Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 28 Jul 1960, p. 3

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ROTARY PARK SWIMMING POOL Seen here is the new swim- ming pool being constructed in Rotary Park, Centre street. Workmen Wednesday laid the | concrete of the apron around the pool and in the next day or so will line the pool prior to its being painted. The pool WEATHER FORECAST Warm, Showery - Day Tomorrow TORONTO (CP)--Official fore- casts issued at 5 am.: Synopsis: Colder air will cover the northern forecast regions by Friday morning and spread over the remainder of the province by Friday night. Regional forecasts midnight Friday: Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Nia-| gara, Lake Ontario regions, Lon- don, Windsor, Toronto, Hamilton: | Sunny with a few cloudy periods today. Cloudy * Friday. Showe and thundershowers Friday aft- ernoon and evening. Little chanae in temperature. Winds light to- day, southwest 20 Friday and shifting in the evening to north- westerly 20 Georgian Bay, Haliburton Sunny with a few cloudy periods today. Cloudy Friday with show- ers and thundershowers clearing late in the afternoon, Cooler late Friday. Winds light toda: coming southwesterly 20 tonight and shifting to northwesterly 20 about noon Friday. Kirkland Lake region, North Bay, Sydbury: Sunny with a few cloudy periods today. becomin< cloudy tonight with showers and thundershowers, Clearing Friday afternoon. Cooler Friday. Winds light, becoming southwesterly 20 this afternoon and shifting to northwesterly 20 Friday morning, White River, Timmins-Kapus- kasing regions: Sunny with a few cloudy periods, becoming cloudy with showers and thundershowers this evening. Friday variable cloudiness with a few s valid until howers.' Cooler late tonight and Friday. Winds southwesterly 20-25, shift- ing tonight to northwesterly 20-25. TORONTO (CP)--Marine fore casts valid until 11 a.m. Friday. Lake Huron, Georgian Bay: | Winds southwesterly 20 increas- ing to 30 this afternoon and shift- ing to northwesterly 30 late to- night and Friday morning. Cloudy, Showers and showers beginning tonight, Lake Erie, Lake Ontario: Winds |; 10 becoming southwest 15 this afterncon and variable to west NEARING COMPLETION mers. It is expected the pool will be ready next week. ~Oshawa Times Photo is designed to provide wading for toddlers and a deep end for more experienced swim- thunde; | southwesterly 20 tonight increas-| ing to 25 early Friday. Clear ex- cept cloudy for a few hours this afternoon becoming cloudy late tonight TORONTO (CP) tures: Tempera- 1 TRAINEES MARCH TO RAGLAN Dawson Victoria Edmonton .. Regina Winnipeg . Fort William . White River S.S. Marie . Kapuskasing ... North Bay Sudbury Muskoka Huntsville .. Windsor London ... Toronto . Killaloe Ottawa Montreal . Quebec ... Halifax . NIXON PICKS LODG (Continued from Page 1) "Richard Nixon has carried| New York in a surprise meeting| heavy responsibilities in shaping the policies which brought vies] tory after victory for freedom in} Iran, in Trieste, in Austria, in| Guatemala, in Lebanon, in Jor- dan, in Laos, in Cambodia, in West Berlin, yes, and in Que- moy and Matsu and Formosa." The real business of the ses- sion followed Dewey's speech: Governor Mark O. Hatfield of| Oregon used 289 words to place the name of Nixon in nomina- And then came the wildest bedlam of the Republican. con- vention, lasting 18 minutes. Bands blared. An organ boomed. last week. As if to emphasize the most modern aspects of the platform, the Republicans, just like the Democrats two weeks ago, pre- sented it in a streamlined man- ner. Charles H. Percy, platform chairman, read excerpts while illustrative movies flashed on two giant