Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 9 Nov 1959, p. 3

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Marie, Terry and Jerry, chil- dren of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Joh of Ni weya town- ship, near Guelph dig into their first square meal in days after FIRST SQUARE MEAL a humane society officer found the family without food. They had been living on potatoes and turnips for 'quite a long time' and for the last two days had been eating only raw onions. Quick action bythe official, who had gone to the farm home orig- inally to investigate a report pies were being starved, got My, Johnston a weod-cutting job within hours. Welfare officials TAXI SLAYING McKee, Youth Sentenced To Be Hanged 2, BRACEBRIDGE (CP)--Marvin fore it filed out to of Huntsville was verdict cn McKee, Mr. 1a the Refurbished 0ld Homes In Future By FORBES RHUDE C Justice § sentenced Saturday to be hanged Danis sa'd McKee's evidence was |Jan. 27 for the June 17 slaying a network of fabrication. of taxi-iriver Bruce Spiers. "It strikes me," he said. "that | The all-male Supreme Court the story 'oid by McKee is not {jury deliberated 48 minutes be- {fore returning a verdict of guilty |of murder. Spiers 'was being tried / with Wayne Sluman, 17, also of Hunts-| ville, for the slaying of the 22-| vear-old Spiers whose body was found with its skull crashed be- side that of cab driver Francis| (Fritz) Grosso, 29. the story of an honest man. It doesn't scem reasonable to me. I don't I'ke his evidence. I don't accept it." But he cautioned the' jury not to let his personal view over- come their own opinions. WILL APPEAL McKes'e counsel William Both men Green, said later he would ap- {been shat and robbed of $24 and peal, la f | Their bodies were found 18/25 witnesses and 30 exhi # miles southeast of Huntsville 11 fore the jurz. |days after they left Dwight to called the Crow wrist watch. E |pick up a fare. |" As M2Kee was escorted from asked the jury not to consider ment. the after, the evidence of Sluman, . |he A bri worker, worry, I'll be back." HOWS RESENTMENT a Then he turned to the court shot them through the head and Urbs such as occurred in the late ntment: then returned the following day 1910s. provided the family with gro- ceries and had them enrolled for welfare aid for which they did not know they were en- titled. S (CP Wirephoto) CAPSULE NEWS Top Farmers Are Honored TORONTO (CP) -- An award system to honor outstanding farmers aged 21 to 35 in 13 Ou- tario districts will be started in 1930, it was announced at the all- Ontario conference of the Junior Chamber of Cemmerce during the weekend. Prizes will be based on farming ability and community leadership. BEATEN, ROBBED PETERBOROUGH (CP)--Pro- vincial police sent out a prov-| ince-wide alarm Sunday for two men wanted in connection with the robbery and beating Satur- day of a 71-year-old shopkeeper. Police said Solomon Salhany was robbed of an estimated $2,000 after being hit on the head sev- eral times with a stove poker. Police said the elderly man | LAW STUDENTS ORGANIZE tive meeting at Queen's Univer sity here during the weekend Bob Higgins of the University © ident. DEFICIT REPORTED penditures of $1,537,025 1958-59 academic year June 30, university ported. CHESS SET AUCTIONED LONDON (AP) -- A KINGSTON (CP)--The Central and Eastern Canada Law Stu- dents Association held its forma- New Brunswick was elected pres- ! | WINDSOR (CP) -- Assumption| | University and its affiliated col-} leges had a combined deficit of | $51,291 with total operating ex-|ig and "And ycu call this justice. Friday Sluman pleaded to a re- with a rock, smashing his skull. reach the proportions of an inva- duced and was sentenced to 15 years McKee w: crowded. courtrcom aring the verdict he laid other Mer), a Sudbury steel- and muttered: "Don't spat out his charge of manslaughter a hand on the shoulder of his older able that tv Crown Attorey Alex Hall put bits be- McKee'e counsel n's case a web evidence and of circumstantial Mr. Green said it was unthink- 0 boys so well known in Huntsville and even by their victims would set out to rob and murder them, Mr. Hall said McKee