Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 4 Dec 1961, p. 3

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mondey, December 4, 1961 ~~ RE-ASSESSMENT APPEAL COURT OPENS An appeal has been launched against the City's recent re-assessment of 132.38 acres owned by the Oshawa Golf Club of $61,790 by two local firms, Sholon Construction Ltd. and Braemor Gardens Ltd., (owned by Nat Goldman). The appeal will be heard by a three-man court of revision (Louis Hyman, QC, chairman, Ed, Klein and W. S. Pogson) which is to sit in the City Council Chambers, starting today. The Board will also sit Wednesday and Friday of this week, also Monday, Wednesday and Friday of next week, and Monday and Wednesday of the following week -- also the board will sit two nights, December 5 and 12 (both Tuesdays). There will also be an appeal from Principal Invest- ments Ltd., over the re-assessment figures on the Oshawa Shopping Centre -- believed to be $4,500,000. Best guess around City Hall is that more than 600 appeals will be heard from the 28,500 re-assessment not- ices sent out, resulting from the recently-completed two-year re-assessment survey conducted by a firm of municipal consultants, Fittings Ltd. and Pedlar People Ltd. also have appeals in. WHAT WAS THAT YOU SAID, MR, DOWN? - "IT attended a meeting this summer at which the speaker was Prime Minister John Diefenbaker and I can honestly say that I have never heard an address which moved me so much. I can't tell you what he said, but I'l! remember that speech as long as I live." NORMAN DOWN, president of the Ontario Riding (Federal) Progressive Conservative Association, at a PC meeting in Whitby last week. TALK OF NEW ARENA TO BE REVIVED Talk about a new community arena for Oshawa will soon be revived, but under a new auspices. It will be brought out by a group at the monthly meeting of the Oshawa Neighborhood Parks Association in the CRA December 6. Chris Mason, chairman of the 300-member ONPA (it includes 17 parks and 4,500 member families) ad- mitted this much recently, but refused to divulge any details . "A notice of motion was served at the October meeting to this effect, and that is all we can say about it at this time," he said. The announcement from the influential ONPA is of interest because of the great need for an arena, especially in view of the fact that the City-owned-and-operated Oshawa Children's Arena appears to be bursting at the seams, An average of 4200 children have been using the srena weekly of late and frequently there are more than 800 skaters on Friday night, an all-time record high -- already there is urgent need for more lobby and dressing room space in the five-year-old arena, which got by with a deficit of $8000 last year. Chairman Bill Kurelo of the seven-man arena com- mission said that the Board of Education will be request- ed to segregate students during the 4-7 p.m. skating per- Before-Christmas MONTREAL (CP) -- Police|and a bank at Rosemere held up| \said it looks as if a pre-Christ- for $2,000. : |mas crime wave is under way; A Wednesday break-in at the after a $100,000 jewel robbery | Regal Internationai Company,| capped a week in which some'an electrical goods distributing $400,000 worth of merchandise firm, cost $119,000 in iovied ra- was stolen. The cool jewel robbery took zors and tape recorders. place at the Barney Adler and} The J. M. Morrison jewelry Sons, Inc., premises in mid-|firm lost rings and watches. val- town Montreal when four|ued at $20,000 to robbers Thurs- armed, masked men tied vice-|day. Four juveniles were later president Peter Adler to a chair |arrested in this case. jand methodically looted the, Several break-ins and holdups vault and offices. Thursday netted another $13,000 | Police estimated that $100,000\in loot and cash. in uncut gems, rings, costume; Thieves carted | dios, cameras, binoculars, ra- | off $9,000 in| \jewelry and cash was lifted.|cash and $3,000 in loot from the|| |The loss was mostly in jewelry.