Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 19 Apr 1960, p. 9

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The Oshawa Times SECOND SECTION OSHAWA, TUESDAY, APRIL 19, 1960 PAGE NINE Three Escape WORKS YARD CRITICIZED As Car Rolls BELLEVILLE -- Raymond Jo- Counci 1 Turns Down seph Guislain and Henry Vau- tour, both of Oshawa and Jerry LeBlanc, of Sarnia, suffered abrasions and bruises last Friday afternoon. After receiving treat. ment at the Belleville General Hospital the trio were released. Provincial police reported the Conant St. Rezoning of land should remain inactive is a mystery to me. "If the planning board mem- bers are going to knuckle down to the mayor every time he throws a fit -- and he does throw them occasionally -- if the plan- ning board is going to get down on its knees to the mayor -- then I car do nothing." Ald. Branch: "My colleague has an unfortunate attitude. Last year we rezoned the easterly por- tion for a city yard; we feel the time is not ripe for further ac- tion." NEED ASSURANCE Ald, Christine Thomas: "I feel that we need more assurance that a change of zoning will not come up again. We must be as- sured that the planning board has no ulterior motive." "Don't be so suspicious, lady," rasped the mayor. "Oh! Mr. Mayor," retorted Ald. Scarcely had City Clerk Roy|When the mayor was on board of Barrand finished Teading jem x Works he 5d xorg. Now Wal- i seco on council's agenda Monday night |ter Branc nothing. Guigiain aie and ond 30: when Ald. Finley Dafoe was on| "The city yard cannot operate driven by Eugene Finkle, of 'nis feet with a motion that, "we|efficiently in a junkyard. We Bell's Corners, ont, were 201 |d0 mot concur in the recom-|lhave a good potential city yard Irciedin ai on shuts 01 ona the 1a 031380 1s com pal. i ¥ board." "Something has to be done. | [Finkle auto attempted to make "poy. n ine hoard recommended |rye EO area ghoudir't a left turn. | : th people e al | Slain goto biuched thei 2: city-owned property on theipaye to Jook at that mess. I want 4 Tne Gislan Suis ih ue ot of Rorth side of Conant street, east to help the people in this area. ER Oe a a Ljat Bison Toad, remain R3 "be-|y 1o0ked for a good use for the FOR) ou io, Jue tt We cause there is no urgency for Yo land." the highway. The auto was a|20ing 2 bail Be (Ald. Dafoe has been uoted complete wreck. i > had thought the fast Marek a said, "he hoard : ; | (Once, works is in n space an 2A three persons in the (hares was a good place lor 2 eiy/ yg' Jagky Hike the best-possible Ba were thrown out of the] o Y use for the land.") vehicle as it rolled down the|11 TO 1 VOTE : highway. | Council agreed, voting 11 yA 1 AchOSS PROM HOMES tod w for no ge. but not before Ald. ask if this area tarry directly a . Dafoe and Mayor Lyman Gifford across from Yesidenoes, TTR i had argued long, loudly and heat- "Uncle io Cha Ala. Atters- TEMPERATURES edly. y. «le $ Early last March a deputation . for 13 PERIOD | ens, armed with a 70-sig-| Ald. Dafoe repeated his charge FIVE NEW OSHAWA POLICE CONSTABLES BEGIN TRAINING The five new constables, re- | the Oshawa Police Force, are | Harry King lecturing the new § Dennis J. Tobin, Chester B. | and William J. Moring. cently accepted by the Oshawa | now undergoing training. Seen | constables on their duties. ' paughren, David A. Garrow | --Oshawa Times Photo Police Commission for duty on | here at right is Sergeant | From left ane William D. Tane, | Volume Of Building = &w NN NER NN ER ti: vor nd Ald Bra had done ndthing to improve the| Said the mayor: "When the present R3. (The city already(city yard. easterly portion of the land was i i f| "Last year," h ti , "all [successfully rezoned, I said I [owns land directly to the east o the st yea 38: Soup nued Wn would go along with rezoning of Declined In Marc Iplanmng board reque 5 land be rezoned M2 from the M. Building reports for 1960 show a total of $218,515, retail store. down more than $600,000 from thie] Permits for new March, ceived a $15,000 permit for a new/nor th, $900; basement Nassau street, $500; N. Owens, Guelph street, $500; R. Labrida, Urbanowicz, ho al Na NIG [this land; it is zoned M2, which would allow a city yard.) Mayor Gifford left the chair so agreed to back the rezoning of the westerly portion of this prop- erty this year when the easterly the west portion, but NOT for a city yard. . "We have all the city yard we March, 1959, total of $832,807. |apartments were issued to D.