Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 19 Mar 1960, p. 3

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DIEFENBAKER ADMITTED TO ONTARIO BAR Law Society of Upper Canada. It was the third such member- ship conferred in the society's history, the other two going to { the Duke of Windsor and for- Prime Minister Diefenbaker is now eligible to practice law in Ontario. In a 20-minute cere- mony Friday he was granted an honorary membership in the | Shift System BOWMANVILLE (Staff)--About is at B range from a minimum of $4,500 for basic qualifica- 1050 d ville High - Schoo! will go on shift schedules at the school in Sep- tember. The increased number of students will make it neces- sary to increase the teaching staff of 32 by 10 for the fall school term. To facilitate school bus sche- dules the morning shift will be i of students from Bow- Darlington = township, the town and Clarke s from west Darlington will form the afternoon shift. It is intended to reverse uc shifts midway through the school term, about Feb. 1 To provide Grade 13 students with complete courses an ar- rangement will have to be made {to provide an increased number | of periods per day, said Durham | District High School Board | secretary-treasurer Walter B. | Reynolds Friday. Mr. Reynolds said the re- mainder of the students will be on eight period per day shifts. | Upper school students, how- |ever, will require 10 instruction- {al periods per day to complete | their matriculation courses. The morning shift will begin at 8 am. and continue to 12.40 p.m. The afternoon shift will begin at 1 p.m. and continue to 5.40 p.m. RAISE FOR TEACHERS Teachers' salaries will now mer prime minister Louis St. Laurent. From left are: Mrs. Justice Laidlaw, the prime min- ister, Chief Justice Porter and | Chief Justice McRuer. (CP Wirephoto) CAPSULE NEWS Firing Sparks Wildcat Strike CORNWALL (CP)--Firing of aj PROTEST CUT IN GRANTS shop steward Thursday at L. R.| OTTAWA (CP) -- The Ottawa McDonald and Sons trucking firm|Catholic parent - teacher associ- touched off a wildcat strike of|ations are flooding the Ontario Local 938, International Union of departmen of education and lo- Teamsters (CLC), involving 30|cal MLAs with telegrams protest- drivers and warehousemen. Union|ing the cut in school grants. The spokesmen said picket lines were department earlier this week said set up after Armand Trottier,|1960 grants to Ottawa separate shop steward, was discharged schools would be $144,000 less without notice. than had been expecied. The cu : 2 may result in a tax increase o POLARIS SHOT SUCCESS 1.5 mills CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) ae An advanced Polaris submarine LARGEST SHIP missile bolted from an under-, COLLINGWOOD (CP) -- Billed ground tube Friday and raced as the largest ship ever built on more than 900 miles down the At-|the Great Lakes, the 730-foot ore lantic missile range. The navy re-|freighter Murray Bay will. be ported the test was-successful--| christened Thursday by Mrs. Har- the seventh in the last/old Walton, wife of the shipyard eight launchings. The United manager The ship, with an 18,- States hopes the Polaris will be|000-ton capacity, will start trials ready for operation late this year|as soon as Georgian Bay is free aboard nuclear submarines. |of ice. t f success ahs ONOR PUBLISHER - Ont. (OP) s-| The Niagara Peninsula Graphic| {Arts Association at its monthly| day at the age of 92. Following| ing paid tribute to Frank H.| |Leslie, publisher of The Even-| his ordination in the Anglican] Church in 1893, Mr. McTear filled |; ¥ . charges in a number of Ontario|iN8 Review, who this year cele-| centres, including Maitland, Car-|Prates his 60th anniversary in thei dinal, Westport, Bath, Wellington Publishing business. Brig. Guy and Cataraqui. He retired in 1938|G0stling, national president of the association, praised Mr. Les- TREGOFF ON BAIL [tie as one of the. industry's most 10S ANGELES (AP)--The par- | Public-spirited citizens. Tear died in hospital here Thur, WEATHER FORECAST Hons to a maximum of $5,500 depending on qualifications. This can be increased by $2,000 per year, in addition to the across- the-board annual increments of $300, depending on experience. Therefore a teacher can earn $7,500 per annum the first year, and may proceed to an annual maximum salary of $9,100 with the $300 yearly raises. salary