|home of Paul Tremblay Friday| | The four men spent a full/and later held up a Dominion} hour scouring the premises, Stores branch for $400. then left by the front door,| Early Sunday a lingerie store} |locking it behind them. An ele-|Jost $5,000 worth of women's ap- vator man heard Adler's cries!pare! and $3,000 in furs and jand freed him. jewels was stolen from the Last Monday, $110,000 in furs home of Dr, Luc Chicoine. jwas stolen from the Silver Fur;-------- Ae ° Pongo g followed a Sunday| . ur snatch in which $30,000) |worth of mink pelts were stolen| Deadline from the McComber Fur Salon. | nas ebhed of S00 Mees) EXtended BattleGroup For Seaway 'Moves Base In W. Germany Montreal to the Great Lakes | HEIDELBERG, West Ger-|another deadline extension. many (Reuters)--A U.S. Army| Seaway authorities said the |battle 'group moved from its|@kers going through the sys- base in the Augsburg area of|tem from Montreal to Kingston Lawrence Seaway, scheduled to close Sunday night at midnight, midnight tonight, ice and weather conditions permitting. St: Lambert lock at Montreal, the head of the canal system, |Berlin where it will replace the |group now reinforcing the gar- |rison there, the army announced jhere. Army headquarters said the|coming down to Montreal and battle group of the 19th Infan- eight going back to the lakes jtry numbered about 1,500 men,|~ rhe er , Hebel out included jthe strength of the first battle\i40 jast 13 ocean ships in the |group of the 18th Infantry it was| sostans y eis |relieving. aM | It was announced Friday that ships in the 135-mile waterway, |the battle group of the 18th In-/all of them inland lakers going jfantry, which went to Berlin a/back for winter berthing. jweek after East German auth- | Ambassador Adlai Stevenson | to board a waiting helicopter West Germany early today for will be allowed passage until|~ cleared 26 ships Sunday -- 18) Sunday, there were cnuly three! SUDBURY MONTREAL (CP) -- The St. OFF FOR WEEKEND REST President Kennedy walks | across the White House lawn Sunday with United Nations for a_ flight to Middleburg, Va., and a brief weekend rest at Glen Ora, the Presi- | dent's rented estate. Mrs. Local 59 Miss Mine Mil (CP)--Supporters|gaining agent for the Interna- of the executive of Local 598 of|tional Nickel Company's 15,000 the International Union of Mine,)|Sudbury - area employees. No 8 Supporters Traffic Toll Less Than | Last Year The Very Finest By THE CANADIAN PRESS ' | A relatively quiet third day | °% sift, from BLACK'S has kept the total number of ne iy traffic deaths so far in Canada's! 7 Safe Driving Week well below last year's toll for the first three days. Three people were killed in traffic accidents across Canada on Sunday bringing the number dead since the week started on Friday to 21. In 1960, 20 deaths made the, week's third day--a Saturday--/ its worst and raised the total, for the first three days to 35.) For three years before that the| three-day total was close to this| year's--one less in 1959 and) three less in 1957 and 1958. The purpose of the week, | sponsored by the Canaian High- | way Safety Conference, is to promote safety - consciousness | among drivers during the year's| most fatality-prone month. It has been held Dec. 1-7 since it) was: begun in 1950. j Although all provinces but! Nova Scotia (one) and Ontario| (two) were fatality-free on Sun-| day, only Newfoundland, Prince Edward Island and Saskatche- wan have had no traffic deaths) for the three days. The province - by - province breakdown: | SHOW Him You Care Enough to Give Fashionable Total 3°61 °60/ 5 4 The latest styles . . . smart P designs by such fornous tie mokers as . Currie, Park Lane, Forsyth. .00 -- 1.50 2.00 -- 2.50 GLOVES Of every description. Wools, Wools with leather palms, Fleece-lined leathers, unlin- ed deer skins, cape skins, and pigskins priced from .. 2.50 to 8.95 GIFT CERTIFICATES December ...... Kennedy and the Kennedy |Newfoundland .. Ma children already are at the Middleburg retreat. New Brunswick. --(AP Wirephoto) |Quebec ...,... : é {Ontario ... |Manitoba ' Saskatchewan . Alberta British Columbia 1 Total' s.i6555 voce 9103 92 HOOwHH Woo eoceoneosores wHonawsaAwos | | et TE at oa Pinned 11 Hours Under Automobile | | BOND LAKE, Ont. (CP)--| |Nicholas Nakeoff, 41, of Toronto 1 Meet jorder on the grounds the meet- jing was called to deal with ac- tion against the Steelworkers' Mill and Smelter Workers |dissenters could be heard. raid. He suggested it be placed |was pinned in his car for 11 from Black's ere alwoys Lighted navigation buoys are/ (ind) were conspicuous by their The motion authorized/before the next regular mem-| ours Sunday after it plunged/ jorities sealed the East - West!being takén up by the federal |Berlin border in August, would|transport de partment's buoy jreturn to its base in the Mann-|tenders as the seaway continu jheim area of West Germany/closing operations. ;when it was relieved. Some lakers spend the winter Both battle groups will move,in Montreal harbor, but most go along the autobahn linking Ber-|back to lakes and are used for | | | Sunday night at aj/Thomas Taylor, former mem- some 3,400 Mine |ber of the local exceutive, to absence meeting of S) Mill members called by the un-|sign and file the intervention.