AIR CADET NEWS City Squadron Training Starts By WINGLESS WILLIE (88 that was heating up his field, Tuesday evening the members! He quickly advanced to Spit- "lof the Chadburn Squadron, No, fires and did seme night flying, 151, held their first parade of | took to train-busting, ship-bust. the new Air Cadet Year, Thirty- ing and finally entered homber four cadets were on parade com-| escort work, He was attached to ared with 43 cadets on roll, /an RAF Squadron for a while Next week we are looking for ajand when his transfer came he better turnout along with a gen- offered to revert to the ranks if eral increase in new cadets, he were permitted to stay, He did Any boys, between 14 . 18 not stay nor did he revert to the years of age, are welcome to ranks but moved on to bocome a come to the Rotary Hall on Cen-| Wing Commander, tre street and join our squadron| Lloyd led his squadron through next Tuesday evening. many Channel clashes during the | Dieppe raid, knocking out three CLASSES Focke Wulf 190's in a single en Classes were limited Tuesday counter, Lloyd also took part in because it was the first parade ye chage of the Scharnhorst and of the year, Flying Officer Hous-|Gneisenau when they sped ton, our newly commissioned of-\y ough the English Channel. ficer, gave the NCO's a lecture One of his most talked about 4 on discipline, During this lecture exploits was the strafing of an TT" the NCO's discussed methods of enemy destroyer, Chad and Sgt, ;|{using _ discipline to bring thei cpa nook of the RAF were out ;|squadron up to a higher stan- ("ont un an airdrome in Hol- od land, They missed the airdrome and found themselves over Flushing Harbor where a nice, new destroyer rode at anchor, |The flak began to fly but they dove through sweeping the decks with cannon fire, destroying deck guns and installations and sweep- ing a number of Germans into Fhe Oshavon Times PAGE THIRTEEN SECOND SECTION OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1960 ard, A While ¥-0 Houston gave his lec. 4 ." ture our CO, F-L Gilbank, gave £ ithe junior cadets a lecture on 4%. i how to build a higher standard "% in the squadron, During the second period a film was shown on the escape of refugees In Word War | Many interesting subjects are the drink. {being taught this year and regu-| On another occasion Chad came lar classes will commence next| once three German E boats Tuesday. giving an allied convoy a going |GONE IS THE ANGEL over; he dived in and turnéd the For the next two weeks this col-| tables for which he received a) THE ABOVE PICTURE | retail store, The building in the | The repaving of the street was the application for paving the i | n | . 8 [umn will be running a story on|ltelegram from the Navy extend |the late Wing Commander Lloyd ing congratulations, for his en. PLAN BLITZ FOR MENTAL HEALTH GROUP Organizing a city-wide house to house canvass for the Osh- awa and Ontario County branch of the Canadian Mental Health Association has kept the co- chairmen, Mrs. G, A, Rundle, Painters Display | CELEBRATING [mihi ht, Work At Library | Three Oshawa painters are cur. |strength, achieved with an econ rently exhibiting their works in{omy of line which suggest that the auditorium of the McLaughlin| Catalano is beginning to master They are June his subject, Public Library Jim dd | Chadburn, DSO and Bar, DFC, |awa Squadron was named, Lloyd Chadburn grew up in |Aurora, Ont, and was an ath. letic chap winning a bronze medal {as a crack shot in high school |He graduated from Northern Vo- | cational School in Toronto in ac {eounting and typing to work in a Toronto bank as a junior and [later as a ledgerkeeper, Previous to the war tempted to join both standing, and Mrs, E. M. Culp, | Sept. 15, a rally will be held in busy for the past weeks, The the Canadian Legion Hall, Cen. Rouse do house Sinnvass will be tre street, for the 400 peo- e between six a e Weil h p.m Tuesday, September 19, ple who will take part in the during a week-long campaign | canvass for mental health, Thursday Oshawa Times Photo at. Air he the down, Lloyd tried again at the outhreak of the war and was finally accepted hy the Air Force in 1040, He did not enter as a pilot but as a gunner, Chad went overseas in Novem- | ber, 1950, and moved directly into an operational squadron, His first {erach at Jerry came while on the | ground with a rifle against a JU | BIRTHDAYS | Congratulations and best wishes