Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 20 Sep 1961, p. 15

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i scheduled "for a later date. It | was moved up because Dr. | Vipond ' will be leaving for Malaya this Sunday instead of the beginning of October as planned. To quote from the scroll: *". . . we especially re- member Claude's contribution as Liberal candidate for On- | tario Riding in the fateful Do- | MORE THAN 100 people at- tended a reception for Dr. Claude Vipond and his wife, Joy, Tuesday night at Hotel Genosha. The event was spon- sored by the Oshawa Liberal Association. Terence Kelly, president of the association, symbolically presented Dr. Vi- pond with an illuminated scroll. The scroll was not pre- pared for last night, because the reception was originally minion Elections of 1957 and 1958, and as a trustee of the Oshawa Board of Education, 1953 to 1958, Joy's leadership | in Home and School Associa- tions, and your joint contribu- tion to UNESCO in the Osh- Mrs. Vipond awa Schools." + was presented with a bouquet | by Mrs. president Everett of of roses Warne, ciation. Mr. gag telegrams, each express- ing the wish Dr. Vipomsl would stay in Malaya for 20 years. Fill Water Holes In Lakeview Park Members of the Oshawajto make it more accessible for Parks Board of Management, flooding the skating rink. at a recent meeting, learned the; The chairman and the super- levelling of Lakeview Park, us-|inetndent were instructed to ing fill in water holes in differ-| prepare a list of projects which ent parts of the park, is being| might be included in the federal- carried out under the direction|provincial municipal winter of Superintendent Herbert works incentive program. Bathe. It was learned that con-| It was decided to withold ap siderable landscaping has been proval of the granting of a por- done around the parks head-/tion of Eastview Park for the quarters building. proposed boys' club building un- The board approved of the til detailed information is re- loan of park bleachers for a ceived regarding location and rescue demonstration to = be|size of the proposed building. held by the Emergency Mea- In receipt of a request from sures Organization Oct. 13, 1gjArthur E. Kent, 382 Simcoe and 15 at the Oshawa Airport. | street north, that the fence A welcome 'was extended to| between his property and the en- Fred Dingley, who has been|trance to Alexandra Park be re- appointed foreman to replace paired, the board agreed the the late Donald Carnochan. The fence should be repaired. The superintendent was authorized matter will be attended to as to appoint a horticultural sub- soon as possible on the board's foreman program In reply to complaints about: The board received a letter the dust nuisance caused by the | from Dr. C. M. Elliott, superin- Alexandra Park track, Mr.!tendent of Public Schools ex- Dingley said the dust was caus-| pressing willingness to ask prin- ed by the track being graded in cipals and teachers to co-oper- preparation for Oshawa Fair ate with the board by admon He said the dust would be laid!ishing their pupils to respect with a water truck before the!and care for the flowers, shrubs track is used for horse racing. and equipment in city parks. The superintendent was in- The chairman told the board structed to secure an estimate the request had borne fruit of the cost of moving the foun-'since the superintendent had tain in Harman Park. The park reported there had been less association asked for the move vandalism recently in the parks x RECEIVES LONG Major William Clarke, 823 Glenbrae street, Oshawa, of the Ontario Regiment, re- ceives the Canadian Forces wih SERVICE AWARD 74 Army, Navy Force personnel to receive able J. Keiller Mackay, Lieu- | tenant Governor of Ontario, | awards at the ceremony. The at an Investiture at Old Fort medal is awarded to mem- York, Toronto. He was one of and Air bers of the Canadian Forces after completing 12 years efficient service with good conduct, ~National Defence Photo ' GM MODEL SALES ALL-TIME HIGH General Motors of Canada said today that its total the | Ladies' Auxiliary of the asso- | Kelly read two | CAS Costs Per Capita Are Lowest The Oshavwn Times | SECOND SECTION "OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1961 PAGE FIFTEEN | The monthly meeting of the | board of directors of the Oshawa and Ontario Children's Aid So- ciety was held at the residence last Thursday evening with D.D.O. Bell presiding. The 14 members present were surprised to learn, from an an- alysis of the operations of all 55 Children's Aid Societies in Ontario, that the local society spent the lowest amount per cap- ita of any society on services to parents and children in their] own homes. ! The society is proceeding with| a survey of resources in Oshawa] and the county, to determine what services actually: are] available to families in distress. | The chairman of the family ser-| vices committee, Neil C. Fra-| |ser, QC, reported that a survey| |form was being circulated to| ks | other organizations concerned, | land returns are beginning to | come i | In commenting on the low ex- | penditures of the society in this area, the president said: "It would seem as if there are many services which the so- ciety should be rendering to | children and parents which it is presently unable to give, be- cause of the lack of financial support." The director's report for Au- care of the society, 105 of these being on adoption and 191 boarding homes. During August, the society provided protection services to 410 children in their own homes and assisted 97 un- married mothers. The resignation of Miss Sylvia Goldring from the staff was noted with regret. Miss Goldring is pursuing her education and training. The appointment of Mrs. Sylvia Kerr, BA, as a re- | plac t, was confirmed.| Mrs. Kerr is a graduate of] Western University and lives in Oshawa. { | Accounts for July and August totalling $2,338.22 and $2,617.83, | respectively, were approved for payment. They were signed "John Diefenbaker'" and "Tommy peiensier: ani tommy | Fine Driver | Dr. Vipond symbolically re- | $200, Costs | ceives the scroll. Left to right are: George K. Drynan, Dr. Vipond, Mr. Kelly and Wil- | liam Lawson, president of the v jith careless driv- Ontario Riding Liberal Asso- Wie uh vith Phils resulting ciation. In the lower photo, (jn the hospitalization of six peo-| Mrs. Warne (left) gives Mrs. |ple, Gary Allen Dussault, 21, Vipond the roses, with Dr. Vi- |356 Highland avenue, Oshawa, | pond and Mr. Kelly looking on. |was fined in magistrate's court | --Oshawa Times Photos (here Tuesday $200 and costs i: with two weeks to pay or two months in jail. | Russ McNeil, 222 Kendal av |enue, driver of the other car, testified he was going east on| Driver Claims Girl Trouble fi' "mA 18 when he saw a pair of car 18! S| Girls can sometimes cause a coming towards him on his side King street west on April 16,| # ¢ } The highlight of the meeting of the 12th Oshawa Boy Scout Troop Tuesday night at Har- . START LAYOFFS AT GM TODAY A spokesman for Gen- eral Motors of Canada, Limited, said this morning that even though the strike against General Motors Corporation in the United States is settled today it will be a week before pro- duction in the company's Oshawa plants can return to normal. It was stated that about 1,000 employees, or 50 per cent of the working force in the company's north plant here will be laid off this afternoon and that this plant would be forced to close by the end of the week. Layoffs in the south plant will start sometime today and the plant will be 90 per cent down by Friday of this week. mony United Church was the | era, from left, are Ron gust showed 383 children in thet Le a : is Sa Wilson presenting the Queen Scout Badge, gold cord and Bushman's Thong to his son, Brian; Ralph Laxton, receiv- | presentation of Queen Scout | | Badges to two members of | | the troop. Caught by the cam- | RMONY SCOUTS RECEIVE QUEEN SCOUT BADGES ing his Queen Scout Badge and gold cord from his fa« ther, Bud Laxton and Scouts master Ernie Jukes. --Oshawa Times Photo Ban Sale Dieta ry Aids By Hospital Gift Shop Alka Seltzers, Metrecal and dia-|items to patients by well-mean Barbershop Song Is Published An Oshawa barbershopper for {the past 12 years, Clarence has written a song especially for barbershop quar- tet singing and has it published lin the 1961 edition of 'Songs {for Men," a book printed an- nually by the SPEBSQSA. Mr. Burgess' "Back to Old Ontario", is the first song in the 1961 SPEBSQSA song book {this year and will be circulated sales of cars and trucks for the 1961 model year were at an all-time high -- 217,118 units to date. The company also an- nounced that sales of cars and trucks in the first 10 days of September -- num- bering 5676 -- were up 38 per cent' over the same period a year ago. At the same time, sales were up 17 per cent over the first 10 days of August of this year Auto Hit Girl Fine Driver $50 An Oshawa man given the maximum sentence of $50 and costs in magistrate's curt here Tuesday for passing on the right hand side Constable Thomas Holmes told the court that Kenneth Ma gee was making a r turn from King street ea on to Wilson street about 8.45 p.m Aug. 18 and cut on to the shoul- der to pass the line of traffic Sheila Thompkins, 11, 580 Athol east, was struck by the car and taken to hos- pital with minor injuries bruises to her hip, knees and ankles "That the ¢ ly injured 1S yours,"' Magistrate told the accused. court here Tuesday. Oshawa Police Constable Don- ald Walton told the court he investigated an accident at 6:05 p.m., Aug. 22, in which the vehicle while driving south on Simcoe: street the time that his attention had been distracted by a girl he thought he knew "lI was going to give ride," he told the court her a Has Arm Broken When Auto Skids James Zakarow, 16, 15 Mill street, Oshawa, was taken to] the Oshawa General Hospital| with a broken left arm when a car, in which he was riding, skidded off the road night Police report the car was driven by Larry Ronald Dupuis, 17, 519 Albert street, Oshawa. Damages to the car were esti- mated at $900 when it skidded off the Ghost road at the east bridge, cut off four fence posts and 100 feet of fence and went irl was not serious- 179 feet through a field and no fault of came to rest on its top F. S. Ebbs Damage to the fence was esti- mated at $75. was street Monday 7 [tion man trouble, A girl cost Keith of the road. He was unable to McPherson, 18, 150 William street east, $50 and costs with one week to pay or 10 days in jail, when he was charged with remember the collision. Both drivers were taken to | hospital, along with Mr. Mc- Neil's wife and three other per ns careless driving in magistrate' g in mag S| cons Both cars were total wrecks, | Constable Stanley Hodgson, Osh- awa Police, told the court. In defense, Oshawa lawyer accused had struck a parked Terence Kelly suggested Dus-| i sault was on the wrong side of}; the road because a car he was McPherson told the officer at passing speeded up. Magistrate] £4 F. S. Ebbs replied it is the driver's responsibility to allow for such events. Paint Contract | To Local Firm OTTAWA (Special) -- A con- tract valued at $14,901 has been awarded by Defence Construc- tion (1951) Limited to an Osh- awa firm, it was announced here by Hon. Raymond O'Hur- ley, minister of defence produc- The contract, to Harry Linde, Painting and Decorat- ing, of Oshawa, is for exterior painting of various metal build- ings and exterior painting of permanent married quarters at Goose Bay, Labrador. Fifteen contracts for $10,000 or more, amounting in total to $1.5. 98, were placed by De- fence Construction during the latter half of August. Warn Hospital Board William A Holland, Oshawa Royal York Hotel workers' General Hospital superintend- strike is a duly organized and ent, was Tuesday night named! legal one. He said that by the OGH nominee to the On- | crossing the picket line, board tario Hospital Association's|members would cause ill feel- board of directors ing among the labor [force here. The OHA informed the Osh- ere The awa General Hospital board by labor representative 'ht that it was! Pointed out that organized labor letter Tuesday nig ! H seeking nominations for its in Oshawa supporting the ? in- Royal York strikers generously board of directors. It also : i] yore ; : formed the board of its forth- and it was also a generous sup-| of the OGH coming convention slated for Porter the Royal York Hotel, Toronto, fund Oct. 23, 24 and 25 Mr. Ross pointed out he On- ario's Teac hers Federati When Mr. Holland extended tario's Te e he rs' Fe 2! ition ' ; to the board -1 found it convenient to call off 2) Invitation Br gua ng its intended convention slated attenc 1e CO 2) , yan- - > g : or the Roya ¥ en t ized labor's representative for the Royal York when the to h s : : otel worker's union went on the board, Keith Ross, remind- strike y smbers if they did ed the members. i wf He said he felt the Ontario attend, in order to do so, they | would. be a picket. Hospital Association should con- line sider another hotel in which to hold its convention in view of CAUSE ILL FEELING the strike by organized labor Mr. Ross pointed the against the Royal York. is crossing out building D "said. Hotel Picket Line S. F. Everson said that not all the hospital trustees who would attend the - convention "worship the ground a picket line walks on." SAVING PROVINCE MONEY In addition to raising a com- plaint about the intended con-| vention at the Royal York, the| labor representative slammed "unfounded remarks" by Health Minister Dr. M. B ymond when he encouraged members of the medical profes- sion to attempt to get patients| out of the hospitals a day early. | Mr. Ross said the health| minisier has stated that by get- ing patients out a day early and cutting the patient days in the hospitals in Ontario, doctors would help save the province $20,000,000. "There'll be more come out of this the next time the labor council meets here," Mr. Ross | being | residence. | to barbershop quartet singers in . (both Canada and the United © |States. | The author said Monday that {more than 30,000 copies of the |SPEBSQSA's official song book will be circulated this year. Before coming to Oshawa 12 | § years ago to take over his du- |ties as branch manager of a % | vacuum cleaner company's Osh- |awa sales operation, Mr. Bur- |gess worked as a song writer and arranger. He has never |written a song especially for {barbershop quartet singing be- fore he completed "Back to Old | Ontario", ' ho CSE AN SEMINAR SPEAKER Howard Swartz, cH SO a son of Mr, and Mrs. Manning F, Swartz, Somerville avenue, | who has been chosen as the student speaker at a seminar held at Lorne Park Secondary School Saturday, Sept. 30. A Grade 13 student at the OCVI, Howard will speak on what the educational system owes the student in re- | gard to the UN. The seminar | is being sponsored by Peel-Halton Counties UN As. | tion. sociation. | In addition to writing "Back of the SPEBSQSA college of |gess' composition, that it has a | Dixie." | Fine Soestier $10 And Costs Charged with speeding,| Wayne Measor, 19, of Toronto. was fined $10 and costs or 10 days in jail in magistrate's| court here Tuesday. | An officer of the Oshawa Po-| } lice Department testified he | paced Measor's car along High. way 401 about 2.30 p.m. Aug. 27, | and noted the car was going at speeds in excess of 70 miles per hour. In other cases, two men were fined $10 and costs or five days in jail 'on charges of dis-| obeying traffic signs Constable Douglas Jordan of| the Whitby detachment of the OPP, testified Donald Set- phens, of Downsview, passed another car coming from High- way 401 into Whitby Township. A sign indicates only one lane is to be used at that point, the officer said. | Constable Jordan also testi-| fied that Victor Meier, of To-| ronto, disobeyed a no parking} | Winona Minn. | sign in Pickering Township Aug. 27 by parking over a half hour at the spot to which the sign ap- plied Two men on liquor charges were each fined $10 and costs or 10 days in jail. It was testi- fied that Allan Gilmour, a tran- sient, was drunk in a public| place Sept. 18, and that William| Cunningham, 511 Fairleigh ay- enue, had wine in his posses- sion in a place other than his GORDON W. RIEHL, chair- man of Oshawa Chapter, So- ciety of Industrial and Cost accountants of Ontario, ac- cepts the lectern from Nor- | man V. Roe, past chairman, | Proprietary drugs and dietary |was ordered stopped by the hos-| {aids will no longer be sold in|pital board at the request of the Oshawa General Hospital|the hospital medical staff. | Womens' Auxiliary gift shop,| Speaking on behalf of the me: | {the OGH board of directors|dical staff, Dr. W. G. Y. Grant| {ruled at its September meeting| requested the sale of drugs and| | Tuesday night. | dietary aids be stopped because| The sale of such items as as-| of the harm which could easily | pirin, laxatives, 222 tablets, be done by giving any of these |betic candies from the gift shop!ing visitors. _ Dr. G. B. Doherty, in support. ing his colleague's request that these items cease to be sold in the gift shop, pointed out the medical staff is by no means condemning the products but it Just wants to insure that patients are not given dietary aids, drugs or laxatives unbeknown to a patient's doctor or the nurses on duty. _ Both doctors. pointed out the impending danger of adminis« tering prescribed drugs, die- tary aids or laxatives to a pa. tient. They emphasized that tests being conducted on the pa- tient could very easily be spoiled by the administration of drugs not prescribed by the pa- tient's physician. T. D. (Tommy) Thomas, MLA, suggested representa- tives of the women's auxiliary and members of the medical staff should get together and in | [that way the women could be |instructed in what they can |sell. He said it would be dras- [tic to prohibit the sale of {everything along these lines. | [NO ARGUMENT T. M. Moore, a Whitby re- | |presentative to the hoard, said / i | CLARENCE BURGESS afterwards he wrote "That Old Wisconsin Trail," for a group he SPEBSQSA chapter original for their shows which "whole new concept and he is|Prompted Mr. Burgess to write!y, glad to get someone singing his second barbershop melody. |s about going somewhere beside] Several years ago, back in ( {the "twenties", to be exact, one [tertainer, Tommy Handley. Now, he said, he enjoys most Isays. lit was his opinion that if the {medical staff felt something should be done for the hospital, no one, especially the members of the womens' auxiliary would | | argue with it. | Replying to a question raised concerning staff members in need of aspirin or headache tablets ,Dr. Grant said if a {member of the staff requires | medical attention that person can get it by going to the emer: gency department, | "The girls in emergency | would be glad to give any mem- {ber of the staff a couple of as- Willis A. Diekema, chairman|met from Osh Kosh Winn. ein or 222's or other types of members arrangers said about- Mr. Bur-|from Osh Kosh requested an|them," Dr. Grant said. pain killers if they require Keith Ross, an organized la. or representative on the board, uggested a blanket motion which was passed unanimous- ly) that the medical staff's re- Mr. Burgess has secured a of Mr. Burgess' songs, "Sh Sh|quest for stopping the sales of copywright on both the words Shivering," was made popu-|proprietary drugs and dietary the |and music for his new composi-|lar by English music hall en-|aids in the gift shop be granted. | «qt any of the volunteer workers in the gift shop are in ~|to Old Ontario", the author at- writing and arranging anything|doubt as to what is proprietary {tended a Harmony Education|of a novelty nature -- some-|drugs or dietary aids, they can | School at St. Mary's College, in|thing with a diffreent twist, he check with the appropriate doc- in August and itor," Mr. Ross said. at a Tuesday dinner meeting in Hotel Genosha. The lectern was presented to the Osh- awa Chapter at conference, held in Vancou- ver in June of this year. the annual | | LECTERN PRESENTED TO COST ACCOUNTANTS | Awarded for highest points gained in Canada-wide compe- tition, this is the first time an Ontario chapter has won the award. --Oshawa Times Phote

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