|Gibbon street, $750; E. Pare, Permits were issued for 12 new Evans, Sussex street and F.|Phillip Murray avenue, $500. single family dwellings, with a|Dohan, Wellesley street, Toronto. Ontario Malleable Iron Works, combined value of $159,000. The permits were valued at $1500| Prospect street, was issued a per- D. Berkuta, Ritson road south, each. mit for repairs totalling $975. $10,000; M. Mamanko, George Norman Beal, Oshawa Shop-| A. Fudge, King street west, got street, $15,000; R. Jeffery, Mas- ping centre, got a permit worth a $3000 permit for an addition to stn street, two at $12,000 each:|$1500 for the erection of three a store and office building. F. Krysa, Farewell street, $16,000. signs. | A $4500 building permit for an T. D. Thomas, Harris avenue,| Two new signs for Bassett Jew- addition to a retail store was is- $11,000; W. Baczek, Wilson road ellery, 1 Simcoe street south, re-|sued to Harrison and Kinsman, north, $12,000; S. Gijda, Lowell quired a $2200 permit. |Simcoe street south. avenue, $16,000; Fred Henderson, 2 3 | John Ferjo, Harris avenue, re- Albert street, $10,000; J. Planeta,(TWO NEON SIGNS [ceived a $5000 permit for a dual Gliddon avenue, $16,000. | A $3000 permit was issued to| dwelling addition. V. Szemoit, Drew street, the Central Hotel, King street |FIVE ALTERATIONS | 12,000: C. Chalmers, Division|West, for two new neon signs. ; Fie. $17,000. Five persons received permits| Five permits, totalling $10,000, | for repairs and alterations to|were issued for alterations to a| NEW RETAIL STORE | single family dwellings: bank, a rest room and office, a| Coles Sporting Goods Ltd. re-| M. Paulicik, Stevenson ro ad |pro-shop, a retail store and aj | church. Bank of Nova Scotia, Simcoe CHILLY WEATHER PREDICTE 3 | street north, $1000; R. Dixon Co. 1 on 0 £1 Ltd., Albert street, $2500; Dr. D. A. Brown, Grandview street| south, $1000; Western Tire, King| street west, $5000; Simcoe Street| Temperatures below normal are predicted for most of Can- ada in the 30-day outlook of the United States weather office for the mid-April to mid-May period. Map details the predic- |tnat he could speak on the mat- ter. HEATED DEBATE | Ald. Hayward Murdoch, in the |mayor's chair, refused to accept Ald. Dafoe's negative motion. Said Ald. Dafoe: "The mover of a motior always has the right to close a debate. You are taking that right away from me." "I may be wrong on parfia mentary procedure (he later found he was right) but I'm not going to accept a motion of non- concurrence from you," said Chairman Murdoch. Then Ald, Walter Branch, who sits on the planning board with Ald. Dafoe, moved the motion of concurrence; it was seconded by Ald. Gordon Attersley and the debate was on. YARD CRITICIZED (Ald. Dafoe has been quoted board of works yard has been a tions for the period. Box gives seasonal normals, --CP Newsmap «eu [Vle@H Again barest description and many have| Pentecostal Church, Simcoe a 40 OWNERS WATCH Council To Next Monday |+ Oshawa City Council will meet |next Monday night in an attempt {to complete Monday night's un-|day night saw council defeat, by| {finished agenda. Ordinarily coun-|a 9 to 3 margin, a bid by Rosslynn| {cil meets only once every two|Estates Ltd., | weeks. An 8 p,m. start, usually 7.30, Rossland road, between Steven-|empty stores." |was followed by 90 minutes of|son road and Fernhill boulevard] A Glenforest home. owner, S. |debate. during which spokesmen extended. D. Dyman, said he represented |for a Rossland - Stevenson road| Aldermen Hopkins, Dafoe and six home owners and they were