screens in the stock- yards amphitheatre, The four-day convention winds up tonight with the vice - presi dential nomination and the for- mal acceptance speeches by Nixon and his running mate. Delegates yelled and tossed their hats. Signs shook up and down, "Kennedy Kant Kum Klose," one Said. | After the noise and commotion| subsided with the help of chair-| man Charles Halleck's gavel, one speaker after another stepped to the platform to sec- ond the nomination GOLDWATER NOMINATED When the noise died away, NEWS IN BRIEF | Limited, forerunner of the Burl-| | set out for Raglan, where they cooked three meals and sleep in the open, the cadets made the march under Capiain Bill Clarke, training officer, Lieu- tenant Reg Gu'sole, second in command and Sergeant Bud Ellegett A march of 13% miles to the | | Ontario Regiment tank train- ing area, near Raglan, was | made Wednesday afternoon by | | 40 Oshawa high school students | taking part in a five-week' sum- | mer training program at the | Oshawa Armories. Seen as they Oshawa Times Photo % | blooming now for the second time May Extend Cemetery The Oshawa Union Cemetery Board, at a meeting Wednesday morning, decided to ask the On- tario Department of Health for permission to use 27 acres of land, now owned by the board, as an extension of the 28-acre Union Cemetery, | Located on the east side of Thornton road south, the land is part of the ol¢ McClure property. The cemetery board bought the land about cight years ago. It is now zoned buffer. Soil tests will be made and the general location studied by the provincial health department. Cemetery Superintendent Rob- ert Pierson will attend the On- tario Cemeteries Association convention in Sarnia, Oct. 2-4. CITY AND DISTRICT STREETS CLOSED The following streets will be closed for construction today: King street west, partially closed from Park road to Gibbon street; Simcoe street north, closed to | northbound traffic from Rossland | north to Robert street; Wilson road south, from Olive avenue, {to Dieppe avenue; Dieppe ave- nue, closed at Wilson road south; | Stevenson road south from Gibb street to Champlain avenue; Rit- son road south from Bloor street east to Conant street; Gliddon avenue from Guelph street to | Windsor street; Baldwin street, | closed at Gliddon avenue; Simcoe street morth from Robert street | to Sunset avenue, | MAGHOLIA IN BLOOM Mrs. Anthony Gwodz, of Rosehill boulevard, Oshawa, re-| ! | ports that she has a magnolia { [tree in her back yard which is| | | | this year, It came into full bloom in May, which is usual for mag- nolia trees, and is now under- going a second and most extrac ordinary phase. 2 AMBULANCE CALLS | The ambulances of the Oshawa Fire Department answered two routine calls during the past 24 hours, Cargo Ship 'Unloading OBITUARIES At Whitby 1 | | WILLIAM MARK CURRIE | The pallbearers were Donal HAMILTON (CP) William |Storie, Percy Canning, Edwar Mark Currie, 78, co-owner and|N Lewis, Kenneth Smyth, Products Limited, died here Tues-| Johnston, GEORGE P. BELL day after a long illness. | Mr, Currie was born at Port / Perry, where he received his pub-| A First World War veteran an lic and high school education. He|a Military Medal winner, Georg later attended the University of|P. Bell died at his Toronto. He was one of the orig-| home in Port Perry ear inal directors of the National Gyp-| He was 72. sum Company of Buffalo. { Friends said he had lived I In 1920, largely through his ef-| Port Perry for about forts, the Canada Steel Company 5) Hospital for 13 years, unt May of this year. lington Steel Company He attended was formed. f HARRY ELGIN MARKS | Following an illness of two weeks the death occurred at the |oshawa General | Wednesday, July 27, of Elgin Marks. He was 5ith year. A son of the late William H.