teachers, with minimum basic qualifca-| tions, but the top minimum salary, was increased $500, from $5,000 to $5,500. Teachers may receive tw salary increases a year, on the $300 yearly increments, and als through a raise in category through qualifications. BIG SALARY BILL Mr. Reynolds said the board is blamed by some of the munici-| palities for raises in taxes. He said the school population rate has increased about 15 per cent this year, With the hiring of 10 new teachers for Bowmanville, i NORMAL TEMPERATURES FORECAST cast of the United States wea- ther office. Below-nomal read- ings are expected in Newfound- land, northern Alberta and Brit- Near . normal temperatures will cover most of Canada from mid - March to mid - April ac- cording to the long-range fore- "THE OSHAWA TIMES, Seturdey, March 19, 1960 3 'Wants Modern Rail Signal In Darlington HAMPTON (Staff) -- A copy of a letter forwarded to the Board of Transport Commissioners from the Canadian Pacific Railway re- questing an order to replace am obsolete wig-wag warning _sig- nal with a new red flasher signal, has been received by Darlington township council. -- The railway wishes to replace the wigwag on the Base Line near SS 3 with a modern type rail- way warning signal Railway officials say the new signal will cost and maintenance will cost $50 ap- nually to be shared by the rafl- way crossing fund and Darling ton township. The CPR proposed division of the cost of installation is 80 per cent to be paid from the railway crossing fund, amounting to $4400 The township would pay $688, and the railway company $412, Council will be given the oppor tunity to present its case to the board before the order to instal the warning system is issued, clerk Walter E, Rundle said. ish Columbia and a tip of South- western Ontario. Table gives normal readings for various centres. (CP Newsmap) at a cost of about $25,000 and the adjustment to the salary schedule, which was below other oBITUARES TV Bidcers Can school boards' rates of pay, in addition to the mandatory yearly increments, the board's levy to the municipalities for teachers alone amounts to approximately '$50,000. CITY AND DISTRICT $152.50 FOR FUND The John Meagher Fund was bolstered yesterday by $152.50 as {the result of a 50-50 draw, the {winner of which was Miss Maisie Yourth of Duplate (Canada) Ltd., who also received that amount, $152.50. The announcement was made by Malcolm Smith, presi-| |dent of Local 222, UAW-CIO TORONTO (CP)--Forecasts is- sued at 5 am.: Synopsis: Unsettied weather prevails across most of Ontario this morning, Skige are cloudy in all but the northwestern section of the provinces Light snow is | falling from Georgian Bay and PEDESTRIAN INJURED northward to James Bay. Partial i learing will occur today but a Benjamin J. Wallinger, of the|© . . King Street Chambers, suffered Storm now centred in Southern cuts to his head and face, Fri-|Llnois is moving eastward and day night, when he was struck] "ill result In occasional snowflur- by a car on King street west a ries in Southwestern Ontario be- t| {Church street The driver of the Sunny, Cooler During Sunday {ginning in the afternoon. The odd car was Ralph Schneider, 3, Newcastle There was $15 dam- age to the car TWO MINOR THEFTS The Oshawa Police Depart- ment reported two minor thefts Friday night A battery was re- ported stolen from the car of Stephen Florek, 288 St. Eloi av- enue, while it was standing in the parking lot at Ontario Malleable Ltd, + the car of Kenneth Kilmer, 27 Centre street, while it was parked on the King street east Municipal parking lot. SIX AMBULANCE CALLS The Oshawa Fire Department reported six ambulance calls since Friday morning There were no fire alarms ranged for $25,000 bail for the murder trial defendant and her lawyers went at once to the county jail to obtain her release. | Superior Court ruled Thursday that the co - defendant in the Finch murder case could be re- leased on hail pending retrial of Miss Tregoff and her lover, Dr. Bernard Finch, May 23. Fats a sow bal fo. 0 [NMFS T, BROWN Holstein Was President of RR flurry will persist in the north/ {country. Sunday will bring more sunshine and slightly cooler tem- peratures to all regions. Regional forecasts valid until midnight Sunday. { Lake Erie, Southern Lake {Huron, Niagara regions, Windsor, (London: Mainly cloudy today with a few snowflurries. Sunday