Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 15 Aug 1960, p. 9

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ANNUAL AWARDS DINNER HELD FOR KEDRON CAMP Mourn Death Of Oshawa Educator Tribute was paid foday by (prominent Oshawa citizens to Sir Albert Love, business administra tor of the Oshaws Separate | Behool Bond, whe Hed Sunday N H afternoon in Buffalo, (See story on Page 1) ~ ear ome Following are the tributes A four year old boy, John De Mayor Lyman Gifford (Who goon was knocked down by # {called Mr Love "on. oF er] Car near his home at 839 Bloor {closest advisors'): F consider|y oor oqst Bgturday moring.| the passing of Alert Jove 4 pert Mier treatment at the Oshaws| sonal loss, as well as one 10 The conerel Hospital, for bruises om) entire community, ! : + in, Dis face and legs, the boy was t community. i He was a great ¢o ON allowed to go home, spirited individual, one who radi-|*" apie personality, and & great) The driver of the car Involved admirer of good sportsmanship, In the accident was John Rear- | "He was an outstanding citizen, don, 80 Rowe street, and to Mrs, Love and her three, Extensive damage was caused | sons | extend my deepest sym- to two cars which collided on) pathy." Wentworth street at Park Road! | south Sunday afiernoon, One of| George Vieicher, chairman of the cars driven by Howard N. Me-| the Oshawa School Board: "Mr. Cabe, 202 Monirave avenue, was Love was an excellent public damaged to the extent of $600, Fhe Oshawa Time PAGE NINE OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, AUGUST 15, 1960 SECOND SECTION Boy, 4, Hurt 50 years | * % oi, P hs id % d AT THE STARR-DYMOND PICNIC AT GREENWOOD PARK The twin daughters of Mr, "Doc" Dymond pienic at elal minister of health, looks en, | and Mrs, Fred Weir of Whithy | Greenwood Park on Saturday, | Greenwood Park is on Highway their names are Judy and | The proud mother poses with | No, 7 near the village of the | Joy pose for the cameramen | the six-week-old twins while | same name, al annual "Mike" Starrs | Dr, Matthew Dymond, provin- ~Photo by John Mills Tail Wagging Jim hore .: In Indians' "Revenooer Hall Of Fame Mr ights the Vrank Meagher, member of the Oshawa Separate School Board | "We on the Separate School| Board, and Oshawa citizens as a whole, have sustained a very! great loss in the passing of Albert Love, His® contributions to the community and the church have [made him an outstan ding citizen," (front row) Linda Horick, San dra Walters, Gayle Cooper, Les lie Skerratt, (hack row) Lynne MacMillan Glenda Slesson, Karen Trivett, Carolyn Werry and Irene Frohel : Oshawa overall , the girls' portion of the summer | camp, They were driven home to Oshawa by Kiwanians Sat urday afternoon, The nine and Gall Churth, best camper | happy girls in bottom picture in Cabin B, The awards din are pretty counsellors at Camp ner concluded the activities for | Kedron, They are, left to right, | Dianne Campbell, best camper; Gall Watson, best | camper in Cabin A; Linda Woods, best camper in Cabin C, FOUR OUTSTANDING campers in top picture (ry out thelr prize flashlights presented to them at the Awards Dinner at Camp Kedron I'riday even ing, From left to right are | Photo servant for a great many Years The second car was driven by! "He was a man of fine charac, qo | Brooklin her 4 : 1 | other peoples' problems, We shal wtront, collided ont Separate Bchool Board in losing POOR Trustee J, L. Riordan of 11 was shocked to learn of the : | "We have heen very closely! AJAX Statistics for month of local and district Knights of admitted, 180; number of babies his associates and wide circle of X-rays, 157; laboratory in-patient| faithfully for the past 35 transfusions, 20 minor opera-| J. 1. Kelly, former chairman of tions, 33 zens, We shall miss Mr, Love Love since I came to Oshawa 12| Congratulations and best formed tremendous services for who are celebrating birth. Love's prominence in the Kn Robert Ireland, 116 Elgin and again in this field gave his awa; lvy Owen, 117 Gibbons, nik, 229 Etna avenue, Osh dia Skochko, 127 Tresane I'imes awa | and will be sadly missed in the Toni Locicero whose home is in| community, Toronto and sustained $400 dam. ter and had : Je degree of Cars driven by Merril 1, Ross, | understanding of his own and Daniel Cameron.| 272 Guelph miss him sadly and extend sin poi Bd ; | cere sympathy to his family and King street west Sunday fer | his services.' * . . SEPARATE SCHOOL BOARD G St ti t me IVE J1ATISTICS Oshawa Separate School Board . sudden passing of my dear For Hospital friend, Albert Love nesociated {or many years in July at Ajax and Pickering Gen-| school hoard work and in the eral Hospital: Total in patients] Columbus born, 41; total out-patients, 324;| | "He will be sadly missed hy in-patient X-rays, 120; out-patient friends especially the Catholic|treatments, 622; laboratory out-| citizens whom he has represented) patient treatments 19; blood " tions, 33; major operations, 22;| ear, eve, nose and throat opera:| the Separate School Board: "Osh. awa has lot one of its better citi CELEBRATING badly 7' Mr. Kelly said, b™ "1 was associated with Mr BIRTHDAYS years ago and found him an admirable colleague He per wishes to the following resi the Separate School Board." dents of Oshawa and district Mr, Kelly also spoke of days today of Columbus Gary Powell, RR | Oshawa; "He was a past Grand Knight, street west, Oshawa; Susan all Meringer, 128 La Salle, Osh- Oshawa; Christine Naylor, 565 Masson, Oshawa; Irene Roz awa: Catherine Lodge, 446 Vimy avenue, Oshawa; Ly street, Oshawa; Joan Macken zie, 84 Westmount street, Osh- The first five persons to in Times of | . ANADARKO, Okla, (AP) = | Const, McLean re- |Wa.Tho-Huek, better known am Saskat- | mooning," Rapid-Shooters Arrive In Arctic By JIM WHELLY Canadian Press Correspondent FORT SMITH, NW.T, (CP) Ulrich and Gunter Schimschal, German-born youths from Hamil ton, Wash shot the dreaded Rapid of the Drowned on the Slave River twice In 15-foot kay ak I'he pair performed last done successtully craft in 1911 history of the water just inside Territories above border The . Schimschals ar on a leisurely canoe and pleture-tak ing trip north from Peace River Alta, 300 miles northwest of Ed monton, to Kitigazuit Are tie coast at the the Mackenzie Rive WERE | Ulrich, a former seaman in the German merchant navy, de scribes the kayaks as "ideal craft for river travel, especially, GREEN ISLAND Queensland in stretches of fast water" (CP)-Two adventurous Austral When they reached the Rapidijans--.a crocodile shooter and an of the. Drowned, by-passed hy nderwater photographer plan canoes and small craft since tha tg build a marine zoological gar days of Alexander Mackenzie's don designed by a Canadian ar exploration trip of 1789, the chiteet on this. Great Barrier Schimscnal brothers swept Reef coral island through. They then carried their professional hunter craft back up the bank and shot gaff, 42.vear-old former Sydney the rapids a second time In or engineer, and bearded photogra der to take pictures of each pher Lloyd Grigg, 44, a onetime other Melbourne builder, now operate "We went through a submerged observatory in the which were over our head," Ul-gea 300 yards off Green Island rich said, "But it was easy to Their new project calls for con keep on an even keel with the struction of a £24,000 ($50,000) double-bladed paddles." composite aquarium and educa . en tional centre, They hope to do DISAPPOINTED their own building based on a de When they Before leaving home they sign hy Vie Embleton, a former administration bought enough supplies for the! porgnto architect now working in covered A350 full trip because they thought iti ihe North Queensland city of Peace and would be impossible to buy either Cairn had before them food or equipment north of the The Great miles, up the Slave 60th parallel, southern boundary vast area of Slave Lake to Fort of the Territories and on down the Mackenzie It was a surprise--and some: waler the coast what of a disappointment to can be them when they arrived here to! simply SHALLOW DRAM find a modern Hudson Bay major Ihe brother Company store and the cathedral River where pire, They thought they already their canvas were deep into wilderness eraft, Carrying "We will probably fly back gear and supplie from the coast because we don't aks drew only waloer Rich Ocean Crop Stirs Argument AUCKLAND (CP Professor commercial L. R. Richardson, Canadian prop: cateh tuna an offer of $850,000 for 493 acres wealth, is the central figure in a The New Zealand industry has of reservation property and an brisk fisheries argument here responded to the Japanese activ. easement on 35 acres more, The The dispute has come to a head ity with angry protests, Fisher./land will be used for a water through an invasion of New Zea. men are demanding that the gov. storage reservoir on the $720,000 land waters hy hig well-equipped ernment impose a ban on fishing 000 Niafara power project Japanese trawlers which reap a for up to 80 miles from the New It was not a happy occasion rich harvest just outside territor: Zealand coast for the Indians ial limits Prof, Richardson, recognized We do not feel elated" a Prof, Richardson as an authority on marine life chief, who asked not to be identi roology at Victoria University, round the New Zealand coast, /fied, said Saturday, "We feel we Wellington, graduated from Me: has told the industry that the were defrauded by the court. We Gill University in Montreal and answer is to exploit the fisheries feel that we cannot depend on was a lecturer at McGill for some which have for so long lain ne: the justice of the white man" years before taking up his post in' glected At issue in the two year Wellington in 1539 He says the Japanese activity struggle, which reached the For years, he has been telling is a challenge to New Zealand tof United States Supreme Court be New Zealand that vast fishery re- display similar initiative, Forifore the Indians lost, was the sources lie Just off the coast $15,000,000, he says, New Zealand right of power authority to con ready to be developed into a could provide an adequate fishing demn Indian land. The Indians major industry. He has been sup- fleet to establish a major indus: claimed their land was protected ported by some leading newspa- try hy treaty with the US. and was pers which accuse the fishing in If New Zealand was not pre. inviolate unless Congress specif dustry of lack of enterprise and pared to develop such an indus: ically abrogated the treaty imagination try, he says, then it would be! The authority said the land Now Prof cheaper to buy fish from the Jap: was purchased by the Indians have been strikingly vindicated. 'anese from private owners and was ships are coming all the way The fishing industry indignantly subject to condemnation for pub from Japan to gather a harvest accuses Richardson of "all soris/lic purpose, as is other private which the New Zealand industry|of wild statements." It says there! land has failed to exploi is no local market for fish on the The Indians got just aver $1,540 The Japanese vessels scale proposed and New Zealand an acre, The authority offered nels to cateh fis MW onsts ar ta high to compete $1,100 an acre at the start of the sought hy the as fight and made a maximum offer land fishing ves during the battle of mt $2,165 they are makin an acre. The autho s wea using |! than hall of the dreds of hooks nally sought, By RUSSELL ELMAN Canadian Press Staff Writer the hy a feat mall of the treteh of Northwest Alherta UNAWATE Vince Fla holling the the 0 waves on the mouth o NWT had the They 1,400 OPO: Great Providence to reached th centr they mile yon R Slave ve Harrier Reef living coral interviewed at his observatory, "If the Reel presented to the public and easily, it could be a tourist attraction." left Melbourne is a sald under 1¢ Grigg drove to Peace they assembled covered J-pound 100 pound the I in 1950 Grigg of y of Kk Tuscarora Lose Land Battle NIAGARA FALLS, N.Y AP) The Tuscarora Indian nation, the sixth tribe of the once-powerful Iroquois Confederacy, has closed the book on its long struggle to keep its land from the New Yor State Power Authority The Tuscaroras' general coun not cil voted Friday night te accept each five he like cover twice," fishermen do professor of Richardson's claims ising Kinds fea are the New wid 8 wm with low-wage countries such lapan on world markets The dispute continuing apace, with government lis tening uneasily to both sides. ab ity i sels. In on auls o th Zealand taking M3 acres Arg is me lines Ww New han jor the 181 'Plan To Build Marine Garden for a vacation crocodile shoot In Queensland dnd never returned South, His interest in marine life was stimulated through photog raphy, which gave him and his partner the idea of building an underwater observatory "Instead of just taking pietures of the teeming marine life of the Reef, we wanted to show people what we had seen,' he said, "The simplest way to show marine life was merely walk downstairs into the sea The Australians in designed and built the H0-foot all - steel observatory in Cairns harbor, It was towed 16 miles through open sea to Green Island, nearest point on the 1,200 mile Reef "to the Queensland mainland, then launched by winches down a slipway The observatory, at high tide 18 feet below the water, is held in place by steel anchor pins driven into the coral reef, Visit ors walk down 30 steps into the chamber, where 22 plate » glass port-hole pe tacular view of the fantasy of life and color of fish and coral, It's possible to see up to 80 feet with the clear turquoise water acting as a natural magnifying glass, FACES PROBLEMS The proposed marine zoological garden is expected to take 2! years to complete on the 33-acre tropical isle, It will include mod- els of the Reef with colored wa ter, shell collections, specimen rare corals, exotic fish, saltwater crocodiles, sea snakes, and mod els of underwater topography ex hibited in a rotating sphere, "It will be something of a chal lenge to build," sald architect Embleton, "We have to get the materials across to the island, find how to make concrete out of coral sand, how to avoid correo sion from the salt, and keep the water circulating in the tanks without running into heavy ex pense to " one year 100-ton windows permit a Embleton, who stuglied at the University of Toronto" and grad uated in architecture from Lon don University, joined the Queensland Public Works depart ment in 1948 as head of one of its drawing offices, He designed an 11-storey tax building in Brisbane and television studios, and in 1984 was Moject Architect for the Royal Tour of Australia He now is Cairns magaser a large private architefts firm In this tropical city, his work in designing churches homes and bulk sugar for cludes schools terminals TOP CYCLIST HOHENSTEIN « ERNSTTHAL Kast Ge y (AP)--Rik Van Looy of Belgium Sunday won the professional road racing cham plonship of the 1960 world eveling championships, In a sprint finish of the 173% -mile the Sachsenring Looy P Andre iLerani of race over Van defending ciren cham Josef d heat nce's Darrigarde Belgium was pion thi th . 2 | Neb, form The Oshawa their birthdays each day will receive double tickets to The Regent Theatre, good for four-week period, The curren attraction is "The Lost World" Reports on birthdays will he received only between the hours of 8 am, and 10 a.m Girl Convicted Of Vagrancy Wendy Jean Hansen, 18, re ceived a suspended sentence and a train ticket to New Bruns wick Friday i vieted of vagrancy a week earlier | and held in custody until a pre. | sentence report was prepared Evidence at the hearing indi cated the girl had no fixed ad J. B. Toppings, chairman of the |geparate School Board: 'The {Oshawa Separate School Board has suffered a tremendous loss in the death of Albert Love "The rapid growth and expan sion of the separate school sys. tem in Oshawa may be credited to his guidance and great devo tion to school matters "Mr, Love was a gentleman at all times, He was respected by all men regardless of thelr race or religion," Mr, Toppings said, | Name Manager| Vigor 0il Co. EL DORADO, Ark J. Wayne Hinds, a naitve of Auburn, Neb, has been named general mana. ger of Vigor Oil Co, Oshawa, Ont, William R, Seuren, mana-| = or : i "4 ger of Murphy Corporation's {Ire noe he hitch iuked ure marketing properties in eastern| rom Saint John, N.8., severa Canada, has announced | weeks ago Vigor hp Th ol Said 14 Murphy « ( | Pay Phone Is Removed heen acquired about a year ago Viurphy-Canada, of which Seuren| A pay telephone was wrenched from the wall and rethoved when is vice president - marketing, is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Mur: phy Corporatign, Vigor was or nized in 1028 and distributes) gasoline and fuel under the Vigor brand throughout the Toronto and Oshawa area. It is also in wholesale distribution operates a lake-front terminal at) ; Oshawa ing by breaking a window in the Hinds received his early educa | weight lifting room, The thieves tion in the schools of Auburn, also tampered with a vending ma and attended the Univer: chine but were unable to open it ity of Nebraska. His experience They left the building by the au and|!N8 Entry was gained to the build. and his bro 18, were not E |F | | St. Johnstone 2 Hamilton Stirling 1 Dundee U 2 English F.A. Charity Shield {Buraley 2 Wolverhampton 3 | heen employed by Frontier Refin- F d Arti t ger of wholesale and retail sales| liam Joseph O'Brian, both of Cha. To Stand Trial 0 an Iida ing several tires and other equip out jury Friday on a charge of sentence for a previous offence, other youths were freed of the] od with possessing stolen goods He was arrested in Toronto when |; gajurdoy's Scottish League sie a William Mills, 21 Albion 0 Queen of S 8 D i Brechin 1 Stenhousemuir 3 Dunfermline § Airdrieonians 2 Forfar 2 E Stirling 2 nington, was fined $25 Friday . : \ S Friday yi marnock 4 Hibernian 2 taurant owner with his arti Rangers 8 Partick 1 \ hard he hit Harold Rlack- in the petroleum industry dates ditorium door ing Co, of Denver, and his most in eastern Nebraska Get 30 Days tham, N.B., were sentenced Fri An Oshawa youth was com. ment with somebody else's eredit stealing a diving lung from a D COUNTRY charge because of insufficient] OL William Doidge, 21, of Steven.| he attempted to sell the $200 lung Cup football matches: ther, Donald Mills Alloa 1 Morton 2 Celtic 2 Thad Lanark 0 Own Strength last Fife 2 Cowdenbeath § {Hearts 1 St ¥ with the alternative of 10 Motherwell 4 Clyde $ ficial arm. Snodden told the burn but said Blackburn back to 1949, Since 1956, he has --- recent assignment was as mana Commit Youth | Frank Peter Mullins and Wil day to 30 days in jail for obtain. mitted for trial by a judge with. ©ard. Both were on suspended Park road, service station, Two evidence, They were also yoods | SOCCER SCORES son's road south will stand trial, TLASGOW (Routers fess for $35 Aberdeen 4 Ayr U 3 held oh Lik Rerwick 2 Dumbarton 2 Dundee § Raith 0 "alkirk 2 Arbroath 2 Elgin Snodden, 35, of Can Mirren 1 days in jail for hitting a res. | {Queens Pk 0 Montrose 2 court he didn't know how swung frst | She had been con-| chewan's best booze ~ hound never touches the stuff; he's content Just sniffing it, Ace's nose for alcohol has heen a source of frustration to many a moonshiner, for sniff ing out illegal brew is all in a day's work for the 90-pound RCMP dog, an Alsatian, Now three years old, Ace's sense of smell--developed in dense bush in his native Nova Scotia--has never been-keener, Ace, Regimental service num. ber 241M, is one of 19 RCMP dogs across Canada and is the son of the force's famous Nicki a dog credited with scores of arrests Constable Dave McLean his master and manager "teammate is better," he says and as with the other 18 teams in Canada, these two are inseparable, "One of the fellows even took his dog while honey. Fatality Brings Stiffer Rules JARVIS (CP)Canadian Auto engaged thieves broke into the CRA build:| mobile Sport Club officials willl ern Canada sports car racing in consider safety rule amendments | following Saturday's race death of 38-year-old CBC producer Ted Pope, | Pope was fatally injured when his TRS was struck from behind by another car entering the chi cane, a series of tight bends, at nearby Harewood Acres, old over three times, Pope's racing partner, Bruce Peck of Toronto, was seriously injured in practice Friday when his TRS overturned and skidded 230 feet on its top. He is in Ham ilton hospital where officials de. |seribed his condition as satisfac: tory after plastic surgery. MAY STIFFEN RULES CASC, governing body ofthe Canadian women's 20-yard motor sport in Eastern Canada, will consider rules affecting roll bars and tonneau covers, A roll bar is a steel hoop all cars must carry to protect the driver's head, . New rules will probably quire them to be larger A tonneau cover is a metal or fabric cover over the passen. gor's seat, Many drivers want these hecause it cuts wind re. |sistance, but some CASC stew ards feel they are dangerous. They leave the driver no place to duck if his car flips, CASC may ban them The death was the first at | Harewood, a converted airport now in its seventh year of rac re; CYCLIST KILLED WATKINS GLEN, N.Y, (AP) A motoreyelist was killed Satur day during time trials for a US championship road race, Thomas Seagraves, 2, of Orlando, Fla. broke his neck when he lost con trol of the machine on a curve near the finish