|{he McDermott - Pz aker F |and Martha Marks, the deceased | heal 8 oT at pansies 1, was born in Oshawa and was a|terment wili be in Pine Grov lifelong resident of the commu-| Cemetery. nity. NORMAN 0. PHILP Limited, | Anglica the Fidelity Lodge, No. 428, AF an Al Known survivors besides oil wife, the former Violet Austi Regpital Applebee, are three sisters, a A living in Montreal. S| Funeral service in will be hel [ TYPHOON WARNING PEKING (Reuters) -- Typhoon warnings werc in force along the Communist Chinese coast today as the fifth tropical storm of the |season headed toward the main- [land south of Shanghai. "Urgent|brothers, Alcert and Frank, ofjy.;0 Robert Philp and Fes) ASTRONOMERS warnings" from the Central Me- teorological Institute published Mr, Marks was an employee of | A ¥ Gen-Auto Shippers Limited and| Following a short illness th |was a social member of the Osh-|death occurred at the Oshaw lawa branch of the Canadian General Hospital this morning © | Legion. Norman O. Philp, He is survived by his wife, the {former Blanche Blair and three Born in Cartwright the deceased was a son of thi |Oshawa and James, of Detroit. | Wriddess. A resident of Ontari The funeral service wlli be held | 41; his life, he was married at Governor Paul Fannin of Ari-lin Shanghai newspapers said the at the McIntosh « Anderson Fu-|gherhrooke, Quebec, in 1915 zona placed in nomination Sen- ator Goldwater as 'the voice of conscience speaking for the con- servatives of this nation." There was an eight - minute demonstration. seconding away, Goldwater marched to the rostrum to decline the honor. Goldwater told the delegates serves the support of every American -- over the blueprint for socialism presented by t Democrats." The evening began by nailing down the platform on which Nixon will run. With a shout of aye and only a scattering of noes, the convention approved the 10,000-word document. In large measure, its most controversial planks, defence and civil rights, followed sug-| gestions drawn up by Nixon and Governor Nelson Rockefeller of COMING EVENTS | | BINGO at the Avalon ' Thursday, July 28, North Oshawa Park, $6 and $10 and seven $40 jackpots. | NOVEL BINGO THURSDAY EVENING, 8 P.M at ST. GEORGE'S* HALL (Albert ond Jackson Sts.) Games $6, $12, $20 May be doubled pr tripled $110 JACKPOT INCLUDED Door Prize $15 ST. JOHN'S BINGO | Corner of Bloor and Simcoe, 20 games at $6 and $10, Five Jackpots with high numbers On Friday, July 29th, 8 p.m Ix typhoon was bringing heavy rain and high winds, CRATER RESCUE TOYKO (AP)--Faint cries for Mihara on Oshima Island. A six- man rescue party wearing heat- resistant clothes and gas masks down. He was believed to have he attempted suicide. SEIZE U.S. PROPERTY NUEVA GERONA, Isle of Pines, Cuba (AP)--Cuban agents have begun seizing American n-operty on Cuba's Isle of Pines. The bulk of 2 10,000 - acre fruit and cattle development owned by Fred Swetland of Cleveland and Yellow Springs, Ohio, has been| taken over, Oshawa Woman Injures Knee In Collision BOWMANVILLE (Staff) -- An Oshawa woman, Krystyna Rzcp- kowska, 543 Howard street, was admitted to Bowmanville Memor- ial Hospital suffering an injured Swetland said today. {right knee She was injured in wu Georges two-car collision at the Highway 401-115 junction today. Newcastle and William G. Sim, 63, 392 Elgin street east, Oshawa, collided wher Sim attempted to make a turn at the junction. The injured woman was taken! to hospital by a passing motorist. | or. A. B. Stumbof, of Newcas- tle, attended, Damage to the Dost vehicle |was estimated at approximately | workers. $125 and to the approximately $25 Sim