was the i ' : extending the franchise regula- public utilities commission. Orillia--Wilbur M. Cramp . A was Bel Nousey gvenie Town of No. iris seeking re- PE as program has been tons. pr a result the Ontarici The borrowing of $900,000 for a Port Elgin--Sidney Smith years' experience on the town 24th in size. Port Hope's "per ie new arrangement was A 0 8 (Sor : ood d hen|of Reeve Morley sale of Christmas gifts, home new law allowing municipalities Hospital received solid endorse- Stirling--Kenneth Ray mayor's seat and the reeve's| The average per capita worth tion of homes for the aged has from the g attendance when ] v. s as . | i . i i hi for the|Walkerton--Irwin Lobsinger vote to Read Budg {year from $1035 to $1000. "So we or persons. her first bid for a seat on the children's clothes. A prey bul Ontario vole qualifiestions Guelph relosied a Tome fof the VILLAGES "Our taxes are prohibitive, ex-|are 10 per cent better than the ee Fon William and district Reeve Cyril Morley, given an school board declared that it was th~ articles for sale shows tha aj we Ge BD yo i Alvinston--Clayton Cox governments took over the cost of members and friends of the Aux- ended a long period of indecision Mrs. Critchton said she was novel and useful articles. by voting to make the summer |concerned with the health of the] Home baking of William rejected the suggestion cisive '"'yes" vote. clerk's office has revised its aye. Jae) Biv of : 2d Iti |All other wards showed a major- This group of animals from | man G. E. Nelson, Port Perry, | in the Inter - Provincial class (he polls Dec, 8. {fice hours from 8.30 am. to 5 J and t improve much |supplies, a controversial question payers rejected a proposal to| Previous to this office hours closed was soundly rejected at Kitch. $540,000 towards construction of a one hour break at 12 p.m. for to cast a vote. In view of the two- as follows: AJAX AND DISTRICT NE W S margin at Kingston. Teck Town-| A bylaw to sell the town-owned business will carry on throughout out than in previous vears Nas | Waris and the totals for each are land Lake, votes on the subject ville. Ratepayers preferred to Big T t | date their water to combat dental | : 1g urnou For Christmas rani Bracks TURN DOWN HALL PROJECT In Ont ario : S | | ver, For e, Oshawa Sibu. "Thor Reeve's Seat and community centre won an Amherstburg--Harold Jones PICKERING VILLAGE (Staff) a small surplus over the budget By GRACE MI"S The franchise issue was the duce Woodstock's council to eight Brighton--F. E. Goodrich old J. Carr, retired banker, e3-| progress of the town with that [ Ontario. : Bi ort - Hi municipal offices to speak on terms of the village's relationship |the Ajax and Pickering General decision, - Kingston approved reduction of Havelock--Ernest J. Leeson udge on Port Hope town coun e said the number of towns forum was held in the Memorial ties, Pickering township and the Dec. 8 at 8 p.m. in the nurses'|London yoted heavily in favor of ation of a gas service by the Mitchell--Arnold Gloor tended the meeting. {had increased from 33 to 35 last A , Hi Tahon council, previously ran for both|capita worth is $1200," he said. a success was clearly apparent election paid tribute to the work arranged, to follow the annual/legislature this year enacted aninefloor addition to St. Mary's Southampton--Harvey M the y feap $203,800 in grants for construc. e good ! : ; tepayers. Strathroy--Fred Griffiths seat. Last year he lost by a close of the 33 towns had last the hall was filled by nearly 80 Mrs. Gertrude Critchton making baking, dolls' clothes and smallito make the gxtension. ment from Kitchener ratepay! by been authorized by Welfare Min: were established in 1849 giving aged and Belleville voters agreed) e, i ' nd federal lot of work had been done by the . penditures are prohibitive," he average," said the reeve. joint home for the aged received acclamation, gave an optimistic |time the provincial a ora tenants whose assessed value for| Wallaceburg, in Kent County, education. iliary, in making the big array ofiaxalion purp Shes met al seasonable changed over the years, now switch to daylight time next year © | students and that free dental care|cakes, cookies, puddings, candy|stands at $100 in villages a on Wino 2pprove] abolition should be provided. Referring to should be brought in betore OR, 7% jou a iol She waid 3 A el. a Su the retarded children she said|p.m. for the convenience 0f 3.00 pp an ol ay nan question bt 3% To i i : {ronto suburb of ico gave the education of these children| The program will include the| The regulations have been re-ron [should be dependent on charit- singing of Christmas carols, with | vised several times on a prov- (nod to a Viopossl calling Sor the Mr. Morley noted that the coun-| up, donations. |Mrs. Tom Wheeler at the piano, |ince-wide basis. In 1877 the vote legalizing of Sunday g. Lib res fis Nate Once More Toronto's Mayor preceding ® the village due to increased) iy, to the jdea that senior gov-|should be in the hands of the Sssessment. ernments should take over the|committee by Saturday, Dec. 6, if said this money is used t0|cost of education. He said it| possible. Deliveries can be made hospitalization, prdviding|would be a sad day when this hap-|to 36 Glynn avenue, in Ajax, or pened, and local government lost to Mrs. H, Fenton, Norah street, TORONTO (CP) Nathan tirement from politics. Lawyer Phillips, a white-thatched politi-| Joseph Cornish got 17,089 votes. cian fond of saying he is "mayor| Re-elected to board of control of all the people," has proved with Mrs. Newman was William again that he is. | Allen. Behind him came two for- its autonomy. Pickering. The 66-year-old veteran of 34 mer aldermen--Donald Summer- Ajax Speeders | Warned, F ined | vears on Toronto city council was ville and William Deauison -- = i To the eC No Br ot con ay 153,776 votes, more than both his| Messrs. Brand and Cornish. tied. He said it would be a waste structed east-west road through|as Chambers and Constable Huot.[0PPOn ents, controllers Ford The vleciors oiled Wo Jette of money to pave the road and Ajax as a speedway appeared in| Joe Schisl 128 Gladstone Brand and Joseph Cornish. time being : { Ce ? i It gave Toronto's first Jewish ting for board of control. Alder: perhaps dig it up next year to in- Ajax police court Monday before| oad, Oshawa, paid $10 and costs| ry Ft oa wv: bag imghy Jl ogi to anewerfor the same offence committed for" UY Scar." ae mayor his single campaign issue -- 8 a ig Bin hg ERE Zhe was elected {0 two one-year |demand that the chairman of the pronti y the test percentage of), n Dri Ajax " "fined $35) Chief Coustable Howard Trav- terms before the extended term metropolitan 'council embracing of any comiy Tusieipal. CE) lor pooh on Nov.|® said, "We intend to keep &|yag introduced in 1956. Only To-| Toronto and its.12 suburbs be i i |20. Constables Shaw and Carter close watch on this road which|ronto mayor ever to surpass this|elected, not appointed. And night The population in 1953 was 0k. ir" that they chased Gui-W2 built for the safety and con-|yag Tommy Church, elected to|club own er James Karfilis ran revised assessment, $695,522. es| venience of motorists, and not @8| oven one-year terms from 1915 eighth while calling for "a |a speedway through the town. i, 1091 - | brighter Sunday." "This is 'Safe Driving Week' Another major achievement Nome of five Communist-backed |throughout Canada, This town was that of Mrs. Jean Newman, candidates was elected to any of has an enviable safe driving re-|a smartly dressed grandmother tne 