line at the Wat Kins Glen International Grand {Prix road racing track and was {ung to the ground. calls, Searching for illicit stills, | however, is a small part of the team's six-day work week, Ace is also used for guarding, find. ing persons and property and other jobs. Jim Thorpe, has been admitted to the national hall of fame for American Indians, The Sac and Fox Indian was voted outstanding athlete of the half-century in an Associated Press poll, Another well known Oklahoma Dally training keeps the parts ners in top form, Each day, Ace performs obedience tests, Six days a week, unless a job | is to be done, searches are simulated with spent car tridges, liquor bottles and a male quarry, Persistence by the dog and patience by the master pay off 99 times out of 100 The working life of a dog like Ace is about 10 years. What happens then? Ace will be put quietly and painlessly to sleep, The dogs thrive on thelr work and to prevent them from do- ing it is to be cruel--they will pine and mope and fade away, says Constable McLean ing. It was the second In East | 10 years, PRODUCED TABLOID Indian, former New York Yan. | kee pitcher Allie Reynolds, une |velled a bronze bust of him dure ing ceremonies here Sunday, Highlights of Thorpe's athletie career included his football play- ing at Carlisle Institute in Penn. sylvania, winning of the penta. thalon and decathalong medals in the 1012 Olymples and starring in both Jrofessional foothall and baseball, Thorpe died of a heart attack at the age of 64 in Los Angeles in 1053, Long Trip For Bottle OTTAWA (CP)---Willlam Cars. callen, 12, sailing home from Germany where his father had Just finished four years of air force service, chucked a bottle over the side of the Homerle off the coast of Labrador, William, son of Air Commo dore and Mrs, H, M. Carscals len, received a letter Saturday from fisherman Sam Clarke, Mr, Clarke wrote he found the bottle containing William's name Pope, a native of Clarke City, Que, switched from producing Tabloid, a CBC interview show, | to producing TV plays recently, | |He joined the CBC in 1952 as a radio producer and won awards {for his radio productions, His wife and two children sur vive Two New Records To Eleanor Haslam | | SASKATOON (CP) -- Saska| toon's Eleanor Haslam shattered) and 880-yard records Saturday at! the Saskatchewan track and field championships 'The 20-year-old star clipped one-tenth of a second off her Canadian 220-yard record with a time of 24.5 seconds, In the 880. vard event she established al mark of 2:12.7, three-tenths of a! second faster than the Olympic qualifying standard She will run in the 100, 200 and| 800 metres at Rome this month, Sr. Tennis Champ Walks Off Court TORONTO (CP) Canadian senior tennis champion Walter Warren of Toronto astonished of. ficials, spectators and his oppon. ent Sunday when he walked off off the coast of Cornwall, 2,800 miles from where it was dropped, Grey Monarch wi Fort Erie Feature FORT ERIE (CP)---Grey Mon. arch outlasted Strong Boy to win the $10,000 Auspicious Handicap at Fort Erie Saturday before 13.666 fans, Hidden Treasure and Skinny Minny won both divisions of the Heresy Stakes, Grey Monarch's victory spoiled an almost-perfect day for jockey Alfonso Coy. Coy won on Our Sirdar and then captured both divisions of the Heresy Stakes on the W. R. Beasley horses, Tiny Baby Still Alive NEW YORK (AP)-A 12.0unce girl was still alive in an incu bator today---two days after she was born 41% months prematurely in a Brooklyn hospital, The baby was delivered to Mrs, Dorothy Dispensa, 33, Saturday at Caledonian Hospital, Mrs, Dispeasa and her husband, Joseph, a 38-year-old postal clerk, have another daughter, Carol Amn, 12, the court in the middle of a match in the Ontario interna. tional tennis championships here; | Warren trailed Emil Rose, Tor | onto, 16, 04 when he quit in the {seniors competition for players over 43 In other competition Mrs. B. { Boyd, Deep River, defeated Mary D'Senna, Toronto, 6.0, 61 1 | ONTARIO WINNER KELOWNA B.C, (CP)--George, Denniston of Agincourt, won the senior men's title at the Cana. dian water skiing championships at. 'the Kelowna regatta, He gained the crown Saturday with first-place victories in the jump ing and trick events,

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