group presented arguments Branch supported the company 'violently opposed to the pro- against a rezoning of land held|in its attempt to have an easterly posed rezoning." Nearly 40 area residents Mon- congestion, noisy night |and annoying flashing lights. "Two neighborhood Rossland Road Zoning Harmony Upheld By Council traffic ATTRACTIVE WALL os "And the applicant would cer- 1 ewa shopping [tainly make the east wall of the| to extend commer- centres have recently. been com- cial zoning on the north side of|pleted," he said, "and both have the north side of Rossland road. Gilbert Murdoch represented J. C. Stephenson; area residents were represented by T. Vander- stoop, S. D. Hyman and D. W. Wilson. About 30 concerned resi- dents were seated in the council chambers. Then tenders were opened for |construction work in the Wilson {road south area. Another petition |was presented to council by Rob- |ert Davidson, on behalf of Har- mony road north residents. | Finally, council worked its way {down to item 17 on the agenda-- |a planning board recommenda- {tion that city-owned land on the north side of Conant street east of Ritson road south not be re- zoned at the present time. Ald. Finley Dafoe and Mayor Lyman Gifford tangled on this chair to speak on the issue. The debate was lively but time- consuming. Presiding chairman Hayward Murdoch suggested a time exten- sion to 11.30 p.m. to enable money accounts to be passed. Consecrate New Church Saturday | A solemn service of consecra- {tion to mark the official opening | of the College Seventh-day Adven- tist Church on King street east {has been scheduled for this com- |ing 'Saturday, April 23, it was one, with the mayor leaving the| Jportios of its land zoned C1 from| Mr, Hyman mentioned the "de- RIA. |terrent effect on prime residen- |BUILD SHOPPING CENTRE 'ial land." [ The company is presently build- FoUR HOMES AFFECTED (ing a shopping centre on com-:| Representing Rosslynn Estates mercially zoned land and wished 1tq was Gilbert L. Murdoch, {to extend the centre eastward. who told the council that "'at the | Planning board has recom-imost four houses were directly mended the rezoning subject to|affected by the proposed exten- there being no access for service gion trucks to or from Fernhill Blvd., . and if 'a 'suitable method were}. V3 2 treed boulevard front- found t ing on Rossland road, argued iy i Io Suavanies thal oo Eas0 IMs. Murdoch, the effect of the erty prop | planned additional five stores and x 185 parking lots would be neglig- FEAR DEVALUATION ible. Spokesman for the residents| 'The applicant owns the land was Ted Vanderstoop, who readlon the east side of Fernhill from a prepared statement, |boulevard (extended)," said Mr. Mr. Vanderstoop said oppo-|Murdoch, "He plans to put up a sition to extension of the com-jrow of houses; these would act | mercial area stemmed from fear as a buffer for the residents for |of property devaluation, traffic/Glenforest home owners. Specialists Aid Crippled Kiddies During the past year leading|pled children, report their needs physicians and surgeons from|and plan their attendance at hospitals specializing in ortho- clinic. paedic services attended numer-| Op a plan i ous clinics held at strategic crop Dame day {oF ingiante, tions throughout Ontario for the|around a community such as benefit of crippled youngsters. [Kirkland Lake will gather there. The out-clinic service provided To meet them will he specialists by the far flung facilities of the jn orthopaedic surgery and other Ontario Society for Crippled Chil-|hranches of medicine together dren has Jeveloped, under the|with local doctors who diagnose closely related co-operation be-|their conditions, describe treat- tween the society and the 222|ment service clubs which each year : conduct fe Easter Seal Cam- TREATMENT ARRANGED paign, to finance assistance to| If the latter can be i : : ; provided help crippled children. In addi-|jcally, the local doctor then sup- most unsightly, smelly, rat-in- fested