16 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, December 17,.1962 BIRTHS _| Dawson Creek, DYL -- Walter and Iris are happy Ft. St. John "Si'"i) Both Mile 0 FORT ST, JOHN, B.C. (CP) --The northeastern British Col- Ll om8., on 'Thursday, Dece 1962 at Oshawa General Hospital. eister for John. Thanks to Dr. Ross. (nee iappy to announce the 1 of Sherri Louise on Thursday, December 13, ovegdig | Oshawa hay aes -- weighing 5 lbs. 15 ozs. sis-|" for Heather and Tommy.' Creek and Fort St. John are both claiming the honor A GOOD NEWS STORY -- When you announce the birth of your child in The Oshawa Times, clippings of the notice are available for Baby's Book, Family Tree Records and to mail your and relatives in those far-away places. To place a birth announcement, call The Oshawa he ge = oe Department. Telephone 7 DEATHS BROWN, Meredith James At Toronto riage Hospital on Friday, 1962, James Brown, haared husband of the late highway, The controversy doesn't ap- pear to have any immediate] chance of settlement. In fact, neither is the real highway starting point. Dawson Creek maintains it was from that point that the U.S. A@my started to build the route during the Second World War. Others argue that the of]: being Mile 0 on the Alaska) © there are some suggestions that} . umbia communities of Dawson] f Underprivileged Xmas Party Held By HENRIETTA LEITH NEW YORK (AP) -- Sunday was Christmas for 60 of New York's most privileged under- privileged children, .the guests at Danny Doyle's annual Christmas party. The party was held in Eddy's Restaurant and Bar, where the tables in the back room won't seat more than 60. Driver Sought After Kenora | Hit-Run Death They were all underprivileged when they went in. But when they came out, there was a full- course turkey dinner under each belt, and' each pair of arms was full of books, candy, fruit, balloons and toys, Deany, a bartender who was once an underprivileged kid in the Manhatten Hell's Kitchen slum himself, started collecting for his annual Christmas party several years ago, This year his bar patrons and than $800. Robinson arranged for roller skates .at a reduced price. A other friends coughed up more Then a bar customer got! Danny dolls at a discount, and} onetime baseball star Jackie; Mabel Burk and dear father of Arthur and Ruth = Toronto, dear brother of Margaret ( Thomas Kerr), Toronto and Lewis, "Fenelon Fails, Gladys (Mrs. S. Percy Brown) of Detroit, May (Mrs. Ivan », Toronto, Howard of Pontypool, in his 69th year. Resting at Northeutt and Smith Funeral Home, 53 Street, ille. Service Tuesday, December 18 at -2 p.m. inter- ment St. John's Anglican Cemetery, Bla k. BROWN, John H. into rest suddenly, after a jax and Pickering of 'Florence Frazer, and dear father of Jack of RR 3, Pickering; | Shirley (Mrs. S. Johnson), of Toronto; | and dear grandfather of Jacqueline,} Linda, and James Howard, Mr. Brown} is roan at McEachnie Funeral Home,} 28 Kingston Road West, Pickering, Fu-| neral service in the chapel on Tuesday) Dec. 18 at 2 p.m. Cremation. FUSCO, Fredrick~John Guddenly at the Oshawa General Hos-; = 7 Monday, Dec. 17, 1962, Fred-| Fusco (of 67 Ritson Road South, toned, husband of Margaret Mac- Dougall, dear father of Mrs. R. Connell (Stelia) of Oshawa, Fred of Whitby, in his 42nd year, Resting at the W. C. Town Funeral gg pp ie m mass in t. john Evangelist Co . Whitby, on Wed- im. Interment . Cemetery, Whitby. Priest the Rev. L. J. Austin. Visitors) commencing 10 a.m, Tuesday | HENDRY, Jane At Macnecial _Hasntel. Monday, cember 4s Hamilton, aged 76 years, beloved wife of James M. Hendry, 20 Jane Street, Bowmanville, and dear mother of. Don, sister of Christine 'Mrs. Hector (MacPhail) North Bay and Ar- chie Hamilton, Kirkland Lake. Resting at the Morris Funeral Chapel, Bow- Bowmanv'He, 962, Jane t/Mile 0 at Charlie Lake as may highway between Dawson Creek, and Fort St. John was already: in existence and that the U.S. Army was only improving it. The true Mile 0 is, therefore, Fort St. John, they say. In the official U.S, Army reports on Alaska Highway con- struction there is a memoran- dum that reads: "At the present time do only sufficient work on the road between Dawson Creek and be necessary to provide a jsmooth surface for winter travel." This doesn't settle the argu-| jment 'because, in actual