to the following resi- dents of Oshawa and district who are celebrating birth. days today Mrs, Maurice Bickle, RR 4, The rest of his work consists of] Oshawa; Graham Alchin, after whom 151 Chadburn, Osh. in gagement with the enemy, Chad returned to Canada early 1943, The first thing he did {was to down a large quantity of oysters which were his favor. ite food, It was on this visit to Canada that Lloyd came and inspected 151 Air Cadet Squadron, During his visit he gave his permission to name our squadron in his honor, Hence our Squadron has |been called 151 Chadburn Sqdn Lloyd returned to England but returned home in 1944 in connec- tion with the Victory Loan drive He again returned to England and as an operational Wing Com- mander at Group Headquarters, they were reluctant to let him {return to the air, Chad finally got his way and on D-Day he was back in the air Next week along with Air Cadet News ~ part two of "Gone is The Angel", shows a portion of Richmond | street west which will soon be | repaved at a cost of $16,880.95, { The building on the right is | the new liquor control hoard | Chest Drive 'Will Open On Oct. 26 The campaign dates of the Greater Oshawa Community Chest fund drive have been set, The drive will be conducted from Oct, 26 to Nov, 10, There will he no door to door soliciting, Arthur Doyle, executive secretary of the chest, said today, | There "will be employee can F { street left foreground is the premises of Unit 42 Canadian Corps Association, The white build- ing to the rear left Is the Coulter Mfg, Co. premises, LAID IN 1920 opposed by an executive of the Corps at a meeting of the On- tario Planning board at city | hall yesterday, The planning | board chairman in approving road said it will be an Improve. ment to the downtown area of Oshawa, Oshawa Times Phote Richmond Street West Paving Plan Passed The Ontario Municipal Board of the opinion that the paving pave Richmond Prince street to from street, ermission west 0 Church $16,680.05 City Solicitor E, J, McNeeley Wednesday approved an appli- work should be done now, and cation by the city of Oshawa for all done now, if we are to have|$2100 to the hospital building any sort of street, at a cost of CANADIAN CORPS OBJECTS | Harold Oley, first vice presi dent of Unit 42 of the Canadian (didn't have the money to spend on roads, He said, "we gave fund, and in order to give this |we had to borrow $1500, FAVORED BY COULTER A, G, Coulter, president of the and weer | VASES in plants and industrial canvasses of firms, All retail Fuller, Joe Catalano Corps, sald that he felt the Can- Coulter Manufacturing Lo. who vod in 1920 The oment dian Corps being the only resi- have property abutting the street, pave 418 10, Tue 2020 pavement dent on the street being imposed spoke on behalf of the road pavs side. of the street only, He said/upon. He objected to the cost of|ing project, He sald the road the 40-year-old pavement $1250 as being the share of the was in a deplorable eondition quires frequent patching {Corps, He maintained the road from October to April, and that : {was 95% better than some of the traffic was forced to travel on SPUR RAIL LINE | streets in Oshawa, the 20 foot paved portion of the The city solicitor described the! Oley sald, the Ontario Liquor street, He maintained that driv. south side of Richmond street as Control Board had heen putting|ing was hazardous on that street being unpaved with a rail road pressure on the city since the| during usual conditions, spur line crossing the unpaved building of its new liquor outlet] City Solicitor McNeeley added portion, He said the railroad on Prince street, He maintained | that the railroad planned to tear company had agreed to pave the|/the area near the liquor store up the railroad tracks and ree railroad bed at their own ex-|could be repaved and the rest|p ace the road-bed and ties before pense, |of the street patched up, Helthe paving project begins, He He also told the hoard that to claimed that only 270 feet of new also sald, the eity council had Fleming a group of well executed designs told the board, the street was Miss Fuller, formerly a student|and a Japanese print, His one oll at OCCI and OCVI and now a! painting titled Abstract", is an fourth year student at the On-|intricate arrangement of elipses tario College of Art is represent./on a dark background : ed by a number of woodcuts and| Catalano received his early