place, you couldnt find a worse spot anywhere between To- ronto and Montreal. "Why is there a mess there? want. Ask the city engineer. Ask the board of works chairman." When the motion to concur was voted on Ald. Dafoe was alone in opposition. part was rezoned M2. POCKET OF LAND "Land to the east and west is industrial. Why this little pocket CANON A. G. CHANNEN Former Rector Whitby Church TORONTO (CP)--Canon Albert Gordon Channen, 53, Anglican rector of Christ Church in sub- urban Scarborough died Mond cf a heart attack at Lake Missis- sauga, Ont. Born and educated at Barrie, Canon Channen graduated from the University of Toronto in 1928 and from Wycliffe Theological College in 1931. After his ordination at St. James Cathedral, Toronto, he Folk Seek proposed extension of the centre| An invitation to meet with as tractive Phi Joss he board of works in committee was ere dul ig pie |extended to Robert Davidson ge defy anyone to explain how | Monday Dig by a Te Chair- A man Walter Branch. Tezomng 22 lee i, an esgierly' Representing residents in the { iy i ): _|Beaufort, Colborne - Harmony - result in devaluation of Prob-\yi;o area Mr. Davidson submit- erty." fri ; D. W. Wilson said he didn't put ted a petition to council asking for was in the parish of Duntroon, near Collingwood, for three years. He then served as rector at Bradford for six years, and at All Saints' Church, Whitby for 12 years He had been at Scarbor- ough for six years. Canon Channen had been the honorary clerical secretary of the synod for the Toronto dioceses since 1955. He leaves his wife a son Rob- ert of Peterborough, and three daughters, Mrs. Robert Baggs (Mary), Ann and Patricia, all of Scotland. CANON A, G. CHANNEN The remains are resting at the only a dollars and cents value on his home. | "I want a nice place to raise a| family," he said. "I fear park-| ing will have a far eaching ef- fect. Four homes are directly jeopardized with a proposed parking lot less than 100 feet from their homes." Ald. Gordon Attersley said he| thought it was about time the] zoning bylaw was used for the| protection of the people. Ald. Christine Thomas agreed| that the residents were entitled] to protection. Mrs. Thomas thought the planning board's re-| commendation for rezoning left too many loose ends." - SEES REGIONAL CENTRE "I would characterize this as a| regional shopping centre," said| Ald. Dafoe, "not as a neighbor- hood one. This whole area will grow by leaps and bounds. '""We can't please everybody.| We feel what we did was in the| interest of the people who will| be living in the whole general area in a few years time. There will be a bigger variety of stores, and sufficient parking." | this will be a busy area in al without an entrance on Fernhill, | one will be needed on Rossland. | This would be a mistake and| would produce traffic problems. By voting for the application, we can be assured of avoiding a traffic problem." | Ald. Norman Down said that| he could take '"'only a personal! view. I think the four properties da PROTECTION FOR PEOPLE | Said Ald. S. T. Hopkins: "I feel that some area residents had few years. Mr. Murdoch tells usjust a few years ago. consideration on the following: Condition and grade of sidewalk between Beaufort and Colborne streets. Plans for Harmony road north between King and Colborne streets. Debris on Harmony road north "from Industrial Disposal trucks, due to uncovered loads night and y. Sidewalk facilities on the east side of Harmony north between King and Beaufort streets. Proper ditching on Harmony north, between King and Beau- fort streets, on both sides of the road. Mr. Davidson complained of a sidewalk in a ditch, property own- ers in the Beaufort area clean- ing up for Industrial Disposal and impossible conditions for walking in the general area be- cause of lack of sidewalks and pothole-filled roads. Mayor Lyman A. Gifford ex- plained that sometimes sidewalks were put in at the future grade of the road and they would appear low. The mayor told