prac-' jtice, distances on the highway| jare measured from Dawson) Creek, the railhead. Charlie |Lake, a few miles west of Fort) ISt. John, is by this reckoning| about Mile 52. | Convert 'ail | Into Museum HOPEWELL CAPE, NB. (CP)--A jail built in 1845 and unused for the last seven years is to be converted into a mu- seum by the Albert County Historical Society. The society has 100 museum pieces for which it lacks storage manville. Service in the Chapel on ednesday at 3 p.m. Interment Bow- etery. Wwe manville Cem LARKIN, Elizabeth Memorial Hospital, Bowmanville, ro December 16, 1962, Bg age Moffatt, e 76 years, wife of the late James Frencls Larkin, Noweastia,| dear sister of Margaret (Mrs. Arthur) Allen), Orono, Resting at the Morris| Funeral Chapel, Bowmanville. Service| in the chapel Tuesday at 2 p.m. Inter-| ment Bowmanville Cemetery. LARSSON, Maria Sophia At Oshawa General Hospital on Sunday, | December 16, 1962. Maria Sophia Fa: lund beloved wife of the late Erik H. Larsson and loving mother of Mrs. John ~ gi (Marianne) of Omemee, Mrs. i (Lillian) Oshawa end of Schumacker in her 50th year, Resting at Mcintosh Anderson aoe Home until Tuesday, ment at Fo Union 'Mausoleum, ling ready for use in 1963, |jspace and hopes to have a |portion of the two-storey build- The lower section of the old structure has stone wall three feet thick. A more recently constructed upper storey con-| tains several rooms. Most of! \the renovation is for the pur-| jpose of fire-proofing the old! building. E. M.Sherwood of Moncton,| \fore midnight ser-iN.B., recalls one of the most] evening, his emotional pain be-|ing change of climate regard-| notable incidents in the jail's| ll7-year history--a hanging in| Union telegrapher in nearby Hillsboro at the time, said the | is that of Maj. CANADIAN PAYS CONGOLESE 'HELP Typical of the varied inter- national jobs Canadian army personnel performed in 1962 Marcel Mar- (right) of Winni- chessault peg. A Canadian Guards offi- cer and camp commandant at United Nations headquar- ters in The Congo, he pays his | Congolese employees -- at Reg HERAT ea EPS "y Mental Illness Climate Change AP NEWSFEATURE New and _ encouraging treatments for the mentally ill teday are replacing the centuries-old idea of hiding victims behind asylum | walls. Here, in one of a se- | ries of special reports, is a look at what's being done in | the United States to heal the | ill, | By ALTON L. BLAKESLEE AP Science Writer NEW YORK (AP)--Just be- one December came too intense. So a middle-aged man ex- 1907. Mr. Sherwood, a Western| ploded into a shouting volcano of rage, then surrendered to help- less sobbing. man hanged had been con- victed of murdering a tiie: sister with an axe. Entered into rest in the Oshawa Gen-| DEATHS awa in his 85th year. Resting at the Armstrong Funeral Home, Oshawa with memorial service in the Chapel, Tues- pill -- 18, at 11 a.m. Inter- Glenwood Cemetery, Picton, On- ao (approximately 2.30 p.m.) TARAS, Jacke jed iliness at the Street Whi December 17, '1962, Jacko Taras, husband of the late Annie Kosty- -- gs ore father = Joseph and o|Isaac, 74, president of Indus- Ed-/Trust Company, and past pres- By THE CANADIAN PRESS Hollywood--Charles Laughton, 62, an English hotel man's son who became movies' top char-| acter actor; of cancer. Halifax -- Donald F. Mac- trial Machinery Company Lim- ited, director of the Nova Scotia of Harry of Oshawa, ala = (Sylvia), of Vancouver BC., a P. Skranek (Estelle) and Mi-| Winnipeg in his 76th year. Somme' at W. C. Town Funeral} for service the Chapel | December 19 at 2 p.m. y, Breok- . Armstrong. | ev. Visitors will be received 7 to 9 p.m. | Tuesday evening. ~ GERROW FUNERAL CHAPEL Kindness beyond price yet within reach of all. 728-6226 390 KING STREET WE Funeral arrangements floral requirements for occasions. OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE 24 HOUR PHONE SERVICE 728-6555 IN MEMORIAM BINGHAM -- In loving memory of a dear wife and mother, Agnes Binghzsm, who passed away December 17, 1952. © happy hours we once enjoyed, How sweet their memory still. But death has left a loneliness The world can never fill --Ever remembered by husband and family. TERWILLEGAR -- In lovin ¢ mem- ory of our dear dad, Archie Terwille-| gar, who passed away December 17, 1952. As angels keep their watch up