36 council and school board who led ballotting for board of posts. Closest was Mrs. Janet Ba; control for the second straight McMurray, who failed by exceeding year. Mrs. Newman is Toronto's!vates to win a seat on the public first woman controller and po-|gchool board for ward five. |the court that he and Constable tentially the city's first woman| 0 Cip0ihe balloting went OBITUARIES Fred Gallivan had followed a mayor. |about as expected with only one |taxi through the industrial area|100 SOUGHT OFFICES A ory Cink of of the town and back up Harwood | With ethnic leaders reporting a weston was toppled by former | MRS. ELIZABETH J. Phillips |avenue about midnight on No-|quickened interest among New cq uncillor J. L. Holley. COBOURG -- The death occur-(vember 7. As the taxi turned Canadians, eves ) candi- |dates sought office on city coun- 1 d School Boar Is Returned - once in the past 100 J i a ely is criminal that the care and conveners. a sewage system for the village had not been set- ists who has used the newly con-|street on Nov. 7, by Corp. Thom- with him at Squires Beach. Thomas Patrick Murphy, of Commerce street, Frenchman's cord over the years and in sof y, was fined $30 and costs for | far as possible my force intend 60 miles. He was|to keep it that way." Rebekahs Hold Anniversary Meeting By GRACE MILLS AJAX -- A special meeting of, oq of Mrs, Elizabeth Jane Phil-/north on Harwood an object was the White Dove Rebekah Lodge No. .379, Ajax, was held at the Church of the Holy Trinity re- cently, to celebrate the second an-| miversary of its formation. failing health for the past four| The taxi was stopped and re-| About 101,601 of Toronto's 340,- ears, Mrs. Phillips had spent|turned to the scene where a bot-|574 eligible voters cast ballots her lifetime in Hamilton town-|tle of liquor was found in the for a turnout of 20.8 per cent. | | Arkona--Bernard Bartlett [Chippawa--John W. MacKenzie Coldwater--Lawrence Devine Crystal Beach--J. Millington |Erieau--Leonard Stass | Hensall---Norman Jones |Long Branch--Mrs. Marie Curtis | Mildmay--Theodore Dietz |Newbury--John D. McNaughton | Ripley--Walter Walden | Wardsville--Arthur Harold | TOWNSHIPS Balfour--Edgar Balfour Bertie--Fred House Bruce--John MacKenzie Capreol--Raymond Chenier Casimir, Jennings and Appleby-- George St. Louis Charlotteville--John E. Cooper Culross--Michael Fischer Drury, Denison and Graham-- Gerard Gainer Dunwich--Clare Blue East York--Jack R. Allen Ekfrid--Lloyd Galbraith Ellice--Walter Mogk Etobicoke--H. 0. Waffle Glenelg--Frank D'Arcy Greenoch--Roy Atkinson Hanmer--Mederic Legalt Korah--Harold Webb |McKim--William Ellis Mersea--Ellison Bell Nairn--Lyall Hall Neelon-Garson--Don Gillis North York--Norman Goodhead Norwich North--David Chambers Oakland--Kenneth Hagerman Oxford--Hilton Virtue Rayside--Mrs. Malvina Labine St. Edmund's--J. D. Wyonch Sarnia--George E. Cole |Scarborough--A. M. Campbell |Seymour--Alex Linn | South Dorchester--John B. Wilson | Stamford--Edward E. Mitchelson |Stephen--Glen Webb 03! Wallace--Carl Weber | West Nissouri--Ernest Budden West Zorra--Ernest F. Garner York--Chris Tonks Ship Boycott Spotty Except In US. Ports told the meeting. "They are spending money right and left. This thing has got to stop." He declined to elaborate on any platform for financing municipal affairs and traced his background briefly. Born and educated in Sarnia he came to Port Hope to work in the bank. After travel- ing throughout Canada in the banking business he settled in Port Hope and married a Port Hope girl, He has lived here for "We pay a little more for our county rate," he said. "We pay $13 a person to the county while the average throughout Ontario is $10.30. We pay more for educa- tion. In Port Hope it costs $38.50 per person to maintain all edu- cation while the average for all Ontario is $35 per person. 