vehicle at Sparks Hot Fight | follow Ineral Home at 2 p.m,, Saturday, {July 30, followed by interment in| of Whitby for 12 years and, prio Oshawa Union Cemetery. The|to his retirment, was a hardwar: |services will be conducted by! agent for a» years. He was Rev. W. J. Goodswan, assistant|member of Whitby Unite Waiting for the|help were heard Wednesday from rector of Christ Memorial Angli-| Church and of the Canadian Or-| speeches to be cleared the smoke-filled crater of Mount can Church | stock FUNERAL OF Besides MRS. WILLIAM H. ROSS nu | McLean, of Whitby. The funeral service will be hel |day, was held at the Mclntosh- the W. C Town {Anderson Funeral Chapel at 3|at |p.m., Wednesday, July 27. | Rev. Dr. George Telford, min. |ister of St. Andrew's United |Church, conducted the services. Interment war in Oshawa Union|ton. Rev. A Cemetery, duct the services. i Law chairman of the board of Currie rence McMurtry and Murray P. Shanley street ly today. E 19 years. | He worked at the Oshawa Gen-|Martin presented a silk hat to | | Saturday, July 30, at 2 p.m., from| beloved hus-|---- band of the former Ethel Wright. township, Mr. Philp had been a resident Ider of Foresters Lodge at Black: | is wife he is survived | d i tic | A private f 1 {by a brother, William G. Philp, of |___ that despite previous criticisms|descended into the crater and] private funeral service for|naciiet 1000: i he now felt the platform which found an unconscious man lying|Mrs. William H. Ross, 179 King Nestieton and 2 Niece: O11VeiupASED ON HEARSAY" the convention had adopted "de- or a pock more than 200 yards street east, who died last Mon. |" Chapel Whithy, at 2.30 p.m. Sat urday, July 30. Interment will be which he said was based on hear-| lin Cedarvale Cemetery, Canning-| say. | M. Butler will con. | Whitby had a 300-foot long | marine visitor early today as the d| motor vessel Monica Smith of the | d|Swedish-Chjcago line tied up in| _| Whitby harbor at 6 a.m. [ | This was the first ocean going cargo liner to use Whitby's har- Ten "sports cars. picked up ul ngland and destined for Toledo, | Ohio, were off-loaded and will be | n [reloaded later today. | 30 a.m. Mayor Stanley | r. The vessel brought 709 tons of d| steel piling, which is being un. e | loaded, il| Captain Stig Olofsson, The captain said he had heard n{of Whitby before through he Church and was a member of | Whitby Dunlops who had played d| against Sweden, in Norway, in| the 1958 world hockey champion | n| Whitby Harbormaster David| 11| Ross met the ship five miles oft | |shore and assisted in piloting it | d|to the east pier of the harbor, The mayor and council with | i-| chamber of commerce execu- his | ships. In- [tives toured the ship and were el guests of the captain in the ward- room, Captain Olofsson was the| town's guest at a luncheon at the | €| Spruce Villa hotel. | al The Monica Smith is expected of to leave later to-night, EGYPTIANS e Earliest known building | erected for astronomical pur- | poses is the observatory at | Alexandria, Egypt, built in | 300 BC by Ptolemy Soter. | You needn't be an, astron- | omer to ohserve the stellar | performances of Oshawa Times Classified Ads. Just dial RA 3-3492 and order one to fill some need for you. ri e| a I | | | Alexis Caron (L--Hull). and| d|Lionel Chevrier (L -- Montreal | Funeral Laurier) promptly took up the is- _| sue. Mr. Caron called for a "com- plete investigation" of the charge | "What 1 deprecate in this at-| | tack is not that it is directed at a previous administration but] Cribbing Charge By ROBERT RICE Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA. (CP)--Acting | ce worker State Henry of Montreal -- who | Secretary Balcer will look into al plained the