sunny with a few cloudy inter- vals and a little cooler. Winds southwest 15 northerly Northern Lake Huron, Georg. ian Bay regions: Cloudy with a few snowflurries today, clearing this evening. Sunday sunny with a few cloudy intervals and a little colder. Winds northerly 15. Lake Ontario, Haliburton re- |gions, Hamilton, Toronto: Mainly cloudy today, clearing this even- {ing. Sunday sunny with a few | cloudy intervals and a little icolder. Winds northerly 15. | Kirkland Lake, Timmins - Ka- puskasing, James Bay regions, North Bay, Sudbury: Mainly cloudy with a few snowflurries today and Sunday. Colder. Winds northerly 15-25 today, becoming light Sunday. White River region: Mainly sunny and colder today and Sun- day. Winds north 15 today, light] {tonight and Sunday. | TORONTO (CP) -- Tempera- | tures: | | Dawson | Victoria .. | Edmonton .. Regina ur Winnipeg ... Fort William . White River .... Kapuskasing ....... North Bay ...oeceeee e € Toronto Ottawa ... Montreal ... Quebec ... Halifax BEERERE UE PEPE EY Payment OTTAWA (CP)--A deficiency payment on eggs for the Janu- ary-March period seems a sure bet on the basis of the latest mar- Egg Deficiency Assoc. ket report by the federal agricul- REPORT ON MISSILES WASHINGTON (AP) -- Sena- said ° Friday that the United States plans to have some 300 long - range ballistic missiles ready to launch in the next three James Tamblyn Brown, 53, of tor Alexander Wiley (Rep. Wis.) Newcastle, one of the most prom inent livestock breeders. in this section of Ontario died at Oshawa General Hospital this morning He retired from active farming last fall. the years. Wiley, a member of the senate space and foreign rela- tions committees, said in a re- corded interview for use over Wisconsin radio stations that four additional s qu a d rons equipped with Jupiter and Thor intermedi-| ate-range missiles will be placed "in the United Kingdom, Italy and Turkey in the near future." COSTLY BOMR PARIS (AP)--France spent ap- Mr. Brown was extremely ac- tive in community and county affairs and had served as a coun- cillor and reeve of Clarke Town- ship. The deceased was prominent in local agricultural activities and his Browview Farm herd was one of the best in the province Animals from the herd won many ionors in, most of the big shows. ture department. It may run around 10 cenis a dozen depending on market re- action in the last three weeks of | this month. The report up to March 5 shows a cumulative market aver- age of 22.5 cents a dozen com- Agriculture . Minister said that while the market price for the first three months did not call for a deficiency payment, one would be made if necessary for the second three months. Certain eggs if the national average mar- ket price over 12 months is be- low the base level of 33 cents a dozen. Prices pitched downward and Harkness Farm groups have been |medical arts building on Bloor| FUNERAL OF WILLIAM STEVENS The memorial service for Wil- liam Stevens, who died at the Oshawa General Hospital last Tuesday in his 52nd year, was held at the Armstrong Funeral Home at 2 p.m. Friday, Mar. 18. Rev. W. A. Gibb, minister of Westmount United Church, con- ducted the services. Interment was in Oshawa Union Cemetery. During the service Douglas Crosley sang the solo, "Take My Hand Precious Lord". The pallbearers were L. E. Brocklehurst, B, Worden, R. Mar- tin, B. Ritchie, R. Wood and V. Brooks. By TOM MITCHELL Canadian Press Staff Writer TORONTO (CP)--The nine ap- plicants for a licence to operate Toronto's second television station finish presentations before the Board of Broadcast Governors to- day and have their first chance to peer into the detailed bids of their competitors. The full briefs that all nine filed with the board before this week's hearings will be made public this afternoon on completion of the final presentation. It is by Rogers Radio Broadcasting Limited, op- erating radio station CFRB Tor- onto. The bidders have the weekend to sift through their competitors' briefs and prepare their argu- ments for rebuttal, set for Mon- d. | ROTARY SPEAKER Mel R. Osborne, PhmB, of To-| ronto, will be the speaker at the meeting of the Rotary Club of Oshawa next Monday. His sub- ject will be "Facts and Falla- day. | cies on the So-called High Cost| Friday they heard the proposals of Prescriptions". Mr, Osborne of two companies that would be| operates a drug