'However, despite this, our general tax rate is $77.89 per person while all across Ontario the past 13 years. the average is $31.54 per per- son." BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT To Welfare By MARVEN MOSS Canadian Press Staff Writer MONTREAL (CP) -- An econ- omist says Canadians have shown they are not content to sit back and let the government carry the burden of education and wel- fare services. In a recently-published booklet title Philanthropic Giving in Can- ada, Earl F. Beach says Cana- dians are making increasing philanthropic contributions. The Chicago-born professor of economics at McGill University says all indications seem to point to a steady growth in individual and corporate contributions, partly because Canadians may feel "they do not want big gov- ernment to take over complete control of the education and wel- fare functions in the community." The basic factors, however, he attributes to higher personal in- comes, increasing awareness of Bay Youth, 19 Goes To Jail | AJAX (Staff) -- Glen Flood, 19, | NEW YORK (AP)--American maritime workers are providing of Frenchman's Bay was fined $25 and costs for being drunk in| Canadians Give More Agencies responsibilities and tax laws en- couraging voluntary contributions. With charts compiled from {taxation statistics covering 1944 |to 1955, the booklet shows indiv- idual philanthropic eontributions rose to $229,329,000 in 1955 from $61,400,000 in 1946 while corporate giving moved up to $27,600,000 from $10,950,000 in the compar- able period. * {Walsh and aided the largest grant, $112,184, to. wards construction of a home which will accommodate 160 per- sons. . A grant of $25,943 was given fo the counties of Northumberland and Durham for an 93-person ad- dition. Victoria ovum received a final payment of $17,924 for construction of an addition. Lincoln County's Nipponiu Home received $26,250 and the Christadel Church was awarded $13,500 in maximum grants. 5 General Pays Visit To COD COBOURG -- Ma).-General @. e-camp Major A. H. Innes arrived in Cobourg Sunday afternoon from army headquarters, Ottawa, Occasion of the visit is periodic inspection of facilities at 26 Central Ord- nace Depot. During the day they were visit- ed by Col. W. E, Bawden, Com- manding Officer, 26 COD. A mili- tary dinner was held at noon Monday at the Chateau hotel. Lionettes Plan 'Prof. Beach adds a note that the figures could well 'e con- servative since they not in- clude gifts from private founda-| tions, death bequests and miscel- laneous sources not covered by taxation statistics. UNEVEN RESPONSE The booklet also refers to in- dividual contributions by income groups and Prof. Beach notes that "there is some evidence that not all groups have responded evenly." - Using 1954 statistics as a base, he says giving by the middle in- come group "seems to be sur- prisingly low. Yet this group is made up largely of college grad- uates who owe most to the com- munity for having provided them with a heavily-subsidized educa- Aid Hospital COBOURG -- N. Dearlove, Co bourg General Hsopital adminis- trator, spoke Thursday night te Cobourg Lionettes club at their monthly dinner meeting in the Chateau hotel when he outlined progress and present needs of the hospital. : He congratulated the club on the activities of Lions club, which pledged itself last week to donate over $13,000 to furnish the top floor of the hospital's new wing. Lionettes has already donated $500 to the hospital building fund some months ago, but hope was expressed at the meeting that they would be able to give more help later, lips, 98, of Cobourg, Nov. 27. In|thrown from the taxi. [cil and school boards. PORT HOPE All |ship, residing at Bethel Grove ditch. Mahoney admitted that the n 1956 it was 29.6 per cent. | and Cold By prior to com- bottle and its contents were his. A| The voters, all owners or rent-| Announced at the meeting was Sister 1ssbel Macikness, NG, public/much of the starch in a four-day a public place and $25 and costs |o0- the meeting, assisted by es Robins, VG. Due to a power break, the meeting open-| ed by candle light. Sister Robins, reporting for the sick committee, said that several ing to Cobourg about 28 years| search warrant was issued and at|ers of property worth at least es ? 