had lured each man to a nearby hilltop and to rob them &nd finish of Snlevs Sluman wes arrested first and sion "like we have never seen | Haliburton region; Variable picked vp later with |in penitentiary by Mr. Justice Annie Young, 17 of Oshawa in in the ending treasurer Rev. Edward A. Roberts, has re. MRS. WINIFRED LACY CORNER Many residents of Oshawa and 'Russian whithy were saddened early this 8!d, a daughter, ¢? Farewell avenue, died at "i awa General No surviving relatives are known. | Service will be in the W. C. Town Funeral Chapel on Tues- OBITUARIES FD In his charge to the jury be- north of Huntsville. COMMUNITY CHEST day, Nov. 10 at 2 p.m. Interment will be in the Veterans' Plot, Groveside Cemetery, Brooklin, Ontario. Rev. David Marshall of St. Andrew's Church will conduct : the service. Members of Branch 112, Cana- dian Legion, will act as pall- bearers, and will also conduct a graveside service. MRS. JOSEPH DZUGAN Mrs. Joseph Dzugan, Osh- go Nov. 7, following a short illness. |, The former Joyce Leona Hrab-|Qg luck, Mrs. Dzugan was the daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Hrabluck, of Burlington, Ont. : Mrs. Dzugan was born in Mani- ¥° toba Sept. 26, 1930. She married [© in Toromto, in 1953, and has lived in Oshawa for five years. She was an active member of the la- dies' section of the Ukrainian Businessmen's Association. Mrs. Dzugan is survived by her husband, her parents, a son, Ron- Noreen, and of 300|the Community Chest is gett 2 Days Left In Campaign Anybody who gives a dollar to they will have to hurry up with and upkeep, he commented, sel-| vod value for their money, wa omen who canvassed part shawa's outlying districts. Hospital Saturday, thes comment today of one of the of "They can't realize what it is ou a dollar as a contribution r 16 charities", she said. "They have no idea what the VON would mean to them if they were to get sick or what it costs to keép Camp Scmac that so many of their children enjoy", she pointed out. Often, the canvasser said, peo- ple just handed over a dollar to all about or they would not give g/thase cheques," she said. Miss Vera Moyse, chairman of the outlaying district canvass, has been helped by representa- tives of St. John ambulance the Girl Guides, the YWCA, the Women's Welfare Association, the VON, Cercbral Palsy Parent Council and the Red Cross. Miss Moyse said that on the whole, contributions appeared to be coming in better than last year. The canvassers had nearly all finished their rounds, she said. Bill Paynter, chairman of the Community Chest emapaign, had a word for canvassers who are dian Press Busi Editor TORONTO (CP)--A new house in suburbia--or an older refur- bished house in the eity. This is the choice which real estate men may have to offer buyers in the future, David M, Walker, United States urban re- |newal commissioner, said today. Addressing the "build America better" committee of the tional Association of Real Estate Beards, Mr. Walker envisaged the modernization of older homes (on scales similar to housing de- |velopments in the suburbs. He urged the committee to give emphasis on urban renewal in the sense of refurbishing of cntire neighborhoods, and not just clearance and redevelop- | |SEES SUBURB EXPLOSION While Mr, Walker urged a sec- ond look at the city to meet the needs bf growing population, B. E. Willoughby, realtor and farm broker of Toronto, forecast an- cther "'explosion" into the sub- THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, November 9, 1959 3 WEATHER FORECAST | Nice, Pleasant, Some Clouds TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts issued by the weather office at 5am.: Synopsis: Seasonal tempera- B Na- Tie trend to the suburbs would before." a A ; Mr. Willoughby spoke to the|flurries toda the Elk Lake district 200 miles nypticnal Institute of Farm Brok-|chznge in ____ |ers, which like a number of other [south affiliate organizations, is holding its annual meeting simultane- ously with that of the National Association of Real Esiate Boards, a U.S. organization with Canadian menfbership. HOMES OVER-PRICED Louie Reese of Birmingham, Ala., said home - owners some- times 