method used by the charge that the Liberals gave out forme: answers in advance to friends i writing civil service exams. He said Wednesday he would the 'proper course" of jzed to release Mr. Henry's nam checking into the charge 'by ,.a details of the case Valade (PC--Montreal = Ste. Marie). r administration to get thei friends into the eivil service." | But Mr. Balcer pointed out that der the Liberals as an employee | Cars driven by Jack Dost, 27, (he couldn't order a full inquiry of the Montreal ordnance depot. into every little Fer that When a civil service competition comes up about civil service jobs. wae Nay The accusation sparked a fiery Was Sanne for tue dopant fight in the Commons--most of ment, Mr. it in French. Mr. Valade said he wanted to inati ih the exa ape: poin* w She injustice in many de Sxamination papel: cases of the present system of ge di § if fei grading" federal government| le did not identify the official said Mr . : Liberals devised special examin Fowever, In his earlier, state.| ations for personal friends to ge iment he made a specific charge them into the civil service, 5 . | investigation many such rumors and disclosed the name of one| 'don't stand up." Sibley X sex. | furious and moved so rapidly in Mr. Valade said he was author- Mr. Henry was classified un- [tional research department. And Henry was approached] by an official and was given all the answers to the questions on The PC member also said the that it is an attack on the Civil| Service Commission of Canada," | said Mr. Chevrier. l He said that he has heard "silly rumors" such as the one put for-| ward by Mr. Valade "but I have never seen the proof yet." Mr. Balcer agreed that after The debate, which got hot and | French that the simultaneous translators couldn't keep up with r the remarks, enlivened Commons | consideration of the estimates of | Mr. Balcer's department. In the end, the estimates were €| approved. So were the estimates for the northern affairs and na- | the commons also wrapped up its | clause-by-clause studv of the gov- |ernment's anti-combines legisla- n | tion, leaving over third reading final approval -- for sometime next week LAND-SEA-AIR FOR ALL TRAVEL DONALD TRAVEL . SERVICE Whitby-Oshawa-Brooklin MO 8-3304 t I! THE OSHAWA TWES, Thursday, July 28, 1960 3 ' J / SHOP AT IGA WHERE You SAVE 2 WAYS : LOW Foop PRigEs : FREE GIFTS FOR CASH REGISTER TAPES, 3 1.2 Y, rai ALL FOOD PRICES EFFECTIVE JULY 28, 29 & 30 -- WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT oHage Time! | (GR KENT CHOICE | OMATOES 2 PEAR SHAPED -- SAVE 2éc ior HAMS 20-0Z. TINS 1%4-LB. TIN _IROSE SWEET MIXED -- SAVE 6c PICKLES IGA PLUS DEPOSIT 16-0Z. C JAR FRESH GRADE A EVISCERATED-2'; -3 LB. AVERAGE ROASTING OR FRYING AND ONE 6-0Z. PKG. OF SWIFTS BROOKFIELD 7 0) < COOKED HAM CHEESE SLICES a ALL FOR 57¢ ' ALL FOR 75. COMBINATION OFFER YOUR CHOICE OF SIZES 279 10-0Z. PKG. OF 8 TABLERITE 8-0x. pies 30-0Z. BOTTLES PLUS ONE PKG. OF 8 DEMPSTER WIENER ROLLS PLUS ONE PKG. OF 6--10" DEMPSTER WIENER ROLLS 49: - DELICIOUSLY REFRESHING U.S. NO. 1 SEEDLESS GRAPES: 35 LUSCIOUS FREESTONE ELBERTAS U.S. NO. 1 PEACHES Heaping quart box 25. LARGE JUICY CALIFORNIA U.S, No. 1 Durates PLUMS "=" 29° BOX WIENERS ONE PKG, OF 6--12" WIENERS IGA ROYAL GOLD--REGULAR OR NIPPY CHEESE SLICES CHICKEN - TURKEY OR BEEF FROZEN 2 MORTON PIES 8-o0x. pkgs. HOME GROWN NO. 1 GRADE: CORN DOZEN 49° BILSKY I.G.A. STORE 120 WILSON S. -- OSHAWA HOPE 1.G.A. STORE PORT PERRY SOUTH END L.G.A. BROCK ST. S. -- WHITBY COLLEGE HILL 1.G.A. CUBERT ST. -- OSHAWA BECKSTEAD 1G.A. COURTICE -- ONT. DYL'S LG.A. 166 ADELAIDE ST. -- OSHAWA LANSDOWNE I.G.A. LANSDOWNE SHOPPING CENTRE -- :

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