there, Please God let him know That we down here do not forget,, We love and miss him so all --Lovingly remembered by daughters,| Kay, Donna and Frances. TERWILLEGAR - ory of a dear husband and father, Archie Terwiliegar, who passed away, 10 years ago December 17, 1952. Eternal rest grant him, O Lord, or may perpetual light shine upon him. Always remembered by wife and family. CARD OF THANKS DELONG -- In the midst of our sor- row we wish to express our heartfelt thanks and appreciation to our rela-! tives, friends and neighbors for the and sympathy shown us in the loss of a beloved husband, father and son, William J. Delong. We especially wish to thank the Rey. Hillier for his comforting words, Dr. McKinney and Dr, Smith,'staff of 1E of the Oshawa General Hospital, also the donors of many beautiful floral offerings and the pallbearers and the Murray Robinson Funeral Chapel for their kind and effi- cent management of the service -- Joan, Roy and Rita Delong. RICH IN GOLD South Africa's gold produc- tion is great enough to pay the country's entire foreign debt with less than four months pro- In loving mem- jident of the Nova Scotia Road-| |builders' Association. | Toronto--Saul A. Silverman, 66, president of the A. Silver- man and Sons Limited depart- jther; following a heart attack. Asheville, N.C.--Dr. \Ferry, 81, a native of Charlotte-| jtown, P.E.L, who became one| lof the outstanding Presbyterian j}ministers in the United States. | Toronto--Bruce B. Craibbe,| jdirector of the Craibbe-Fletcher |Gold Mines of Red Lake, Ont. 5 London--Sir Gerard d'Erlan- fi 7 LOCKS FLORIST jger, 56, millionaire financier ry former head of British Overseas Airways Corporation. IN MEMORIAM A CHRISTMAS - TRIBUTE Nothing is more befitting or o greater tribute to the Pointed Shoes | 'Cripples Feet, Engineer Says VANCOUVER (CP)--Canada| Pads the western world in pro- ducing the worst conglomeration|® of children's shoe styles and] shapes, says Roy Arnold, 49-) year-old father of six, consulting engineer an doperator of a chil- jdren's shoe store in suburban} North Vancouver. } He says the pointed toe that! has been gaining popularity in children's shoe styles in recent} } crippling deformities in young) Asa J.ltoet. He says he got the British Co- lumbia division of the Canadian! Medical Society to agree with) his belief there should be misi- imum design standards that/ would eliminate inferior and! dangerous children's shoes in! uture. "Because they have no stand-| ards to work to, the manufac- turers just turn out exactly| what they feel caters to con-| sumer demand. They know that| children like to copy their par- | By taxi, his wife took him ial With Castro a new kind of hospital clinic! offering emergency first aid-- 24 hours a day--for emotional injury, a kind of mental acident | ward, At the emergency clinic, the jman of 50 was given a tran- |quillizer and talked with a psy- chiatrist, learning that his feel- jings of frustration and depres- sion were not uncommon, tak- 'ing the first step toward under- standing and dealing with his problems. His case is one in a hearten- ing mental illness, GIVE BACK HEALTH The change is sweeping) through state mental hospitals. {Once they were mainly dour, lock-away jails for '"'the in- sane."" Today, the best hospi- \tals are sending the majority of | newly-admitted patients back to home and health. Reign 4 the winds of leha nge are drugs, intensive ipsychotherapy, increased hospi- jtal staffs, earlier treatment, a |vaniety of new community fa- jcilities and more enlightened aie understanding and inter- Mental patients fill half the hospital beds in the U.S., one in 10 Americans is mentally ill jin mild to severe degree. Ten per cent of public school chil-} jdren are estimated to be emo- | tionally disturbed, in need of |help, The tempo and stresses of ment store founded by his fa- years slowly but surely causes|modern life may play a role. The trouble may involve job,|-- jmarriage, family, school, aj jtragedy, approaching retire-} jment, failure to achieve goals, |something arousing fear, anxie-! ities, doubts, anger, depression| or other deep emotional! reac tions. |NO SINGLE CAUSE There is no single cause of| mental illness, authorities! agree. "None of us is always per- \fectly healthy mentally," says |Dr. William Mexsninger