'innocently' over - price tieir homes when' they come to sell them, Improvements, remodelling dom add as much to a home's over-all value as they cost, but |several coats of paint, one on top of the other. | The comments of the various speakers were contained in texts made available to the press in advance of delivery. Some 5,000 delegates are at- tending the convention. | | | owners sometimes even try to/imen cumulate in value the cost of the said |Cloudy with sunny intervals and tures with some cloud and some are expected over southwestern Ontario through Tuesday. Mainly cloudy skies with periods of light snow will persist over the cen- tral and morthern regions as an- other weak disturbance moves through the north Tuesday. midnight Tuesday: Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Lake Ontario regions, Niagara, Wind- sor, London, Hamilton, Toronto: Partly cloudy today and Tuesday. Little change in temperature. Winds southwest 15 both after- noons. Georgian Bay, Kirkland Lake regions, North Bay, Sudbur*: a few snowflurries today. Cloudy with occasional light snow Tues- Regional forecasts valid until M sess ssenanes Kapuskasing . White River EEE RERESsS 8S BHERESSEasE SS TORONTO (CP) *-- Tempera tures: Dawson Victoria ........ Edmonton . Regina Winnipeg Fort William ... White River ... $8. Marie gee day. Little ch n pera- ture. Winds west 15 today, south- west 15 Tuesday. Timmins-Kapuskasing: Mostly cloudy with snowflurries today. Cloucy with periods o" light snow tonight and Tuesday. Winds light today, south 15 Tucsdav. with a few snow- y and Tuesday. Little temperature. Winds hwest 15 both afternoons. Forecast Temperatures Low tonight High Tuesday . .. Windsor 30 50 St. Thomas Paper Made From Sawgrass MIAMI (AP) -- Paper is being made experimentally from the worthless sawgrass of Florida's Everglades. Dr. R. V. Allison of the exper- tal station at Belle Glades harvesting equipment will have to be developed 'but there is no question that sawgrass is an excellent source of a very good grade of printing paper." The experiments were carried on at a Peoria, I11., papermaking cloudiness firm which processed two 125- pound bales of sawgrass. Preliminary results were highly Woman Dies success ul, Allison said, adding: "Sawgrass makes a newsprint of a better grade than news- papers now use. Some day Flor- ida newspapers may be publish- North Bay Sudbury .. Muskoka Huntsville Windsor London ... Toronto Killaloe Ottawa ... Montreal ... Quebec .... Halifax NOW ON DISPLAY' AT YOUR DEALER'S LENITH NATIONWIDE William Sam-|get rid of the canvasser. finally told the men where to find and| "It is frustrating", she had to his money. He was reported in two sisters, Mrs. bluck (Mabel) of Toronto, chess .sct sold at auction at geek to learn of the death in | isti i 5 i rass newsprint right Christies for 1,700 guineas ($5,- Windsor of Mrs. Winifred Lacy ing on sawg P ig not through yet. satisfactory condition in hospital. SUPERMARKET BURNED HAMILTON (CP) -- Four per-| sons escaped unhurt Saturday) might when fire ripped through a Hamilton North supermarket and variety store causing an esti- 998). Each piece was set with dmperial Czarist crown in silver. The buyer was a dealer from Fiorence. CHECK TV ADS NEW YORK (AP) -- Certain mated $200,000 damage. David Wood, 13, assisted a passing arson squad is investigating the fire. RUSSIANS TO VISIT OTTAWA (CP) Some 11 Canadian International Paper| Company. He was a member of| a nine-man delegation of the| Canadian Pulp and Paper Asso ciation just returned from the| Soviet Union. MARATHON MARCHERS | LONDON (AP)--Peter Degnan, 24-year-old Royal Marine reserv- ist, marched 110 miles in 36 hours, 27 minutes and claimed Sunday this is a world record. Were reported inflicted on the Derek Mullins, 22, another ma- rine reservist, started out with not identified. APPROVE BOURGUIBA TUNIS (AP)--A heavy turnout representatives of the Soviet pulp|0of Tunisian voters Sunday ap-|, and paper industry are expected proved the pro-West regime of to visit Canada next spring for President Habib Bourguiba and four weeks, it was reported Sun-|his ruling Neo Destour party. | ion day night by Geoffrey