store in the|linked with publishing interests. Henry Borden, Toronto lawyer, | {outlined the plans of Toronto St. W. 4 Eaton Manager Congratulated His associates and the employ- ees in the T. Eaton Company store in the Oshawa Shopping |Centre are today extending gratulations to the store man- ager, Merle W. Book, who is marking the 25th anniversary of his employment with the firm. At a ceremony in the board- room of the Toronto store, in which the president and the com- pany directors participated this week, Mr. Book was presented with a plaque and a quarter cen- tury watch. He was also the guest of honor at a party in the King Edward hotel, Toronto at which his associates for many years in the firm's branch stores extended their congratulations. The employees of the Oshawa store also honored him with a MERLE W. BOOK presentation. and five years later he became a Mr. Book entered the employ branch store manager. Study Opponents Brooklin Venue Of Seed Fair UXBRIDGE -- Professor John Dalrymple, Kemptville Agricul. tural School, Kemptville, will be the guest speaker at the Ontario County Soil and Crop Improve- ment Association annual seed fair and hay show to be held in the township hall, Brooklin, next Wednesday Mr. Dalrymple will speak on "The Use of Hay Conditioners in the. Production of High Quality Hay" Following his talk Mr Dalrymple will be the moderator of a panel discussion on the same topic The pane! members are Cecil Disney, Brooklin, RR 1; Gerge McLaughlin, Beaverton; Les Smith, Port Perry, RR 2; Roy Ormiston, Brooklin and R J Smith, Blackwater The exhibits of grain, forage seeds and hay will be set up in the Township Hall, Brooklin, at 10.30 a.m. The exhibits will be judged during the morning The afternoon program will ine clude the comments of the judges, Mr Dalrymple's talk, the panel discussion, and a general discussion period Telecasters Syndicate -- a com- pany to be formed to operate the {private station on Channel 9 that | will be the first set up here since |the publicly-owned CBC's CBLT started operations. The Southam Company Lim- |ited, publisher of seven Canadian daily newspapers and holding in- terests in radio and TV stations, |would supply 30 per cent of the initial capital and hold 12% per cent of the voting rights. Another Toronto lawyer, J. 8. D. Tory, presented the application for Summit Television Limited, a company in which the Toronto Globe and Mail and the Canadian organization of British film pro- ducer J. Arthur Rank would each have one-quarter of the voting rights. The Summit proposal was the only one of the eight applicants heard to offer stock in the station to the public. Shares totalling 27.3 per cent of the station's equity would be held by the public. WOULD OFFER SHARES Mr. Tory said shares amount- ing to five per cent of the sta- tion's original equity would be given free to a university or uni- versities. This would be both a financial aid and encouragement for the university to interest itself in TV as an education medium. The station proposed to go on the air from studios in North Tor- onto and start with an eight-hour Good seed is good economy im successful grain growing and the seed fair assists in maintaining standards of high quality besides affording an excellent opportunity for farmers to discuss grain growing with other growers, said Lyn Fair, county agricultural re- presentative : way fo h 0 broadcasting day building up to 16 hours daily by the end, cent Canadian in content. Ceylon Election 'Starting Quietly COLOMBO, Ceylon (AP)---Bare- |foot voters of tropical Ceylon |voted today in a parliamentary jelection contested by parties {marked on the ballots with such symbols as a green ele ®ant, a {purple hand or red and blue | wheels, The general election for 151 seats in the lower house began quietly, according to reports throughout this Commonwealth is- land in the Indian Ocean. About 3,700,000 registered voters weré 'choosing among 898 can- New ear: | Exciting New Fashion! Hear-Rings*® by MAICO ® Helps conceal hearing loss » Designs for all occasions # No pinch--No pull © Lightweight, comfortable MAICO of Anywhere of the mail order advertising de- During his years of service partment in Toronto 25 years 2go| with the T. Eaton Co., Mr. Bool and after a short period was|served as assistant manager at transferred to the branch stores Belleville and Ottawa and was department. store manager in Brantford, Ni- His promotion was- exception-|agara Falls and Chatham before ally fast as within a year he be- coming to Oshawa in June, came an assistant store manager 1958. didates from 13 parties. Some were running as independents. Last fall Prime Minister Solo- mon Bandarnaike was assassin-|{ ated and his widow has been cam- paigning for his Sri Lanka (Glor- ious Ceylon) Freedom party which headed a coalition govern- ment, It is symbolized on the bal- Address and Phone HEARING SERVICE 850 Yonge St., Toronte strongly critical of the govern- WA 4-2317 pared with the base level of 33 cents. An official said Friday that the cumylative average had worked back up only about two cents in the three weeks previ- ous to March 5. The egg deficiency payment system imposed Oct. 1 provides for payment to farmers on lim- ited quantities of Grade A large ment program for both eggs and hogs. Like eggs, pork was shifted from a government - purchase support system Jan. 12 with ex- pectations that prices would skid. day Canadian hog producers may enjoy expanded exports to the United States, normally a lower- price area where Canada has been limited to annual exports of READY HARBOR PORT COLBORNE (CP)--Har- bor activity here is picking up in preparation for the 1960 shipping : _|season expected to get under way But a second official said Fri In two weeks, Harold: Treble. southern: division superintendent of the Welland Canal, scheduled to open April '1, said Friday the maintenance lock was almost complete and would be flooded LATE DEATH BROWN -- Entered into rest at Osh. awa General Hospital on Saturday March 19, 1960, James Tamblyn Brown, Newcastle; in his 54th year. Beloved husband of Grace Bragg and dear father of Earle, Gerald, Merrill, and Lynn, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. Brown Orono, and brother of Marion, Oshawa Everett, and Olive (Mrs, H. E. D. was sentenced to nine months in lot by a purple hand. Please send Whisper-Lite Hear-Ring Booklet. | BACK TO JAIL TORONTO (CP)--Kenneth Bry-| mer, 21, who escaped to Canada from a Florida prison farm three years ago, pleaded guilty Friday to illegal possession of drugs and | | Nome ...cccccesssocsscsnnsans | Address .. | city: .. ssvssssssesatseusenes ) "or-Mv-3-19-60 ' - reformatory. Millson) Orono, Leroy, Lindsay. Rest. His activities as a breeder won about 60,000,000 pounds of quality March 25, ing at the Morris Funeral Chapel proximately $360,000,00 d its first atomic bomb, it was an- nounced Friday. Most of this ex- pense went toward plant invest- ment. The exact amount the French have spent on their atomic program for military peacetime purposes has never been revealed bu' is e<timated to be around $500,000,000. FIRE BURNS SHIP LIVERPOOL, England (Reut- ers)--Tons of cotton and copra were destroved and the 6,951-ton British freighter Britanny badly damaged Friday in a five - hour blaze at the Liverpool docks.| Nearly 100 firemen fought the| fire. It started among general| cargo stacked in a huge dockside! shed INTERESTED IN HIGHWAY MONTREAL (CP) -- Premier Antonio Barrette, in a letter made public Friday, hinted Quebec is interested in participating in the| Trans-Canada Highway project. | The letter was addressed | him the honor of being president of the Holstein-Friesian Associa- tion of Canada in 1958, He is survived by his wife, the former Grace Bragg; a daughter, Police Helpless As Wheels Taken HARTFORD, Conn. (AP)-- It was like something out of the silent films of the Key- stone Cops. A police wagon bearing sev- eral prisoners broke down at the top of a hill Two wheels fell off, and one started roll- ing down the hill. The policemen chased it to the bottom. Meanwhile, at the top oft he hill a car stopped. Two men got out, picked up the other wheel, and sped off in the car. The police watched help- lessly from below. | | | to Herter Proposes Plebiscite Check WASHINGTON (CP) -- State Secretary Christian Herter has proposed to Chancellor Adenauer Bowmanville. Service in the chapel on Monday at 2 o'clock. Interment Lang Vault, Orono. (Masonic service in the chapel on Sunday at 9 p.m. Sentiments pork. SEASON OPENS TORONTO (CP)--The Canada Steamship Lines' Glenelg docked here at 6:05 p.m. Friday to open the Lakes navigation season in| ATAMANCHUK--John suddenly at his Toronto harbor. The ceremony of | residence in Toronto, March 18, 1960. DEMAND NURSES' OATH ST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP)--Su- perintendent Dr. A. W, Taylor said Friday staff members of the may be expressed hy a contribution to | Canadian Cancer Society). BUEHL of West Germany that any pre- summit plebiscite held in West Berlin should be conducted with international observers present. JAMES T BROWN Lynn and three sons, Earle, Ger- |of Lindsay. ald and Merrill. Also surviving are his parents, Mr and Mrs J D. Brown, of Orono; two . sisters, Marion of Oshawa and Mrs H E, Millson (Olive), of Orono and two broth- ers, Everett of Orono and LeRoy, The; funeral service will be held at the Morris Funeral Chapel, Bowmanville, at 2 pm. Monday. March 21 Interment will be in the Lang Vault at Grono. Adenauer, who called for such a plebiscite in a speech here Wed- nesday, said it should be con- ducted by the Western powers. The United States is beginning consultations with Britain and France--the other two powers with troops in West Berlin--on general hospital here won't be paid until they agree to take the provincial government oath of secrecy and allegiance to the Crown. The employees, mostly presenting the harbormaster's hat to the captain of the vessel, Harvey Ambeau, aboard ship today. Beloved husband of Alma, dear brother of Michael, resting at the J. Cardinal and Son, Funeral Home, 366 Bathurst St. Toronto, for funeral service at 9.30 a.m. March 22. Interment Mount Pleasant Cemetery. will be held nurses, object on the grounds it tr ds their professional eth- ies. Oath - administering cere- monies were begun last fall for the province's 3,000 civil serv- ants when the government dis- covered it had been overlooked during the hectic turnover to Con- the chancellor's proposal. federation. A masonic service will be held in the funeral chapel at 9 pm. | Sunday. | Mayor L. J. Gaston of suburban Lachine, who had asked if Metro- For Construction politan Boulevard, the express | way across Montreal Island now | nearing completion, could be con- | sidered part of the Trans-Can- ada Highway ACTOR SUSPENDED HOLLYWOOD (AP) -- James | Garner says he's through as a| star of television's Maverick se- | ries. "They quit paying me," he said Friday. Warner Brothers | studio said it suspended Garner because of lack of scripts for the Maverick show as a result of the eurrent wri! strike. It eonsid- ors his conti: | still in effect, a spokesman F. RICHARD 136 SIMCOE N The Examination of Fitting of Contact Le And Glasses ¢ BLACK, O.D. AT COLBORNE eyes nses Children's Visual Training For Appointment Please Call RA 3-419] EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT City of TENDERS of New Senior Public School Board of Education, hh amient and Pp sealed go b demind Board will be d by the of Education of the City of Osha: wa, and by the Architect, until 12 o'clock moon, E.5.T. on Tuesday, April 5th, 1960, for the construction of a senior public classrooms end euditorium, et school consisting of fourteen Wilson Road South, Oshawa. Drawings and specifications will be available on or after 10 a.m. March 21st, 1960, ot the office of the Architect upon deposit of certified cheque in the amount of $50.00 mede pey- able to the Architect. Tenders will be accepted subject to the approval of the Oshews City Council and ths Onteric Municipal Board. The lowest or any tender wll be accepted. CLIFFORD & LAWRIE, Architects, 1999a Avenue Rd., Toronte 12 , Ontario. CITY OF OSHAWA NOTICE TO DOG OWNERS The 1960 dog licences are now available and may be purchased at the City Clerk's Office, 3rd floor, City Hall, the Police Department and the Dog Control Department, Fallaise Avenue (east off Rit- son Road South). By-law 2365, as emended, requires that the 1960 LICENCES MUST BE PURCHASED BY FEBRUARY Ist. This is to notify afl dog owners that dogs not carry- ing 1960 licences shall be considered as stray dogs and i ded. Such impounded dogs, if not claim- ed. within 48 hours, shall be destroyed. Avoid having your dog picked up and possibly des- troyed by purchasing your licence without delay. L. R. BARRAND, Clerk, City of Oshawa. Pu Tender EAT'N TRUE-TRIMBEEF 12 KING E. -- RA 3- Meat Specials! 3633 . Mon. & Tues. STEAKS SIRLOIN - WING - T-BONE Round Steak "™°*° Blade Roast THICK RIB ROAST ROLLED Shoulder ROAST Lean Rib STEW BEEF

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