of the KENORA, Ont. (CP)--Police today sought a motorist who struck down a six-year-old boy and left him dying on a dimly- lit road. '| The pre-Christmas tragedy took the life of Paul Gabryluk. | Police in this northwestern Ontario community 125 miles east of Winnipeg said he was apparently hit by a vehicle which kept on going. The boy's crumpled body was found on the Brinkman Road i |Saturday night about 50 yards) noo, toy trucks, fire engines, games and/ other toys. t BUYS MORE TOYS offiical of the Bartenders' Troops To Arrive From W. Germany z SAINT JOHN, N.B. (CP)-- More than 1,000 Canadian sol- diers and their dependents are due to arrive here from Brem- erhaven, Germany, Tuesday morning on the liner Empress, of Britain. After three .years in West Germany with Canada's NATO force, the troops of the 8th Ca- nadian Hussars will spend Christmas at home before set- ae down at Camp Petawawa, nt. CLEANERS and LAUNDERERS BOWMAN! WLLE = SCARBORO Curtains, Drapes, Blankets, Rugs OSHAWA'S ONLY UNIONIZED SHOP 723-4631 50 MILL company contributed } Danny used his Christmas| jfund to buy still more toys, andj was about to spend some more of the fund on the turkey ain! her, | OPEN UNTIL... Then he got a call from an Un- on, which had already -- buted $50. "How many turkeys do you; d?" the union official asked. | jfrom his home by another mo-inainy said he really didn't jtorist, Earl Alcock. | "The child was alive," cock related later. "He whim-| pered. He was kind of noisy in) his breathing. |S. Camp N'Galiema in Leopold- |s ville. An officer of the British |»oj1eq him into it, picked him|; army helps him. 'up and carried him "I took off my overcoat andipe surprised if he resists talk-| in about next year' rty un-| into a eo er ee ix turkeys. . It is unlikely that Danny will) top collecting. His patrons will) , February. --(CP from National Defence) | lage? house.'" ----| A dortor came and pr onounced| |the boy dead. Reporters Feels .:0" Cecyidk was walt 'Cubans Angry ° gel ir a skating rink when "Police "Chiet John Poke has is- |sued a radio appeal for the) \driver to give himself up. AUTO - LIFE - FIRE McMURTRY INSURANCE EST. 1913 21 King St. W. 723-3722 ALL STORES a -- ONICHT! jneed any, the way things were | ALSO Mr. Al- |going. So -the union sent him! TUESDAY DO YOUR CHRISTMAS SHOPPING shopping contre + J feel EVENING NEW YORK (AP)--A Turk- ish newspaper man who was in jHavana during the Soviet- |American missile crisis says he believes the whole island is seething with sullen anger against Fidel castro and the Communist party. "I am sure that at least 90) per cent of the Cuban peuple--} probably more--are against the| Communists and against Cas-! tro too," Goksin Sipahioglu, a| |free lance reporter from Istan-| bul, said in an interview. } | Even the lowly campesinos--| | peasants--who have been an limportant source of support for the revolution, are angrily but passive resisting the Commu- nists, says Sipahioglu, who was in Cuba from mid-October to! early December, | The writer says he was told! by Cubans: | Probably 9,000 Cuban peas- ants have been sent to prisons for refusing to work in the fields. They refused beacause, even if they were paid, there was nothing they could buy with their pesos, There are resistance organi- zations but they are frag- mented, The organizations can- not get together. Castro is rarely seen ia pub- lic any more. He spends most of his time inside Havana uni- |versity' 's buildings, arguing i th young students who had been the source of much of his | strength. He has been vio- lentiy denouncing Soviet Pre. mier Khrushchev. | RCMP Termed | Political Police Force TORONTO (CP)--The RCMP jis described by a member of! ithe Canadian Council of Na-| |tional Groups as a political po-| lice force. George Harris, secretary-| it's right Ly he to serve During the Holiday Season Holiday Discerning hosts have freely accepted Light Holiday Brew as the one right and light beer which can be served when enter- taining. Holiday is the lightest brew you can buy. Your guests will find it a welcome change because it's not bitter, not ling and are easily deformed by) |bad-fitting shoes." jrenowned Minninger Cilnic. of |Topeka, Kan, "Each of us has emotional quirks and prob- jents so. they build children's} shoes the same way they build adult's shoes, But the differeice} janie is that children's feet are grow-| Where once there was a per-| |vading sense of hopelessness treasurer of the United Elec-| trical Workers Union (Ind.),' said during a public panel dis-| cussion on citizenship rights and| political discrimination against| immigrant Canadians Saturday| that the RCMP directed its ac filling. And, inwardly, they'l] thank you for being such a knowledgeable host. It's right to serve Light Holiday Brew. *Although Holiday is extra light in flavour and body, The medical body passed a resolution calling for a mini- mum standard of design of lasts) for children's shoes, controls of | advertising claims of "correct- ness" in shoe design, and a} memory of the loved ones who have passed on to that bourne from which no traveller returns, than a | memorial verse at Christmas time. It is a beautiful gesture of love and devotion to the memory of a mother, father, wife, husband, daughter or son... or those beyond the immediate family circle, o faithful friend or kin, In the sincere hope of rendering helpful service to those who wish to select an appropriate memoriam notice af Christmas, The Classified Department of The Oshawa Times will publish Special Memorial tribute in the CHRISTMAS EVE EDITION | To ensure that your message appears at this time, call before Friday, December 2\st, if more convenient to you Come in to the Classified Counter or use the mail to send your copy to The Times. | TELEPHONE 723-3492 | | laviation lestimates form of certification for shoe} ments to ensure proper fitting. | Mr. Arnold has written to the;least, of a new day 'in the fie!d! | procedures {federal health department about/of the mentally ill," he de-| | and {his views on pointed shoes. | | theres mental illness, now here is 'a ferment and eager- ness" that the problems can be solved, says Dr. Robert H. Fe- lix, director of the National In- stitute of Mental Health, "I feel that perhaps the sun ysalesmen in children's depart-} |has come up and we are in the very early morning hours, at! clares. tivity largely against the trade! labor movement. He said a worker active and| militant in a strike may not get) a favorable reception when he} japplies for citizenship. The meeting passed a resolu-| | tion asking Citizenship Minister Bell to apply more democratic to the acquisition protection of citizenship lrights. By ELTON C. FAY | WASHINGTON (AP) -- Four top Soviet combat battalions, lerack troops, are among the) Russian soldiers still in Cuba, jinformation available here indi-| cates, The units are part of the|; lover-all Cuban contingent of! ;Russian infantry, artillery and experts which some place as high 20,000 mea. The battalion-size outfits are jin the Soviet Army. As the Soviet buildup in Cuba jgot under way, the battalions| the greater part were medium-jthe weapons systems in the were sent in for the initial] mission of defending the ballis- tic missiles and IL-28 medium % jet bombers which Russia shipped to Cuba. There now is belief that while jwith armor and up to 8,900/the launching sites were pre- pared and much of the guid- ance and supporting equipment sent in, ships carrying the big- ger intermediate-range rockets turned away from their Cuban jdestination when the United States let the world know of its jfirm determination for a show- >| down. REACHES 2,500 MILES jbelieved to be among the best} The plan apparently was to jemplace for firiag_ slightly more than 70 rockets, of which range rockets. The nfedium-| range missile used by the Russians can reach about 1,200 Soviet Combat Troops Found Still In Cuba |miles, the intermediate-range| jabout 2,500. miles. | Although the U.S, believes! all offensive missiles and the IL-28 jet bombers have been pulled out of Cuba--without, ever, being 100 per cent certain -- a huge quantity of Soviet defensive weapons, in- cluding anti-aircraft missiles, remains ready for use. The mission of the four bat- talions apparently was and is two-fold: _To defend first the ballistic rocket, bases and now the anti - aircraft batteries against any invasion attempt by the U.S.; to keep control of hands of reliable Soviet mili- jtary personnel--and out of the 'hands of Cuban Premier Castro. the lively content is as high as other beers. Holiday Brew is the only light brew sold in Canada.