Mr. David- son that he had recently talked with the manager of Industrial Disposal and he understood the debris in the area had been cleared up. His Worship also commented opposed installation of sidewalks Rotary Host To Children The members of the Rotary McDougall and Brown Funeral Chapel, 2900 Kingston Rd., To- ronto, from 2 to 9.30 p.m. today. The Rev. Canon Chammen will lie in state in Christ Church, Mark- ham Rd., from 1 pm. to 9.30 pm. Wednesday and from 10 a.m. to 1.30 p.m. Thursday. Serv- ice will be in the church at 2 p.m. Thursday. CELEBRATING BIRTHDAYS Congratulations and best wishes to the rollowing resi- dents of Oshawa and district who are celebrating birth- days today: Cecil Carson, Taunton; Mrs. Gordon Campney, 128 Arlington Ave.; Pauline Vail- lancourt, 488 Nipigon St.; Norman Cheseboro, 315 Saguenay Ave.; Diane Gar- row, 20 Brock street east; Lois Perry, 263 Kaiser cres- cent; Gaii Leavitt, 803 Gordon St.; Mrs. Harold Bradburn, 321 LaSalle avenue; Mrs, Gerald Galbraith, 260 John- stone avenue; Mrs. T. Har- vey, 77 Gibb street; Joey Mills, Taunton road east; Karen Igel, 335 Nipigon St.; Paul Ward, 429 Fairlawn street; Rupert Gay, 169 Southlawn avenue; Beatrice Parkin, 132 Cadillac avenue south; Susan Porter, 722 Lakeview avenue; Jim Brown, 398 Pine avenue; Alan Marks, 44¢ Cromwell avenue; Winnie Schaan, Apt. 4, 44% Ontario street; Irene Carey, 804 Gordon street. The first five persons to in- form The Oshawa Times of their birthdays each day will receive double tickets to The Regent Theatre good for a four - week period. The cur- rent attraction is 'Visit to a Small Planet". Council Is Opposed To School Frills Finance Chairman E. F. Bas- tedo told Oshawa City Council Monday night that his committee is not willing to recommend an additional expenditure of $550,000 for the R. S. McLaughlin Col- legiate Institute. The board of education had originally submitted an esti- mate of $1,750,000 for the school. Later, the board asked for $550, 000 more, for a school which was to be equipped with a swimming pool and an auditorium. "We will go along with a $1,900,000 bill for the school," said Ald. Bastedo, *'but we are not prepare" to recommend a 550,000 debenture issue. "Our debenture debt in 1962 will total $23.25 million. "I think che board can either go to the electorate or reconsider the whole question and submit a new plan," he said. Review Asked In Training TORONTO (CP) -- Ronald S. Ritchie, employee relations man- -------- -- tion to help finance thé treatment|eryises it. If t P r a 3 ses it. reatment - of crippled children from their quired in a big city hospital community, the service clubsiarrangements are made for (help with the clinics by transport-| transportation and hospitalization should be protected. I cast my|Club of Oshawa were hosts to 88 vote in favor of the homeowners|children and young people on the who bought in good faith." occasion of their annual Youth Day program at Hotel Genosha lon Mondajy. Hamilton Minister le Tie Jrogtem wah alvsiged by |Cecil Stephenson, chairman, an Elected Moderator {the members of the club's youth committee. The gathering was STRATFORD (CP)--Rev. N. D.|amused and amazed by the MacDonald, of St. John Church|sleight of hand tricks of Ron in Hamilton, Monday night was|Leonard, of Toronto, a former elected moderator of the synod ~f| member of the Canadian Army Hamilton and London of the Pres- (Show, who has made frequent byterian Church in Canada. {appearances on television shows|ceaths of Thomas Tomlinson, 18, He was chosen by 74 voting|in Canada and the U.S.A. and Burt Gaynor, 42, Crown Af- delegates representing 55,0000 Mrs, Walter Branch played the|torney L. W. Jordan said Mon-| The vast new eucational sys- members of the synod at its 86th|accompaniment for the commu-|day. tem which had grown up mn in- |annual meeting which opened|nity singing in which the young| Tomlinson was found dead of|dustry and commerce was either here at Knox Church. |guests joined heartily. Rotarian|gunshot wounds