an oll portrait titled Sam", [training at OCCI and OCVI and| This portrait is painted simply |is entering his third year at the in dark blues and greens, The|Ontario College of Art. face is painted in profile, the| Fleming's work includes a prominent cheekbones giving it'a series of drawing and pencil| compelling gauntness | sketches, one somewhat reminis. | In her woodcuts, Miss Fuller/cent of a Japanese print, Flom succeeds In creating an Intense|ing's versatility extends into oils, | emotional impact. "The Quarrel (One of his canvasses depicts al graphically portrays an embitter./ man looking down on a grave, | ed couple trapped In each other's A cloudy sky with a silver lining 1404 Oxford Wayne Fox, 104 Stevenson road north; Anthony Meringer, 132 Central Park Blvd, 8.; Danny Clary, 109 Grenfell street; William Mills, RR 4, Oshawa; David Thompson, 742 Simcoe street north Marlene Clement, 859 Hortop; James Wylie, 666 Olive Ave.; Paul Fletcher, 312 Cadillac south; Wayne Aasen, 500 Dean ave. nue; Helen McPhee, 264 Mon. ash avenue; Joe Grills, street; {and wholesale outlets in the area will also be approached | Last year's objective of $175, 350, which was divided among 16 service organizations, was reached Oshawa Pupils T Visit Stratford potato), ip uo Nearly 250 high school students that the final week of the festival| costs and the possibility of addi- from Oshawa will go to Stratford has been devoted to youth, In|tional organizations joining the next week during the final week| 1958, 12,000 students attended one|/Chest, more money will have to of the Shakespearean Festival, (of the matinee performances, In be collected than last year if the For the third successive year|1939 there were 15,000 and this Work of these groups is to be a group of students from Central year the students from Oshawalcarried on effectively Collegiate Institute will go tojwill be among 18,000 from Ont.| Members of this year's execu. Stratford, where they will seelario and the United States who/tive are: F, J. Skinner, presi re. company, fills the background In a lighter vein is "Sheila", Another oil titled "Autumn in a pencil sketch of a wistful young the Country" is painted in the woman, mellow colors of autumn with a Catalano's work consists of four blue horizon in the background figure studies, two male and two! Altogether about thirty works female. At least two of the fig- are on view, The show is well ures possess a massiveness and worth a visit, 'Super Mayor' Raised In Arctic In 1931 during a return voyage from the Arctic, he and more than .20 sailors were stranded when the steamer Baychimo was trapped In ice off Point Barrow northernmost tip of Alaska. They ripped planks from the ship's deck and built a rough hut for shelter, The crew improvised a football pitoh on the ice, Bonnycastle is a non-smoking, all-round sports- man who still likes to hunt, fish and curl, He used to ski and play tennis, and once toured Europe on an Oxford University hockey team which also included Liberal leader Lester Pearson and Roland Michener, now Speaker of the House of Commons, They were eventually rescued by light planes, but the Baychimo with a skeleton crew was swept away by the swift-flowing ice to a watery grave somewhere in the Arctic Ocean, FAR NORTH A few days before the Baychimo was lost, Mr. Bonnycastle made the farthest flight north recorded up to that time by a commercial plane, Because his inspection tour was running late, he char tered the plane to visit the HBC agent at Walker Bay on Victoria Island, 340 miles north of the Arctic Circle, "I made a deal with Bill Spence, one of the wellknown bush pilots of the day, to make the 300-mile flight from Copper- mine," he recalled. "We loaded his old Fairchild seaplane with some of the lux- uries that make life livable in the Arctic -- fresh potatoes, onions, es, a case of whisky and N By TOM WILLIAMS Canadian Press Staff Writer WINNIPEG (CP)--Dick Bonny- castle, 57, leaned back in his chair and draped a long leg over the corner of his desk Canada's latest "super-mayor," relishing momentary relaxation from his duties as chairman of the new metropolitan council of greater Winnipeg, recalled youth. ful adventures in the Arctic He told of fur trading, being trapped in ice, scaling a mpun- tain with a governor-general, and daring the wilderness in a record. making flight, In soft words he spoke of travelling thousands of miles by