D. Hugh-|Bourguiva, who was unopposed, jively son, research director for the has led Tunisia since the coun-' pecointi rom try won independence France 3% years ago. CHINA FARMERS REBEL TAIPFI, Formosa (AP)--More than 2,000 farmers staged an up- rising last weck in the Manchu- {rian province of Hsingan, Chinese Nationalist information effice government dispatched. Heavy rebels by machine-gun fire, the said Sunday, and Communist trodps had to be casualties | Degnan but folded up with a cramp after covering 104 miles in 35 hours, 10 minutes. SHORT ON STEEL, TV BERLIN (AP)--East Germany| Sunday acknowledge failure to| reach some ol it: ambitious in- dustrial production targets for 1959. Neues Deutschland, Com-| munist parly newspaper, said the couat-y has fallen short by a "considerable percentage" of the scheduled outpul of steel, fer-| tilizer, harvesting machines and television sets | PICKET EMBASSY OTTAWA (CP) --- About 150 persons marched in front of the Russian Embassy here Saturday night while Soviet Ambassador Amasasp Aroutunian entertained at a reception celebrating the an- niversary of the Bolshevik Revo- lution. Police said the demonstra- tion was peaceful and that par- ticipants were believed to be mainly Hungarian immigrants. CROSSES ATLANTIC ALONE BURGLAR GETS TOUGH BATTLE INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -- MI- chael Tarrants, 13, has seen an Indian fight or two on televis- fon, and he knew what to do when he saw an arm thrust through a broken kitchen win- dow Saturday. Michael grabbed his bow and shot an arrow into the arm, The arm's owner, James Thomas, 37, proceeded into the house. A neighbor boy who had been watching television with Michael ran out ard flagged down the car of Deputy Sheriff John Powell. When Powell came galloping to the rescue, Michael and his brother were busy throwing hot water on the intruder. Thomas, wound in his left arm, was ar- rested on a preliminary charge of burglary. nursing an arrow | Corner. Funeral diamonds and rubies and bore| in be announced JStangemoits the | Toronto. Mrs. Walter Andrews (Anne) of admit. | Numbers o f people canvassed left. tbe The body is resting at Arm-|insisted that they would send in Wcund up by Wednesday night", "There are only three days The campaign must In April of this year, Mrs. strong's Funeral Home. The fu-|their contributions on the cheque he said. |Corner resigned her post as resi- neral service will be conducted|f>rms mailed to them by the |dence supervisor at the Oshawa hv Rev. J. C. Pereyma, at St.|Chest, |YWCA, a post she had occupied George's Ukrainian Greek Catho- with distinction for five years. gan said years as deputy matron of Der-| House School, Liverpool, England and for four years, sup- erintencent of an Anglican Church home in Montreal. understanding, loyalty and devo. which, combined with perience for them which was one of lasting influence for good. | Mrs. Corner's work in the area of counselling was especially noteworthy. She was not only a house mother for the girls who lived in residence, and there were over three hundred during her stay, but her counselling ser-| vices were used by many others in the community who needed help with personal problems. She was keenly interested in the YWCA, not only as a com | munity agency, but as part of |a national and world movement and she will be greatly missed {by her colleagues in Oshawa and| {other parts of Canada, She was a member of S i. To her work as residence sup- rvisor in the YWCA, Mrs. Corn- er brought many fine qualities of sense of humor, made her on with the girls an ex- WILLIAM PALMER PARKINSON tire last terncon while m. |Canadian Legion ¢ He was 73. arching in th was returning from St. | Evangelist church to the Legi "Hall when Mr. Palmer collapsed and died on Cochrane street. Born in Dublin, Parkinson William Palmer Parkinson, re-| ] d resident of Whitby for the ister Dielenbaker Friday sent a seven years, died Sunday af- message of sympathy to Presi- Branch 112, Canadian Legion h S Jon te Jalisco. Please accept for vour- Ireland, Mr. lived at 508 Byron the campaign closes and that MESSAGE FROM CANADA OTTAWA (CP) -- Prime Min- e/dent