|trict 2 of the Mine-Mill uni Taylor was named to act as) ion's national office. A resolution passed at the,agent on behalf of Local 598 at meeting called for "'full mobi-| certification proceedings before lization of all resources of the\the Ontario Labor Relations jover an embankment within a} |quarter of a mile of the local] provincial police office. and former president of Local! An OPP officer noticed . the, 598, told the men: jcar beside Highway 11 just be- "You have, by your actions|fore noon. Nakeoff was taken to this evening, put the wheels in|#0spital with head and back in- bership meeting. Mike Solski, president of Dis- jlin and Helmstedt, West Ger-) |many, through East | territory. German! bound. grain storage while they are ice-| Meanwhile, 83 ships of all de- national union and the local un Board. ion against the Steel (United ASK PREPARE CASE motion that are going to restore| \the local union to the hands of juries, | Police said Nakeoff appar-| Soviet authorities were in- scriptions were in port loading| Steelworkers of America) raid- Taylor' was authorized to re- the rank and file, where it right-jently had been northbound appreciated. Every Item. Gift Packaged in Black's Distinctive Gold Box. "The House Of Style For Men and Boys" BLACK'S formed of the proposed move-|or unloading their last cargoes ments along the autobahn. Last|of the St. Lawrence season. The Thursday the Soviet news ag-jharbor is expected to be busy ers, a tain counsel and the national of- A chorus of "ayes" greeted| ficers were asked to assist him another motion calling for inter-|in preparation and presentation Men's Wear Ltd. 74 Simcoe North 723-3611 fully belongs, instead of with alshortly after midnight when the few individuals working|car hit a tree, bounced over a jagainst the interests of the guard rail and plunged 25 feet! OPEN FRI, TILL 9 P.M. | og of bg Say gyort jdown an embankment. ill Kennedy, District 2 secre- i ry, said the Gillis executive hortt or ee it * --_ neglected to discuss important) debits 2 pacha union developments with the Sudbury membership. 40fFamily vention against an application of the case. | by the CLC - affiliated Steel- National President Ken Smith te workers for certification as bar- told the meeting in Sudbury 2 ~}Arena it was the first time a section of the Mine-Mill consti- tution, allowing the president to call a, meeting of the local, had| been used in Canada. | "Never before have officers) of a Mine-Mill local . ba as-| ' sisted in a raid," he told the D I C h | meeting. 1e n ras || The national -- president re-| YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (AP)--| *2\viewed events in the internal|Four members of one famil *#-=\union strife Jeading up to the|were killed Sunday when their] { \present "emergency, : light plane crashed in the fog, ve He referred to an affidavit by apparently during an attempted| } «|Taylor describing secret talks| landing on the busy Ohio Turn- fp |between local executive mem-|nike, | _\bers and the Steelworkers un-| Dead are William Phillips, 35 \ion. He said Taylor's action in| of suburban Boardman Town.!| jdisclosing the negotiations was ship, his wife Beverly, 29, and "to his everlasting credit." so r Smith said he was still wait-|yrme qn y rinand daughter })ing for a reply from Local 598)" 4 third child, Barbara, 5, was| *| President Don Gillis to accusa-|,, ; ye |, , " 4 ...:, \Leported in fair condition in hos-| + .