2 » {Mahoney's home two other bot-/g4p0 gave their blessing to ex- Born Elizabeth McKenzie, Oct.|tles were found. tending the franchise to all citi- 16, 1860, daughter of Robert and| zens over 21 who have lived in Jane McKenzie Ta pion the eity a year. ."" township, deceased mu e| I Sched ] BRAND RETIRES of the jriemers Dea been_jufis. late George Phillips in js], Shel ce u e Labor candiiate. Ford Brand, Be . Condolences were ex- Yi: mea! ey niss F B a controller for seven years, col- pressed to Sisters Moxam and cue" Camborne, and cote] or eavers Siugg, who both suffered and was formerly active With poRT HOPE -- Following ischool trustees were acclaimed [to office in Port Hope nomina- |tions last night. Trustees return- ed were: W. S. Rayner, Dr. G. A. Graham and Dr. E. A. Hunt. Re- {turned to a. three year term as {Water Commissioner by acclama- {tion, was W. Bissett. is reavements recently. Women's Auxilia ups. TEP ST ion we FEE A 0 ef oe FE welcomed and escorted by the poopecier "N.Y.; Melville, Roch-|yer = Athletic Assoeigtion. for guard of honor, as follows: Sister ogy NY; Clifford, Fonthill;|zames at the Peter Campbell Louise Clark, Warden of 'the Re-\yonnor, "Welland; Mrs. H. "E.| Memorial Arena bekah Assembly, by Sister M.[ (nya) Moore, Cobourg; Mrs. pRE WEES | Browning, PNG; Sister Gloria; her A. (Lillie) Cole, Bethel pec. 9: Jr. A -- Leafs: Bruins| Bailey, DDP, by Sister K. ArlsS:|Grove There are 16 grandchil-| _ Rangers: Hawks -- Wings. Sister Mabel Disney, PP, by Sis- 4,01 and 33 great-grandchildren. | Dec. 16: Brine Jr. A: Ran. ter M. Slugg; Sister Isabel Carr,| "py, ora) services were held No-| ors -- Leafs: Hawks -- Wingé PP, by Sister D. Nicholl: Sister yomper 29° at Tait Funeral| Win I : Meta Priestly, PP, by Sister L.\g,e Cobourg, Rev. E. C. Kel-| Thompson; Sister Clara Beaty, loway officiating. Interment fol-| PP, by Sister M. Empey; Sister ,o.4 at Bethel Grove Cemetery, Isabel Muir, PDDP, by Sister M. | hancock, PNG: Bro. Harold Wickett, PDDGM, by Bro. ers -- Bruins; Jr. A -- Hawks. | triumph over the Port Hope Jun- Dec. 30: Jr. A -- Rangers; jor C Ontarios at the Ice Palace 3 Leafs -- Hawks: Wings -- Bruins. here on Friday night before a following committal ceremony at| Jan. 6: Hawks -- Rangers: good crowd in an exhibition fray. § OE EY cre [Leafs -- Jr. A; Wings -- Bruins. Trinity were full value for their k. : : 'M. Phillips, and C. Phillips, sons; [BANTAMS Win despite the fact ports oriy The regular business over, the E. Cole, A. Moore, grandsons;| Dec. 4: Barons 'Mother', Sister Beatty, and the 3 "w "poole. |Hornets -- Bears. 'Father', Bro. H. Wickett, of the Dec. 11: Bears Ajax Lodge, spoke briefly, as did | Fi d $50 Knights -- Hornets. Knights; players working in stores. Trinity ran up a 5-0 lead in the Barons; first period and increased it to y offi i 4 7- ing the middle stanza the district and assembly officers. | Dec. 18: Knights 7-1 during Airaid Special thanks were expressed Hornets Barons. The Jame had jut, Sarteq to Sister Miriam Hancock, PNG, Jan. 1: Hornets -- Bears: Bar. When Jim Hyland got Trinity rol- for making and Sedvorating the - Knights. ling when he pencied Homme a x birthda ake, Penny-drill was .15 second mark. held, oF the meeting adjourned. Entertai t was presented by Sisters A. Collins, Slugg, Severs, | Bobier, M. Collins, Browning and | Norman, with Mrs. Jane Greer) at the piano, and very much en-| ed Bears; Jan. 15: Barons Hornets; Bears -- Knights. Possession . AJAX (Staff) -- Edward Ma- Lunch was served by Sisters A. honey, an Ajax taxi operator was Woods and her committee. Draw fined 150-and costs or one month winners were Sister Vinkle, Bee- on a charge of illegal possession hive Lodge, Bowmanville; Sister of liquor. Mahoney pleaded guil- vans, No. 3 Lodge, Oshawa, and ty before Magistrate C. W. Guest Halton, Benevolent Lodge, |in Ajax police court on Monday. operations; 14 minor operations; bour got his second goal at 10.30 Corporal Tom Chambers told and 16 emergencies. |Once again Trinity scored when ! ¢ HOSPITAL REPORT BOWMANVILLE -- The Me- morial Hospital report for week of November 24 - 30 shows to 5-0 after seventeen minutes. of there were 52 admissions; 13!play. births, seven male and six fe- ishy. { At 13.40 Pete West made it 'Trinity Trounces Junior "C's 10-2 Trinity College's first hockey|they were a man short. Monty the National Maritime Union and, Dec. 23: Wings -- Leafs; Ran- teal annexed a one - sided 10-2/Black was the marksman at the Seafarers International Union 15.30. | With seconds left in the period, Bill Haynes opened the scoring (for the Junior with Mal Stephen- |son helping on the play. | In the fifth minute of the third hat trick but Larry Battersby retaliated at 6.25 for the Oni-| ario's with the assist. being ear- ned by Teddy Watts, Trinity got two -more, how- ever, as Norm McEachern bulged the twine at 11:45 and Monty [Black got his second goal and |the last of the night at 17.10. ; | m bound al! the For Ille al | can, ¥: pares = Beals; Hor: At 5:30 with his team a man 0 short, Dave Butler made it 2-0. Trinity's top line of Barbour,| in the middle period. For Port Hope, George Fenton, |were to the fore. The losers picked up ten of the charging as the game was staged under Interrational Rules. worldwide boycott of ships flying| 'flags of convenience." | were scattered. In the United| were tied up. The demonstration, which en- tered its second day today, is duras, Costa Rica and Liberia. |By registering under these flags, | the owners benefit from tax bene. |fits and lower labor costs, trans! {port workers contend. | | Leading the worldwide action is| | the International Transport Work-| ers Federation, which claims a| | membership of 7,000,000. In the {United States, 18 unions, led by| have formed a united front. |SET UP LINES | NU President Joseph Curran |and SIU President Paul Hall said | {Monday that picket lines had| had been thrown up at piers} |dressed ten men due to some period, Barbour completed his where 75 ships were berthed and all but two ships were tied up.| In New York harbor, however, | unloading operations were halted completely at only two of six tar- get ships. A third ship began un-| loading on its own and three oth-| ers managed to unload with the| help of an independent oil work- ers unico. Thirteen ships were tied up at Delaware River. Ten ships were picketed in Mobile and eight in the 4.0 and Ross Hodgetts upped it|Mal Stephenson and Herk Martin Baltimore. Harbor police in Montreal pre-| vented picketing bv the SIU. Ca-| male; 53 discharges; 13 major short in the second, when Bar- were mostly for boarding and side harbor property and no work steve. |the Grade 9 students with their diplomas assisted by Miss Me- Mrs. Paul Diamond, represent piano, |stoppage was ordered by 'dores. for obtaining liquor as a minor. The charge of drunkenness fol- at the Community Centre Satur- States, however, possibly 70 ships day evening. Corporal Thoma 3| purposes, the same percentage as Chambers made the arrest. |, Flood was unable to pay the fines and will serve the alterna- lected only 30,736 votes, waited S. Gifford and R. Kirkpatrick aimed at ship 'owners operating|tive 10 days in Whitby jail. Flood in |until nearly midnight before con-|were nominated for two year under the flags of Panama, Hon-|agked for time to pay, but the! ceding -- and announcing his re- terms on the Hydro Commission. court was told that Flood was al- ready out on probation on other charges. | The chart shows those earning |between $5,000 and $10,000 an- | Overseas, reports of success lowed Flood's arrest at a dance |nually contribute 1.7 per cent of |their income for philanthropic [those with annual earnings be- [tween $1,000 and $3,000. Average contributions by those the $3,000-$5,000 bracket are 1.8 per cent. In the $10,000 'more, 2.6 per cent. By MRS. CHARLES REESOR PORT PERRY -- Almost 100 parents and friends of the stu- dents of Grades 9 and 10 attend- ed the Junior Commencement ex- ercises held Thursday, Nov. 27. Seated on the stage, flanked by bouquets of bronze, yellow and mauve mums, were the special guests: Mrs. W, T. Harris, Mrs. Paul Diamond, Rev. Braham, Rev. Fuller, S. Chandler, Stan Bruton and Bill Beare. The principal, G. C. MacDon- ' Pete Barbour got his first goal Hyland and Ross Hodgetts car- New Orleans and at Philadelphia g1q chairman for the ceremon (of the night at the ten miute ried the mail although Hyland 15 ships either were tied up by spoke on the oie of the mony mark with the Ports two men was moved back to defense spot nickting or kept at anchor in the in modern education. Sidney Chandler, vice-chairman of the Central Ontario county dis- trict high school board spoke of the need for more room in the Port Hope were again a man|game's thirteen penalties which nadian law forbids picketing in.|School next year, : tudents Get Aw the club's annual Christmas par- ty, this year to be held at the Baltimore hotel Dec. 16. Plans for the club's annual Christmas gifts were outlined. Each year several needy families and the counties old age home receive presents and food parcels from the clubwomen. Charles Dalton, lieutenant-gov- $25,000 group, it's two per centiernor of Price Ed and by those earning $25,000 or! 3 vas Leland, who died in 1933, was a pioneer Isilver fox breeder. Fadyen and Mr. Cole, members of the staff. | Stanley Bruton, representing [the Port Perry public {board, presented Bomnie Wal- {lace with the board's Grade 8 prizes for the most outstanding student in the class. He also pre- sented Group B of the Grade 9 students with diplomas. Mr. Bru- ton was assisted by Mrs. von |Hausen and R. L. MacDonald, The school pianist, Elizabeth Hayes, played a solo and was in- Itroduced to the audience by G. | MacDonald. William Beare, also represent- ing the district high school board, |assisting by Miss Brock and Mr. Cole, presented the Athletic awards. Rev. Mr. Fuller presented Jim Read with the R. B. Smallman At Port Perry ards, Diplomas ling the Honeydale Women's In |stitute, presented Patsy Midgley with the Institute's $10 prize for schooli proficiency in Grade 10 Home Ee- {onomics. The IODE Scholarship for the student with the highest average in the full matriculation course of Grades 9 and 10 was presented to Kathleen Trenka by Mrs. W. T. Harris. Mrs, Harris also presented Lil- lian Couves with the IODE Eng- |lish Prize for the highest standing {in Grade 12 English. | Group C of the Grade § stu. |dents were 'presented with di. plomas by Rev. J. K. Braham assisted by Miss Brock and Mr, Baxter. Following these presen. tations two vocal numbers were sung by the Couves sisters, He then presented Group A of Trophy for highest standing in/Betty, Ruth and Lillian accom- |Grade 9. |panied by Marilyn Reesor on the a I E--------