paddlewheel steamer, canoe, dogsled and bush plane NEW CHALLENGE Now a successful businessman, Richard Henry Carlyle Bonny. castle is embarking on a new adventure, Before he completes his four-year term in his new post he will probably need the same qualities of resourcefulness and endurance he showed in the north A muscular six-foot-four, with receding black hair, he still looks the vigorous outdoors type al though he is quite at home in Metro Winnipeg's temporary headquarters across from Old Fort Garry, birthplace. of the city. Until now he had never served on a municipal council or in any other form of government In his new administrative pest Dick Bonnycastle will run most of the essential services for 15 greater Winnipeg municipalities with a total population of 450,000 He now is lining up staff and arranging for the Oct. 26 elec tions for the 10-member metro council which takes office Oct, 1 Mr. Bonnycastle here will have the same status as Fred Gard iner, chairman of Canada's first metropolitan council in Toronto, and Roland Chagnon, chairman of the Montreal metropolitan corporation which has been oper ating since April 4, 1959 LAW GRADUATE Sn of a county court judge, the new metro chairman was born at Binscarth, Man, He attended Trinity College, Toronto, and graduated in law from Oxford University, After a short period with a Winnipeg law firm, he Joined the Hudson's Bay Com pany In 1926 he was appointed as. sistant to the company's fur trade commissioner and three years later became distriet man ager for the western Arctic. This Job involved long inspection tours of trading posts--and adventure. Other northern highlights In- cluded a 1,200-mile winter trek by dogsled along the Mackenzie, and an 800-mile trip along the Arctic coast in a small schooner HAZARDOUS CLIMB His last Arctic journey in 1937 included a hazardous mountain expedition near Fort Simpson, 100 miles south of the Arctic Circle on the Mackenzie, with Lord Tweedsmuir Although he was an enced mountaineer, Lord Tweedsmuir, then governor-gen- eral, because stuck 10 feet below an overhang on a sheer face of crumbly shale. Mr. Bonnycastle sent for ropes, then skirted around the back of the mountain where the slope was easier. He reached the top and peered over to see Lord Tweedsiuir, "He asked me to give him a experi i» Romeo and Juliet, The trip has|will see Romeo and Juliet. Ident; E, G. Storie, first vice- Brooklin; Christine Hobbs, | " been arranged by the head of the| At the end of each performance|president; T, E, Cline, second 208 Ridgeway; Linda Hase, 856 Simcoe street north; Mrs, Fred J, Perry, 26 McGregor St; Col, R, 8, McLaughlin, "Parkwood", The first five persons to in- form The Oshawa Times of thelr birthdays each day will receive double tickets to The Regent Theatre, good for a four-week period. The current attraction is Walt Disney's | "Pollyanna, Reports on birthdays will be received only between the hours of 8 am, and 10 a.m, Phone RA 3.3474 Rid Asked By Hospital People who book for surgery in the Oshawa General Hospital, Russians Expect seni New Overflight services, W. A, Holland, hospital | administrator, said today By JOHN MILLER : tioned as if to step on Thomp- "If they would let the hospital Wiad (Reuters) - Nikita sal 3 toes and said \ or the doctor know. ahead. of irushchev says the Atlantic If T step on your foot you'd time, that they can't keep the Fact planned this month to send expect me to apologize, Why i phe lane over the Black Sea be.|didn't you apologize for the U-2? appointment, it would help pro. ap A ke : 4 . ; vide time for another patient. {tween Russia and Turkey and If you are strong you can afford *- that Soviet gunners had orders to to apologize." This is an important problen|ghoot it down if it crossed Rus-| Thompson again appealed to now, due to the extreme short-|gian territory, | Khrushchev: "Let's look ahead. age of beds and operating room The Soviet premier made the Let's look to the future." | space, We are trying all possible| claim in a lively hour-long ex-| Khrushchev then signalled to a paceo grow ors from the the Unit ways to improve the service, change Wednesday night with waiter who hastened up with ed Ary of Northumberland: "We realize that occasionally United States Ambassador Llew-| glasses of champagne. The pres Durham will be exhibiting their| patients don't know of the need ellyvn Thompson at a Kremlin mier handed glasses