\tions contained in the affidavit. | ital with compound fractures - 4 | His efforts to obtain an expla-| or both legs. ency Tass charged American|for another 10 days before troop movements along the road/freight lines find it too risky to were "provocative." allow their vessels to go beyond fod so that the younger ones (Grades 1 to 4) skate to- gether one week and the older students another week, instead of mixing them up as at present. Mr. Kurelo also announced that Ronald Simcoe had been appointed acting manager of the arena to succeed Bill Smith who left to take a position with the Board of Education as a school attendance officer. Mr. Kurelo said that the arena overcrowding was likely caused by the lengthy mild spell that cancels outdoor skating --- he said the situation would be eased by some cold weather when many of the youngsters would take to the open again for skating. "We somehow forget that we have another outdoor rink," he added. "When are people going to start using the North Oshawa Arena more, the one that has cost the taxpayers more than $80,000 in the past five or six years." 54 SIMCOE NORTH SENSATIONAL MEAT VALUES TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY ONLY ! SLICED Breakfast Bacon SKINLESS BROKEN WIENERS ANTI-GAMBLING SQUAD PERFORMS HERE g 4 ' g SS np ee Se ; ¢ The tense dramas sometimes enacted on our main | wn i : ? ' .; ; ; 4 | streets (in broad daylight, in full view of the unsuspect- Ls le yo ' ing citizenry) would even stagger the imagination of a TV script writer. Take last July 13, for instance, between 2 and 2:30 39: 29: Ib a p.m. on the north side of King street east, between Sim- coe and Ontario streets: Remember that seedy-looking crew of six men in paint-spattered overalls with caps pulled down, hur- riedly (and unostentatiously) assembling a 40-foot lad- der from a truck? They didn't excite a ripple of curiosity as they propped the ladder alongside a building so that it reach- ed the window of a third-floor apartment -- nobody seemed to notice when three of their number scamp- ered up the ladder, raised the window and surreptitiously entered. The operation took about 10 minutes. They were not laborers. They were members of the OPP's special anti- rambling squad from Toronto and they were in town for a special purpose -- a surprise raid on the third-floor ajartment to get evidence against William G. Cook, later charged with keeping a common gaming house and bookmaking. The raid was in charge of Special Constable Wes Moore. He said the ladder job likely saved the squad two and a half hours -- this was the time he estimated it would take to batter down three barricaded doors leading to the apartment. Cook was recently found guilty of keeping a betting house and sentenced to two months in the County jail, plus $1000 fine and costs -- a charge of book-making against him was dropped. These charges were aftermaths of the raid. Crown Attorney Bruce Affleck said today that he will appeal the sentence handed out by Magistrate F. S. Ebbs. AN ACT OF INTERNATIONAL GOOD WILL Thanks to the honesty of an OCVI student a Japan- ese factory worker will recover her lost pay cheque for 37,006 Yen. Douglas Lambert, 16, found the cheque recently while working in the shipping room at Zellar's Ltd., in the Oshawa Shopping Centre, which is managed by his father, Jack. The cheque was in an envelope in a cardboard box containing imported shirts from Hiyogoken, Japan. Douglas, who works part-time in the store, turned it over to his dad who sent it to Toronto for translation purposes, The cheque has been returned to its owner, Miss Chikako Iwatani in Japan. |Lake Ontario regions, Windsor, 'London, Hamilton, Toronto "RAIN ; WEATHER FORECAST Colder, Snow For Tuesday * J S ~ rly 9 ing Forecasts issued by the Tor-!southerly 20 to 30, becoming Siwaon onto weather office at 4 a.m.: northwesterly 20 tonight, Synopsis: Strong southerly) Algoma, Timagami, winds are pumping warm air into all sections of the province jexcept into the extreme north- ern sections. This instrustion of warm air may bring record- breaking temperatures to some localities in Southern Ontario to-| day. It will be followed by a |strong southward surge of cold air that will invade Northern Ontario today and southern sec- tions late tonight Lake St, Clair, Lake Erie, southern Lake Huron, Niagara, thundershowers to- with and a few day, becoming cloudy snowflurries tonight. northwest 20 to 30. tonight. White River region: changing to snow this colder this afternoon. southeast 15 to 25, noon. Forecast temperatures Low tonight Tuesday PMs Windsor 38 St. Thomas 38 London 38 Kitchener 38 Wingham 38 Hamilton 38 |St. Catharines 38 Haliburton, northern Lake Toronto 40 |Huron, Georgian Bay regions: Peterborough 40 overcast with showers, becom-| ~ = ing continuous rain this morn- ing, chance of a few. thunder- MORTGAGE MONEY showers today. Rain changing to snowflurries tonight. Warm, Ist Mortgage funds available from Trus: & Insurance Com- {turning colder tonight. Winds panies. No bonus or finder's Overcast with showers today and tonight. Cloudy with snow-| flurries Tuesday. Warm today, |turning colder Tuesday morn- 'ing. Winds south easterly 20 to 30, with some local gusts to 35, becoming north-westerly 20 Jate tonight. MoreComfort Wearing AND SNOW COMING |Trenton |Muskoka Coch-|Victoria ... see | rane regions, North Bay, Sud- Edmonton bury, Sault Ste. Marie: Rain Regina Turning Lakehead colder late today or tonight.