in a field near| a proper part of the new scheme ager for Imperial Oil Limited, Monday called for a revaluation of vocational training in schools. He told the Ortario Schoo! Trustees' and Ratepayers Asso- ciation that rather than 'rain an 1adividual for nix first job, a school system should ovrepare him to cope with the working world of change and 'growing complexity. School training should be re- garded as ground.ng in the basics which would fit a person io con- tinue on-the-job t aining. Reports on birthdays will be received only between the hours of & a.m. and 10 a.m. | Double Inquest At Fenelon Falls LIDNSAY (CP)--A double in- quest will be held in nearby spring has arrived, or is just| means of identification or proof April 1, Police Department ing full of old bicycles recovered locks and use them. They said is invited to go to the police sta-| Lack of proper identification of lost or forgotten their licence cents. A bylaw requires all bi-/by Rosslynn Estates Limited, on Cemetery were issued by the police depart- discuss the board's recommenda-| north of Adelaide street ex- Two major purchases were ap- partment of health weuld be ne-| A one-ton pick up truck pur- farther north on Thornton road,| p Bathe, superintendent of fthough held Jointly by four;Peen purchased at $3,150. cemetery board suggested that Was approved. their property. | Lakeview Park, and steps may to contract two local contracters Riding Easter 1 as |ing of the bandstand in Victoria | prepared. Mr. and Mrs. Emil Schlingensie-| vice to the north building in| announced today. auto while riding a bicycle he had js to notify the Central Council (lege Park Seventh-day Adventist right hip and leg abrasions With occurs, [Oshawa Missionary College. |CLUBS ORGANIZE CLINICS Isuch clinics, have received treat- | road, at the corner of Cedar and will preach the sermon at the|rols the volunteer specialist. The|A score of nurses especially train- [Lyman A. Gifford and other |and surgery which are nose re (how to carry on the therapy pre- Fenelon Falls April 27 into the Andrew Brown, 101 Grassmere|St. John, director of the Globe pected to participate in the cere-|doctors come from Toronto, Ham-|that anything required such as Si A 11 1 the corper, is the sudden of ownership is all that is re- of stolen bicycle reparts|quired to claim a bicycle. All at the Oshawa Police station. [those not claimed Only five have been recovered. stressed that the number of bi However, there is still a room in|cycle thefts could be greatly re- in the past which nobody has|many people just steal a bicycle bothered to claim. Ito go for a ride and then abandon tion and pick over the 30 or so|the bikes also hampers the police. {Often the person reporting a T C id o Consider =" | New licence plates will soon cycles in use to be licenced and the plate must be attached to Property committee r bers| ment last year. will meet soon with the Union| tion to council that an option be| Truck Bought taken on 42-acre parcel of land| tended. If purchased, the land would be developed as a cemetery. proved at a recent meeting of the Soil test borings and approval of Oshawa Board of Park Manage. cessary. ; chased from Cliff Mills Motors The board had previously had|for $1,635. plus a trade in of the west of re alrport, but ue Parks, informed the board that owners, omas an Feorg tree spraying machine had ners, the new property has A salary increase for the Jandowuess, in a ® prope y {superintendent of parks of $250 the landowners keep a 200-foot] Mr. Bathe said an appropria- wide strip, fronting on Thorn- tion of $2,500 is in city council's The board pointed out that now be taken toward construc- two entrances would be needed tion. Alderman Brady said he | and submit plans for a structure. |Mr. Bathe said an old plan, | Park, had been found and it has resent oy |been turned over to a contractor - Seriously urt A letter is to be written to the property committee of city coun- pen, of 1024 Cedar street, was! Alexandra Park. The church which has been seriously injured Monday after-| Drinking fountains will be reins- under construction for less than a received only the day before as|of Neighbourhood Associations|Church and is located on King ing youngsters and helping toiphy the society. an Easter present, that no replacements of fountainsistreet east at the corner of the Provide accommodation for those Over the years thousands of possible head injuries when Pastor Walter A. Nelson, of| The society and the service/ment and have benefitted from was struck by a car driven by |Oshawa, president of the seventh-|clubs organize the clinics under|the follow-up program, provided Wentworth streets. The Oshawa rites slated for 3 p.m. this Sat-|lat i s literally every {ed in orthopaedi foll General Hospital reported his Presented Award Spent ih 1h eran of Medicis e, teach the mother condition satisfactory this morn-| avenue, who witnessed the acci-|and Mail's education department,{monies lilton, Ottaw Hi " . i s hs 3 iid | S. . awa 'and oth Jities/braces or crutches are provided dent told police the boy was| was presented Monday nignt with] When it is opened the edifice|located near the pT gr the children. y One of the sure signs that|bikes and parts of bikes. Some Fifteen have been stolen 'sincela public auction ily igs the basement of the police build-|duced if cyclists would obtain Anyone who has lost a bicycle|it. stolen bicycle can only give the . be on sale at the schools and at New Site For: stores in the city for 50 ithe bicycle. Over 5000 permits Cemetery Board of Governors to| lying west of Thornton road, just By Parks Board the cemetery division of the de- ment at city hall. an option on a 50 -acre tract|previous truck. Bryant, had decided not to sell.|? At its April 6 meeting, the Per year, starting April 11, 1960, ton road, along the east edge of 1960 budget for a bandstand at from Thornton road. |had requested the superintendent | prepared at the time of the build- on which an estimate might be Udo Schlingensiepen, 7, son of | cil requesting an electrical ser- noon when he was struck by anltalled in the parks. Mr. Ellegett|year will be known as the Col- The boy suffered a fractured | yj) be made where damage road leading to the campus of who cannot return immediately. |crippled children have attended Robert Ouellette, of courticel Education Director [day Adventist Church in Canada/a medical committee which en- (by the society's nursing services. |urday. His Worship Mayor | specialist in the fields of medicine every case, teach the mother ing. TORONTO (CP) -- J. Bascom church and civic leaders are ex-|to the children's benefit. These scribed by the doctors and see largest Plans for clinic are laid welll thrown 12 feet into the air by the(the Ontario Educational Associa-|will be the impact. Police said the impactition's Greer Memorial Award as atso knocked the boy right out of{the person who made the most his boots. They were found near valuable contribution to educa- the crumpled bicycle. tion in the province last year. : Adventist For the 1960 Easter Seal - {Church in Canada. The total cost/in advance. Through local offices paign, which is held ii an. has been estimated at nearly of health, public health nurses|17 to April 27, there is a mini- $350,000 and seating capacity is and local doctors the Society's mum of $850,000 needed to carry |reported to be-in excess of 1100. |field nurses locate and visit crip- on this and other services. The synod covers most of south- Ross Mills acted as song leader. |western Ontario from Owen The thanks of the guests was his Fenelon Falls home March 26. and Gayno. died in hospital ot things or else it reflects tke failure of our s:hool sys'em to {Sound to Burlington, excluding|voiced by David Sturgis, son of] Kitchener, Galt and Preston. | April 5 from stab wounds in his|respond to the nzvds of a chang- clgb president, Dr. D. E. Sturgis. stomach received the same date. ing world." _-

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