to Thomp- | products at the fair An the for cancellation until the last min-| reception, son and other diplomats in the| attractions will be exhibited ute, But these last minute can-| Thompson Interrupted: 'You! Vicinity and all drank a toast. samples of the high quality to: | cellations leave us no time to re- made a very serious statement |} \ | fill the vacancy Do you mean you would <hoot {down any plane flying over the Black Sea?" "No, no," Khrushchev said {mean one that crosses our bor 1 | 5 | DRAMA COMPETITION ders." Career Ended There have been drama com: The exchange occurred at a SAINT JOHN, N.B. (CP) All ition In igs 4 larke township reception for Nureddin Kuhala, | os rene in a {village for the past 40 years, but visiting vice-president of the career in public life dating back|it is just in the last two years Uni A : to 1936 ended Wednesday when these drama competitions nited Arab Republic, Kuhala Mayor D. L. MacLaren. 6 he slassed "drama festival" had left when Khrushchev grabs mos tian ant aclaren, 66, for- been classed a 'drama festiva ta . mer lieutenant-governor of New| held in conjunction with the fall bed Thompson's elbow and began Brunswick for a record term of fair d g talaing with him and his wife. more than 12 years. died at his) This year the festival willl RECALLS U2 home here . have a three night stand, tonight Khrushchev promptly began|. He lost his right leg above the| (Thursday) Friday and Saturday talking about the U-2 spy plane knee in First World War action at the Clarke township hall, shot down over Russia May 1 | at Vimy Ridge and the old wound Eight one-act plays will be con: "Whoever had the idea of send caused recurring trouble in re. ducted in the competition with en- ing a plane to the Soviet Union?" Sot VOars. He was confined to tries from Orono, Bowmanville he asked his home for the last few months| Peterborough, Pickering town. \ i : and could not attend sessions of ship, Whitby and Oshawa. First deputy premier Anastas the Saint John common council The program for tonight will Mikoyan stood beaming at! Mr. MacLaren Joined the fed: be the Orono Players presenting Khrushehev's elbow, "The Amer: aral cabinet for a brief term as| "The Voice of the People" hy ican ambassador is In a very dif- minister of national revenue Robertson Davies: "Overlaid" ficult position," he said April 19, 1845, and became a also by Robertson Davies, will be Khrushchev pressed on: "Why member of Canada's Privy Coun- presented by Bowmanville Play- did you send the RB-7 after the cil. He ran unsuccessfully as a ers and "Storm In A Loving Jam Liberal candidate for Saint John Cup" by Phillip Johnson will be "This was a different case. Albert in the June federal elec. presented hy the Peterborough Thompson said, tion that year, Community Theatre, Called Larry by thousands of WANTS 'SATISFACTION' friends, he was known in Canada FRIDAY PROGRAM The Soviet premier said Russia and New England as an ambas-| On Friday. night, the pro: still will have to obtain '"'satisfac-{sador of goodwill from Saint John gram will consist of the Orono tion" over U-2 pilot Gary Powers' and New Brunswick. A seem- High School Players' presentation flight, ingly inexhaustible fund of jokes of "The Twelve Pound Look" by Thompson appealed to him: and anecdotes kept him in de- J. M. Barrie: "Sunday Costs Five t us not vate the situa. mand as a speaker Pesos" by Josephine Nuggli, will tion any ma He is survived by his wife, the be presented by the Peterborough Khrushehev, hemmed In by a former Dorothy Jack, and one Knox Theatre Group and "The crush of diplémats, then mo-ison, John Andrew MacLaren. - The Durham | Agricultural Society w ng what it believes to be [the 108th annual Orono Fall Fair =| Friday and Saturday, is available to show when the first fair was held in Orono, but records in the Parliamentary Li: | brary do show that grants were paid to Clarke Township fair in 1852, In view of this record, the Orono Fair Board declared the school's English department, the students will have the op.