|/S.S. Marie ... Winds southerly 20, becoming White River Rain North Bay ... after-\Sudbury ... noon. Cloudy with occasional) Muskoka snowflurreis Tuesday. Turning;Windsor ... Winds London shifting to|Toronto .. northwest 20 to 30 this after- Killaloe .. junctions and delays. Although final form of the in- tervention against Steel was not 4 3 '\decided, Smith said it will in-| j\clude charges the Steelworkers '{have used fraudulent means to obtain signatures. The Labor |Relations Board will be asked| to refuse a vote until these jcharges have been investigated. North Bay |APPLAUD MOTION Sudbury 5 | Biggest ovation of the evening Earlton 5 went to a motion which Smith Kapuskasing was forced to declare out of or- White River der. Moosonee 5 | The motion proposed mem- Sault. Ste, Marie bers of the local "'stop payment Observed 4 crea of all wages, expenses and sev- Served. coMmperatures: erance pay to Gillis and the other 146 members of his board." It charged Gillis violated his 'oath of office by refusing to call special meetings, cancelling regular membership meetings Winnipeg and spending dues money with- {out approval. It claimed Gillis was making every. effort to assist the enemies of our union to destroy us." Smith ruled the motion out of Kapuskasing Ottawa Quebec .. Halifax DON'T * LUCKY « SURE List with Lloyd then Call your Mover Add thet personal touch te your Christmos cards this yeor by having your name printed on each card. ' You'll find we have @ truly beautiful selection of Christmas Cards to select from, including the famous "Coutt's Hallmark" nation had been blocked by in-) before the business was finished, Phillips's home adjoined the| |Southern Airways Airport,| \which has no lights for night| |landings, and apparently he was) LEAN, MEATY SHORT RIB LEAN, TENDER CLUB STEAKS LEAN, TENDER RIB STEAKS LEAN, MINCED BEEF 3 sot Cc Ib |caught in the air in the sudden \fog and early dusk. | It was 5:25, about hour after sunset, | |Cessna 172 four - seater criss-| |crossed the turnpike, presum-| ably in preparation for a land-| |ing approach. A witness said the |plane banked for another turn while only about 100 feet above| ithe turnpike, then apperentiz| ithe engine stalled and the plane} spun nose first into a field) jalongside the turnpike. The jplane did not burn. 39 39 half an THE NEXT RED CROSS BLOOD DONOR CLINIC, will be held vitamins and other ingredients to the feed, food, and pharma-| Subsidiary Formed! To Labatt's Firm gy hag canny vice - presi LONDON, Ont. (CP) -- John|dent of production at Labatt's Labatt Ltd. announced Sunday|and president of Labatt Indus-| it has formed a new subsidiary,|tries, said the subsidiary next! Labatt Industries Ltd., to suc-|year will produce calcium and| ceed the special products divi-|proprionates, used in the bak-| sion, which since 1958 has sold'ing industry. i Thursday, December 7th, from 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. and from 6:00 to 9:00 p.m. ST. GREGORY'S AUDITORIUM Simcoe Street North New and old donors are urgently requested to attend. fee. @ 2nd MORTGAGE MONIES AVAILABLE @ WILL BUY 2nd MORT- Cards. GIVE US A CALL TODAY! Prompt Service --- Reasonable Rotes PRINTING LTD. 1700 Simcoe North -- 728-5119 FALSE TEETH Here is a pleasant way to overcome loose plate discomfort., FASTEETH, an improved powder, sprinkled on upper and lower plates holds them GAGES firmer 60 that they feel more com- fortable. No gummy, gooey, pasty taste or feeling. It's alkaline (non-| SCHOFIELD-AKER acid). Does not sour. Checks "plate L odor breath". Get FASTEETH today TD. at drug counters everywhere. 360. KING W. -- 723-2268 Winner cf Oshawa & District Real Estate Board Sales Award for 2 Consecutive Years. LLOYD REALTY (Oshawa) Ltd., Realtors 101 Simcoe N, -- 728-5123 i 1 a '

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy