THE OSHAWA TIMES, Friday, July 31, 1959 |wounds in the head, AT COBOURG Missing COBOURG (Staff) -- 3 vad d sed , identified 2 that of Charles Pearson, 56, o RR 3, Cobourg, missing from hi | home since July 13, was foun shortly before moon Thursday i the bush two miles south © Pearse Park. Police report tha death was caused W , Zuishe have been seif-inflicted. Walter Copeland, 32, of RR 3, Cobourg, was out fishing when he stumbled upon the body near a creek. A shotgun lay close by. He ran two miles to notify the provincial police, who called Cor- oner J. F. Leeson of Cobourg. Investigation showed that the gun had been ak by a left-| handed person. earson was known to be left-handed. Dr. vith ice, decided mo inquest wat secoary and ordered the ed ) terment was in St. Peter's Ceme- Surviving are two brothers, "IN THE SWIM OF THINGS chev who gestures at left. At extreme right is Dr. Milton Eisenhower, brother of the president. This is one of a se- | ries of pictures made by Asso- | ciated Press Photographer Henry Griffin who covered the | event on.a pool basis. --AP Wirephoto Bathers reach up to shake hands with Vice-President Rich- ard M. Nixon during motor- boat ride on Moscow river with Soviet Premier Nikita Khrush- r NU | OMB Rejects Metro At Ajax Bylaw Hearing By JOHN MIL AJAX (Staff) -- Despite a dis- comfort index that reached a new high for the year on Thursday, town authorities felt much more comfortable when the Ontario Mu- nicipal Board announced that it) would give final approval to the town's zoning and land use bylaw subject to some minor changes. The hearing was held in crowd- Hotel Ajax property being class-|ouly reference to the ed as residential. He said the board and did not recog hotel, which stands on four-and-a members. half acres of land had been used) METRO OBJECTIONS as an hotel for many years. | Mr, Kennedy said the two tie | togeth tin w. HOTEL TURNED DOWN Jogenjer, a Mr. Martin was al. Mr. K bed ie owed to register his objections. Mr. Kennedy asked William |yg. npartin told the board ti McDonald, vice-president of the Met: s : Joan that : : Metro objected to extending in- hotel company, why he had not dustrial land to the lak : made it a condition of purchase; | e lake. He said planning nize staff {it sk George, with whom the dead man lived, Joseph, and one sis- |ter, Mrs. A. Leetham, Cobourg. | Charlie Pearson was not mar- i had lived with his] brother George for manv years. | The brothers owned an 80-acre farm at Creighton Heights, left to them by their father. They did 'Board Decides On Two New Found Shot Leeson, on further investigation A 26 Seek Job Manage Home COBOURG (Staff) -- Twenty six applications for the position of superintendent and matron at the Home for the Aged have been received by the United Counties Council, Board of Mau: the hoard will likely be presented to the next meeting of the United Counties council, Aug. 11. Mr. and Mrs. William Duncan, who have been in charge of the pot it, say members of the pub- home since January, 1946, Te-|jic ytilifies commission , explain- cently submitted their resigna-| ino that the odor is caused by tions effective Aug. 1. Mr. |algae, a marine growth. can is 70 years of age and his "tye gigae drifts in with the wile 65: balmy southwest breezes, acou- mulates around rocks and along the beaches and stays there, Algae Odors Load Cobourg Balmy Breezes COBOURG (Staff) -- Breezes blowing off Lake Ontario over the town are less than fragrant; in fact they smell to high heaven, as many residents i nthe west end of town have been quick to point out. Man ot work the farm, both men orking at outside jobs. George Pearson told police that n the morning of July 13, his rother left the house in a hurry, aving many personal belong- ings, pipes, wallet and keys, be- 'ind. George didn't think too much bout his brother leaving be- cause more than once Charlie had left home suddenly without SE rs a when would ck. He usually showed up after a few SHALLOW LAKE . os pile Boy far + mune ", : y epi eet, comp. on te B00 Genre ion 1,302 feet in the deepest paris of telling how, after Charlie had Lake Superior. been away a week, he had asked | provincial police to look for him. | search of the area around the| house, the nearby woods and| wells, failed to reveal any trace of the missing man. "I figured he took off with a friend, or to find a job some-| where away from here," said] George. A shotgun had disappeared) from the Pearson place, but George thought that had been be- fore Charlie disappeared. "I guess I was wrong," mused George. "He must have took it PHONE with him." Charlie Pearson was a famitiar | AJAX 333 figure in Cobourg. He had work- f 5 x Ss ¢ k of | | ed for 15 years as caretaker Al colts must be placed | SUBSCRIBERS THE TIMES BOWMANVILLE FOR MISSED PAPERS AND BOWMANVILLE'S FINEST TAXI SERVICE PHONE STEVEN'S TAXI MA 3-5822 If you have not received your Times, phone your carrier boy first, If yo. cre unable to con- tact him by 7:00 p.m. FOR MISSED PAPERS If you have not received your Times by 7 p.m. call AJAX TAXI TELEPHONE STEVEN'S TAXI Calls Accepted Between 7-7:30 p.m. only cently been employed by the There isn't much can be done ank and smelling, until an off- shore wind comes along and blows it out again. Health oficers say the stuff is harmless to bathers, but ex- tremely unpleasant to the olfac- tory organ (your ller). It ap- makes the user happy. Algae loves if too, In Europe they do about it. The farmers collect it from the beaches and use it for fertilizer, solving two problems at the same time. pears to be on the increase, en- couraged by household type de- |tergents entering the lake. Sul- phide is the ingredient in deter- gents which forms the suds. It has no cleaning properties, but it NORWAY MAGNESIUM Norway's largest electro-chem- ical plant will increase its mag- nesium production to 13,500 tons annually by 1960. LOANS $50 to $5000 without endorsers or bankable security SS UPERIOR FINANCE 17 SIMCOE ST. OPEN FRIDAY NORTH--RA 5-6541 TILL 8 P.M, CLOSED SATURDAY DURING JULY AND AUGUST Branch Offices throughout Ontario ral 1 room, and had 're- 2 Jocal Dov before 7:30 p.m. | McDonald Construction Co., work-| ing on the new Highway 401. High Schools BOWMANVILLE Durham district high school board has passed a motion to build two new high schools, one fo be located in Darlington and the other in Mill- brook. An amendment that the new schools be located in Bow- | manville and Millbrook was furn- |ed down by the casting vote of (the chairman. The motion will now be presented for approval to {the eight municipalities compris- ling the high school district. | . The action by the board follows [the stalemate caused when some | municipalities refused to go along | with plans for three high schools. Some were agreeable, but would not go along on the question of ED ed council chambers before A. L. Kennedy, - chairman and Claire Nunn, member W. H. J. Thompson appearing for the town said there were two major changes in the new bylaw. An extension of industrial land to the lake, and a residential hold designation on about 50 per cent of lands formerly classified as agricultural -are shown. The green belt along the lake front is now classified as open space. Chief objections came from Hotel Ajax Ltd., which wanted its holdings re-classified commercial instead of residential. P. J. Mar- from Central Mortgage and Hous- | ing Corporation that the land be rezoned McDonald admitted that knew the land on which the hotel stands was zoned residential| when he purchased it. | Mr. Kennedy said that he| would not change the zoning. He| could see no hardship, because| it was bought while residential] zoning existed | P. J. Martin appearing on be-| half of the staff of thé Metro Planning Board submitted a let-| ter asking that the hearing be| adjourned until September, to| give the Metro Board time to e agricultural. Mr. Martin {town on the agricultural land west hould be zoned "Residential C0 / Two municipalities, Bow- {manville and Darlington, propos- |ed to pull out of the high school 2] said it| was the opinion of Metro that it should be industrial, to tie in with industrial zoning in Pickering Township, Bid Kennedy, in giving ard's. decision, said it would| epartm leave the zoning as the town| of et hom Ye Sepa inent asked. Industrial fo the lake. The| lan to institute a limited voca- board also decided in favor of the A 21" course at Bowmanville in September. Principal L. W. Dippell of Bow- manville stated that he would Hold : A second objection was to zon- ing of land west of the creek as Estimated cost of the two new {high schools was not mentioned |in the proposal, but it is expect- |ed this will be included before the| the motion is presented to the mu- | nicipalities concerned. of the creek. Cutler and McGrath told the vard that they had a plan of] : ivisi {have 800 pupils in September and complete the town's 'Official sub-division before the Minister of | in view & this he was given per- plan". While Ajax is not part Panning and development. Mr.| cco © engage another secre- of Metro, the town is part of the! ~conedy said in that event, the ory to assist with clerical work. Metro Planing area, matter might come. before the! TIMES BUREAUS W. H. J. Thompson submitted ™unicipal board in the near fu- | tin, a staff member of the Metro Planning Board, and Mr. Cutler and Mr. McGrath, who wanted lands west of Duffin's Creek classed as residential rather than agricultural. Other changes were minor. G. 8. Horgan objected to the PICKERING RATEPAYERS Brief Bucks CN Line Plan PICKERING (Staff) The with resulting financial distress South-West Pickering Ratepay- to the owners: indirectly affect | ers Association, has prepared a the entire population of the south- brief for prescntation.to the min- ern section of Pickering, an area ister of transport, Ottawa. The of residential development con- group is appealing a decision of taining three-quarters of the pop- the Toronto terminals project of- ulation of the township; disrupt fic of the Canadian National existing roads, schools. green Railways to build an access rail-|belt areas and will parallel High- wa line through southwest Pick-|way 401 too closely from Liver- that the Metro Planning Board ture and the evidence in support | had no status at a hearing on a of ihe Petition should be Yeard| land use bylaw, and the Act had at_that me. i | I $ i ------| Imperial Oil Company was! |siven a C3 zoning on its Har- | wood avenue property, instead of i ithe C2 which would prevent 3 3 0kn ills change in the property. The council will now make the | required changes in the bylaw | BOWMANVILLE and resubmit it to the OMB for Rae Hopkins Ma. 38-7282 final approval. The present bylaw {extends to September. i Ajax 426 ~™™\ g into e°° ering to Vaughan township mar- shalling yards, The route of the line, as pres- ently proposed, passes through an area of the township classi- fied as residential. The route takes off the CNR mainline at Liverpool road, and runs parallel to Highway 401. It crosses high- ways 401 and No. 2 at the middle of Dunbarton to reach the 1st. Concession road. Then it runs parallel along the north side of the 1st Concession until reaches the Rouge Valley, where it turns north-west and follows the edge of the Rouge Valley to underpass the existing CPR mainline. The association maintains the line should be re-routed because ... "it does not conform with Donald Gordon's professed in- struction, stated in a letter to an associate member, that the access line should be built in such a way as to cause least in- convenience to residents, to pass through land already zoned as in dustrial, or oper country and to be as short as possible." SEEKS EQUAL TREATMENT The association maintains that Pickering township occupies a position in the north eastern cor ner of Metro Toronto comparable to that of Toronto township in the south western corner, and that major concessions have been made to Toronto township planning. It is felt that similar concessions must be made to Pickering planning In Toronto township, the CNR has decided not to build nine miles of the proposed route, but to use the existing facilities The CNR also re-routed the remaining portion of the line in Toronto township near Malton The - association claims that funds saved in Toronto township should be used to help other townships has OBJECTIONS ! The association brief lists the| following objections. The pro-| posed line will have a disastrous effect on township plans for the future; have a serious effect on future township planning; ad versely affect over 450 properties pool road to Dunbarton The proposed rail line "will do a maximum amount of damage to the land use policies that should be pursued in the township in the next 25 years. The township already has three main line railways and three main highways running through it, and since the southern tip of the township narrows down to a small triangle, two of these rail lines and two highways are only a short distance apart at many points, dissecting the southern area into a series of small strips." wo rth tookin 5? The association further claims that the proposed rail line will seriously interfere with the rela- tionship of residential lands with existing green belt areas. . . . "The Rouge Valley is at present accessible to lands in the Rouge Park area and as presently con- ceived will have lots with direct access to the valley. The line will sever the residential area from the valley, and bring about its depreciation the proximity of the valley is a major reason for the construction of home sites in the area." Fresh full-power Canadian built Willard Batteries . . « guaranteed for 4 full years . . . dry charged or factory-filled . . . both 6-velt and 12-volt types in economy, heavy duty and premium service grades. See your nearby Willard vecien . A refreshing sip after a refreshing dip... that adds up to king size pleasure for the McGuire Sisters. Only Coca-Cola has that world-famous cold crisp taste, that wel NIVEA GF Ufo Be MARK: REG. THREE PROPOSALS The brief submits three pro- posals to the CNR | 1. Adopt an alternate route| consonant with good principles! of town planning i 2. Provide a subway where the | rail line passes through built-up! and recreational areas 3. Reimburse property owners vithin a quarter of a mile of the line for obvious loss of property values, and reimburse the town- ship in perpetuity for loss of assessment revenue The association closes ite brief with the suggestion that an ideal! route for the proposed line would be for the CNR to share the right of way with the CPR from near] Oshawa to the Rouge Valley | The association points out the following advantages: It will not concentrate major rail traffic in one area, an area not built up because of the pres- | ence of one rail line. WILLARD BATTERIES Are Available At W. R. CHAPMAN AUTO ELECTRIC LTD. 16 CHURCH ST., OSHAWA RA 3-226) WILLARD BATTERIES Are Available At ALLEN BROTHERS GARAGE HWY. 2, BOWMANYVILLE WILLARD BATTERIES Are Available At VIRTUE'S GARAGE TYRONE -- BOWMANVILLE Get value... lift... refreshment tool GET CARTONS OF KING SIZE TODAY! nth rtzed bottier of Coco-Coba niin cori Mh CicsCote UR come lift that really refreshes! 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