|vice-president; H, E, . Pierson, R. V, Sheffield for 40 members| portunity to question a member/third vice - president; R, Fair. of Grade 12 and 13 of the cast about the play or|thorne, campaign chairman and| patre gene (8, T. kins get chair a GO SEPT. 16 theatre in general, | | Hoy kins, budget ¢ Raleman The OCCI students will go to TO ANSWER QUESTIONS Stratford Friday, Sept, 16, Two members of the cast, : From O'Neill Collegiate and| Christopher Plummer who plays ono aly Vocational Institute, a group of Mercutio, and Douglas Rain who| {200 students will travel to Strat-|plays Tybalt, will answer the ford in five buses Tuesday, E. students' questions, | Winter, head of the English de] The eight performances for| ers an partment at OCVI has arranged high school students have Tia the trip, {completely sold out and many The students will be mainly teachers were unable to get tie:| from Grades 12 and 13, All have kets for their classes, | ea ures | shown interest in seeing Shake.| Ontario students will come speare performed and Romeo and from as far as Sault Ste. Marie ORONO (Staff) - Juliet will be studied at OCVIland at least two large groups Central in Grade 12, of students will come from the he holdir This year will be the third,/ United States, lieved to be the 108th annual fair, | MANY CHANGES for this year's fair, which accord-| {ing to fair board members will event, For the first time this year to- demonstration teams will w [and Lengthy Public | show interested persons how to hand. I found an old tree branch {bacco is tied on district farms, and pulled him up with it. He was very tired." DESK DUTIES Mr, Bonnycastle left the Hud- son's Bay Company in 1945 and now is president of a printing firm, holding executive positions with several other business and financial concerns, He is also ac- tive in public service and sports organizations--a member of the Sanatorium Board of Manitoba, chairman of the Manitoba Devel opment Fund, a director of the Banff School of Advanced Man. agement and president of Ducks Unlimited (Canada) Married to the former Mary Northwood, he has one son and two daughters. His home in suburban Fort Garry, one of the municipalities to be included in Metropolitan Winnipeg, and he is a member of St. Paul's Anglican Church He says he would like to visit the Arctic again some day Meanwhile his energy is directed towards making a success of Winnipeg's experiment with met. ropolitan government. | "It has been freely predicted that the population of greater Winnipe will increase to 730, 000." he said. "This new job pro vides a tremendous and a great opportunity for future growth." I |) ¢ ¢ is t i | challenge to plan from ill pathedral--the 1052 fall fair Orono's centenary|inch plywood panels, fair and this year the fair is be: | white and edged in grey to sim- ulate the snow blocks of an ig- loo, White » painted wallboard Many changes have been made| gives the same effect inside, The dome is covered with aluminum {no doubt be the biggest and best Shingles which give the appear. in the 108 year history of the ane of an ice dome, BUILT TO LAST eter and 62 feet signed .to hold 350 persons, En-|- {gineers who have examined believe it will stand for at least 200 years, {bacco grown in these Counties| Brother Laroque and his men Board Narrows Given Approval and the stage Orono Fall Fair has many more the rail bed and pave the remaining portion aside paving was required, the 20 foot wide paved portion would Corps said, the Canadian Corps|years, cost $9,500, He said the city was was a non profit organization and mount to $201.44 for 1060 and the The first vice president of the Igloo 'Cathedral unique Roman Catholic church of The is the result of of labor The walls are made of half: painted The structure, 75 feet in diam- high, is de. it osition Field held P special meeting was have Weidnesday night to consider ap- plicants for the position of busi ness administrator for 'the sep| arate school board, The field of 17 applicants was narrowed down to four. The final 'hoiee will be made Wednesday, The post of business adminis leath last month of Albert C, Love, le Theatre, Saturday night the Whithy nley Little "The Val: Hall and Departed" by Sta ant" by Halworthy Robert Middlemass, In addition to tobacco exhibits productions, the including cattle, swine farm - produce and ma. exhibits arses, chinery, horse and go cart racing al a midway, {o attract the said that city physjeians usually crowded, 'Finger of God" will be present younger fry. Built In North INUVIK, NWT, (CP) - The used an old French method in| {world's only igloo-shaped cathe. making the illuminated windows, | |dral has been blessed and dedi.