Lopez Mateos of Mexico hurch parade. concerning floods in that coun- |try. It said: "I was shocked to learn of the disaster which has ruck the states of Coloma and self and the Mexican people the most heartfelt sympathy of the Canadian government and peo- " | "I hope they realize that there {lic Church. Interment will be at are only three days left before television commercials are being| Prior to coming to the YWCA,|St. Gregory's cemetery. investigated by District Attorney Mrs. Corner had served for four motorist, Robert McMinn of | Frank 8. Hogan for possible years as matron of Ontario Lad- Hamilton, to warn tenants in two!fraud, and some action may re-|ies' College, Whitby; for two| econd - floor apartments, The Sult, 8 spokesman for Ho 3 P {Saturday. The commercials were went street north in Whitby. He lived for some years in| Toronto where he worked in the| receiving department of the T.| Eaton Co. He retired in 1951 and| came to Whitby the following CITY AND DISTRICT year, | In 1922, in Hamilton, he mar-| ried the former Violet Brown.| She survives him, cl STREETS CLOSED The following streets will be osed for construction today: Mr. Parkinson was a member Chevrolet street, from Sherwood of Whitby United church as well|avenue to Bedford avenue; High. as holding membership in Branch|la 112, Canadian Legion. He was a|to veteran of World War I, served|south from King street east to| gy ith the 11th Cavalry regiment Bloor street east; Farewell aven-||;¢ |ue, closed from Veterans road | wi of the Royal Hussars. nd avenue, from Olive avenue Vimy avenue; Grandview | | Surviving, besides his wife, are/to Harbour road. Whenever pos- a daughter, Mrs. G. George's Memorial Church and|Pat3, of Hamilton; a son Stanley ly opened to permit movement o active in the women's work. | Mrs. Corner is mourned by| two daughters, Mrs. William! Brooke of Quebec City and Mrs. |J. B. Stevens, Wind or, Ontario,| |and seven grandchildren, also two brothers, one in England and one in Vancouver. | WILLIAM ROBERT JONES William Robert Jones, 71, died of Whitby; and a brother, Henry, lo of Toronto. cal traffic. Extreme weather |conditions, such as heavy rain, Tractor-Car Collision Injures 2 BOWMANVILLE (Staff) -- Two persons were admitted to Ross Memorial Hospital, Lindsay, in ctitical condition Saturday night, as a result of a tractor-car col- lision about 6 p.m. at Janetville, Mary Lou Walker, 10, o' Black- |stock, was taken to hospital suf- |fering from five fractures of the upper part of each leg, a fractur- ed pelvis and undetermined inter- nal injuries. James A. Fallis, 1, Blackstock, is suffering a possible fractured skull and mul- tiple injuries. It is believed the girl was rid- ing behind a tractor driven by her father, Joseph Walker, when it was struck from behind, when apparently attempting to turn into a driveway, by a car driven by Ross Pollard, 46, of RR 1, Janet- ville. When the tractor was struck jt rned over, pinning the girl, Fal- was a passenger in the Pol- ard car. OPP Constable Bruce Tillson Wade, Bar-|sible, these streets will be partial-|jnvestio y investigated. GETS 25-YEAR SENTENCE MONTREAL (CP) -- William The body is resting at the W.'may result in the closing of other Doucette, 36 - year - old Ottawa Town Funeral Chapel in Whit-|st by. The service will be held at| :30 p.m. on Wednesday, Nov. 11. Interment will be in the Vet-| erans Plot,' Groveside Cemetery, ported a false alarm at Brooklin, Ontario. Rev. John Smith, Whibty Un.|from the box at the post of conduct the|Simcoe and Athol streets. An-[years, he also was sentenced to ited Church will reets. FALSE ALARM |sailor, Friday was sentenced to |25 years in penitentiary for the |shooting of his common law wife Oshawa Fire Department ve-|and for armed holdup. Found suddenly Saturday, Nov. 7, at his|service, Members of Branch 112/other alarm came from the home home Whitby. Born in Fenelon Falls, son of James and Margaret Jones, Mr. | Jones lived in the Fenelon district {until about 20 years ago when he| |came to Whitby. | He was a member of St. |Andrew's Presbyterian Church, conduct a graveside service with Legion chaplin Rev. David Smith. MRS. LOUISE PERRY Funeral services were conduct- | th | vi Th ro! 427 Brock street north, will act as pallbearers and will|of A. F. Foote, 171 Church street, OF fat 11.30 p.m. Sunday. This was e result of ® short in the tele- sion set. The damage was slight. he department reported five utine ambulance calls. ed Friday, Nov. 6, for Mrs. Louise Perrv, who died at Nursing Home, Bowmanville, mi ent was at Oshawa Union Ce- {Whitby; he was also a member |Nov. 4. She was in her 78th year. metery. The pallbearers were: Al- |of Branch 112, Canadian Legion.| The service was conducted by bert Gregory, Percy Nixon, Sam- | St.|uel Adair, Nelson Perry, Phillip {He was a veteran of World War ST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP)--Capt. Tom Dower, who set out from Rev. Clinton Cross, of II, serving in the 109th Battalion. George's Anglican Church, at the|Perry and James Perry. here Oct. 13 to cross the Atlantic|,.. alone in a home-made boat, has| arrived safely in the Azores, he advised his family by telegram | Sunday. He made the trip be- | cause he wanted a kind of holiday." FIND MAIL IN CREEK LONDON, Ont. (CP) vincial police have much of the mail contained in a| bag, stolen Thursday morning| from the Mt. Brydges post ofice. | Raymond Courant of Tiderton| found the letters, many of them | still tied in bundles, floating in| Medway Creek, a few miles west | of here. | HOFFA UNOPPOSED | DETROIT (AP) -- James R.| Hoffa, head of the Teamsters Union, was renominated without opposition as president of his home Local 299 in Detroit. He has held the job since .1938. Only 700 of the local's 17,000 members attended the nominating session. Pro- "different | recovered This was the line-up of top | versary of the Communist revo- | President Klementi Voroshilov; Soviet figures as they reviewed ceremonies in Moscow's Red Square marking the 42pd anni- RED HIERARCHY OBSERVES ANNIVERSARY : lution in Russia. From le't atop | the Stalin-Lenin mausoleum out- | side the Kremlin walls were: ! Marshal Redion Malinovsky, de- fence minister, Premier Nikita Khrushchev; unidentified fig- | ure; Mikoyan and presidium mem- ber: Mikhail Suslov. | deputy premier Anastas --AP Wirephoto | 6.45 guilty of manslaughter |a.m., Sunday. The alarm came |APril 28 death of Claire Rochon Marnwood | Armstrong Funeral Home. Inter-| in the fice |Cooper, 35, for which he drew 20 |five years for a $12 armed holdup |of a Montreal taxi driver, GREATFISHERIES | Marketed value of Canadian fisheries in 1956 reached $198,- 000,000 of whick freshwater fish | accounted for$20,000,000. be In Crash 'Near Qrono ORONO (Staff) -- Mrs, John Broome (Eva) 40, of RR 4, Bow- manville, was killed instantly at the intersection of Clarke town- ship Concession 7 and the Clarke- Darlington township line, about three miles north-west of here, as a result of a car mishap Sunday night. Her 10-year-old daughter, Susan, is in critical condition in Bowmanville 'Memorial. Hospital suffering from a fractured leg, |head injuries and shock. Apparently Mrs. Broome was travelling west on the 7th Coa- cession which ends at the Clarke- Darlington line, where the road runs north and south. She appar- ently failed to negotiate a turn, and ran off the west end of the road into a tree. A passing motorist found the car with its two occupants and called for help. Coroner Dr. C. J. Austin pronounced the victim {dead at the scene. OPP Constable Jack Cartwright |investigated, assisted by Consta- |ble Jim McDonald, from their back door." COMING EVENTS CHRISTMAS tea bazaar, Eighth Sea Scouts Mothers' Aux'liary, to be held at Christ Church Hall, corner Hillcroft and Mary, Wednesday, November 11 at 2:30 p.m, Nursery care 'for children. WOODVIEW PARK MONSTER BINGO $1,300 PRIZES $100 DOOR PRIZES (Jackpot Nos. 55-58) - TONIGHT RED BARN 26% KINSMEN BINGO TUESDAY NOV. 10 JUBILEE PAVILION FREE ADMISSION EXTRA BUSES Jackpot Nos. 54 and 50 @ Rebuilt suite © Complete restyling @ Replace domaged springs ® Replace cushions @ S-year guarentee. "RECO 4 EASY BUDGET TERMS! VER SEE THE DREAM HOME FOR 1959 BY H. KASSINGER CONSTRUCTION LTD. IN BEAU VALLEY OPEN 2 P.M. - 9 P.M. 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