| Hand-painted cated in this Mackenzie River lucent paper {delta town 1,200 miles north of| between two panes of glass to | Edmonton, designs trans: were sandwiched |glve the effect of stained-glass, | The Church of .Our Lady of Our| Victory had its first wedding the Lady bf Victory--was blessed by day after the | Most Rev, Paul Piche, bishop of monies when Father R, Haram-| No record Mackenzie, Built of wood and buru officiated at aluminum, it months Maurice Laroque, a mission car penter in the north for 30 years,|-- and a crew of seven men as. sisted by volunteers, dedication cere. the marriage of Frederick Beaulieu of Fort by Brother Resolution and Agnes Jacobson {of Inuvik, RAN PUNCH ROARDS OWEN SOUND (CP)--Milton Crosby, 20, of Sarnia pleaded guilty Wdenesday to a charge of conveying punch boards used in | connection with gambling, Magi. [strate Alan Setwart remanded Crosby until Sept, 14 for sent. |ence, OPP Constable D, Rollins testified he found the punch hoards and a number of articles used as prizes in a game of chance when he checked Cros. by's car in Sullivan Township Sept, 2, Ch The Ontario Municipal meeting in the city council cham. bers Wednesday approved amend: {ments to Bylaw 3415 of the City of | Oshawa, of a lot in a residential district shall not exceed 83 per cent af the lot, The amendments state, in the case of a lot on a R- dis triet in which an apartment build. Sept, 14, James Toppings, chair ing ig or is to be erected, the man of the separate school board ooyerage of the lot shall not ex: said today. |ceed 23 per cent of the area of the lot; and in all other cases strator has been vacant since the/the coverage of a lot in a resi. dential district shall not exceed |3% per cent of the area of the lot, It also states the minimum front yird requirements of an apart ed by the Pickering Township Lit: want building in R-2B and R-3 districts be 20 feet plus five feet for each additional storey or half Theatre Guild will present "The storey, over two storeys Dear Houghton and the Oshawa Theatre will present NO OPPOSITION Section 22 of the bylaw was amended by deleting the follow ing, "the office of a physician lo. cated in the single-family dwells ing used by the physician as his priv residence", There was no opposition from the medical fraternity on this amendment City Salicitar E. J. MeNeely ihad an office un town, He said ange In hoard | This bylaw states the coverage, {exempted the Canadian Corps res cently from tax payment for ten The exemption will a- exemption may increase in other years, He said the annual rate to the Corps for the work done on the road will amount to $112.98 each year for ten years, Chairman of the Municipal Board A, McCrae said: "we must emphasize this is not a usual case, but considering all eircum- stances we must strive for ims provement, Approval of the aps | plication is granted," Oshawa Men Are Registered 'As Engineers TORONTO ~~ Two Oshawa re. sidents -- W. R, Carnwith, Jr, of 719 Oshawa boulevard north and T, D, Graham of M1 Simcoe |street north, Apt, 6 have been [registered as professional engin- eers by the Association of Pro. fessional Engineers of Ontario and now are accorded the right to use the initials "P, Eng" after their names in connection (with: any engineering work cars ried out, | Mr, Carnwith, Jr, is employed {in a Plant Engineering Departs | ment with General Motors of Cans ada Ltd, Mr, Graham is employs |ed as Junior Engineer with Gens eral Motors of Canada Limited, [ Zoning that chiropractors and other groups had applied for permis- sion to have offices in their homes, but it was decided none of {them should be in a residential area, OPPOSE REZONING A delegation of property owns ers, led by Nick King of 349 Frone tenae avenue, was opposed to the rezoning of the west side of Monts (rave avenue from R-2-B to R-3, King argued that if larger apartment buildings were built in the area, the small apartment owners would suffer, City Solicitor MeNeely painted out that King had recently been successful in having adjacent properties rezoned to R-3, The board chairman, A, MeCrae, questioned King as to why he should have adiacent properties rezoned, but still lead a' delega- tion to oppose further -rezoning of a similar nature, King said that his properties in the area were only 100 feet in depth, and that he could not build larger apartments on his properties. Mike Kostrzewa also spoke against the rezoning, he said that lif the big apartments were built the area would become too | The bylaw was approved.'