Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 7 Jun 1963, p. 19

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i | IN MEMORIAM (nee|_ GRAVES -- In loving memory of our the|dear parents, Charlotte Graves, who passed away June 7, 1956 and Johnny Graves, August 13, 1957. Many a lonely heartache, | Often a silent tear, But always a beautiful memory Of parents we loved so dear, --Daughters, Eva, Alice, Lily and fam- ilies. |CARD OF THANKS and Shirley announce som, Steven Gordon, 8 Wednesday, June 5, 1963) Oshawa General ital. | righ \from 'previous board-ot closing sale.) INDUSTRIALS il Net Stock High Low a.m. Ch'ge Abitibi .| WHITE -- We would like to give spe- cial thanks to Dr. Stanley, nurses Oshawa General Hospital for all their |kind deeds, for theh care of our wife thanks to Rev. Frank Ward of West- mount United Church for his visits and consoling words and to Gerrow Funeral Home. DUFFY, Mercy, Mrs. into rest in Oshawa General) on Thursday, June 6. 1963,| Johnson, widow 'iiiam OBITUARIES of) Alta Gas jand mother, Rita White, also special Alg Ce --Mr. W. H. White and family. yes Alta Dist Alta Dis w 1000 82 82 8 1670 $31% 31% 31% Alt Gas B pr 10$108 108 108 325 945 930 945 200 §: 200 +18 2 2 57% ST% 29% 29% -- 9% 17% 17% 6@ 4 --3 Bell Phone | FUNERAL OF memorial | BLAKE E. CHESEBROUGH Saturday, June 8, at 2 p.m. Interment) The memorial service for pia cag aapaeseni el emma \Blake Ernest Chesebrough, who' MAYNARD, Eunice Ann |died Monday, June 3, at the Wednesday, $, 1963 at the To-|Oshawa General Hospital, in py East General Hospital, Eunice his 82nd year, was held at the Aan Robinson, in her 87th year. dearly| Armstrong Funeral Chapel, rican other of Milancd Che |Thursday, June 6, at 2 p.m. , Paterson), Muriel (Mrs. P. Tyrrell),|) Rey. W. Herbert, minister of Meredith and Morse; also survived by! King Street United Church, con- ducted the service. Interment grandchildren and 2 great-grandchil- iren. Friends may call at the Trull was in Mount Lawn Cemetery. Funeral Home, 1111 Danforth Avenue. Service Saturday morning 10 o'clock.| interment Lakeview Cemetery, Osh- ewa-on-the-Lake. Home, Oshawa service in the chapel |Winnacott, Gary Winacott, FAMILIES who b be actanaad Wilfred Prescott, Kenneth Pres- wi ave e- le ™ their family estates tagether in Mount| COU, Ted Carey and Ormel Lawn Memorial Park testify this to be| Chesebrough. the answer to a delicate future prob- jem. Call for courteous information MRS. MERCY DUFFY ae. The death of Mrs. Mercy Duffy occurred Thursday, June' 6, at the Oshawa General Hos- |pital. She had been in poor health for the past year. Mrs, |Duffy had resided with a son, /Henry, 56 Westmoreland av- jenue. The former Miss Mercy John- son, she was a daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs, Lorenzo |Johnson, She was born Aug. 31 1872, in Reading, England and IN MEMORIAM |was married in Toronto Dec. WOOLLEY -- In loving memory of a 3, dear wife, mother and grandmother, Rebecca Woolley, who passed away awa since 1919, dune 7. 1961. Looking back with memories Upon the path we , We bless the years we LOCKE'S FLORIST Funeral arrangements ond floral requirements for all occasions. OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE . 24 HOUR PHONE SERVICE 728-6555 coming here trom Toronto. She had been Pallbearers were Richard 1898. Mrs, Duffy had lived in Osh- Rev. Dr. John Leng, minister Brazil BA Oj BC Forest BC Pow Burns Cabol 70 Cal_ Pow Hy 22 i C Bread A | '|Can Malt Can Perm ouls ab ase Sales High Low a.m, Ch'ge 50 Bu + 210 $88 78 -- % 55% + % 10 +% 1% + % Stock Can Cem CAE 138% + %) 10% 435 10 Colli pr 93 C Imp Bk C 126 1260 Cdn Pet pr 300 250 60 210 75 275 400 195 300 2190 210 100 900 310 $54! 64 14u+% 54% + % 100 2200 61 930 9 19 865 225 $20% 220% ZS $38% 38% 15% -- ¥% 19 20% Dom Text Es 38% Eddy Mtch Nuclear Stand Rankles Some | |members of the former Ccn-| |servative government to hear! Defence Minister Hellyer say) jlast week the Americans are) |thinking of asking Canada to} jallow them to station additional \fighter planes in Canada. | The Conservatives regard) jsuch a proposal as in essence| \that put forward by the Cana-| |dian government to the United) |States last year during discus-| sions on acquisition of. nuclear) jarms for Canadian forces en-| gaged in North American de- fence. | It still rankles members of| the former ministry that the} U.S. state department said in its! celebrated press release Jan. 30) that Canada had made no pro- posals "sufficiently practical to contribute to North American defence." A reliable informant }government had in fact made a two-pronged proposal, part of which was in many ways simi- |\lar to the suggestion enamating from Washington of putting) jmére fighter planes on U.S. |bases in Canada, | One part of the Canadian pro-| |posal was that nuclear war- jheads be fitted to the Bomarc |missiles at the two anti-aircraft jmissile bases in Canada at caza, Que. of St. Andrew's Church. Inter-|4 KEY PART ment will be in Mount Lawn|! But the missile-firing mecha- Cemetery. FUNERAL OF GORDON OWEN BUTLER The funeral service for Gor- don Owen Butler, who died |General Hospital, in his 37th year, was held at the Salva- tion Army Citadel, Thursday, June 6, at 3 p.m. Col. A. Simester, of the Belle- ville Salvation Army, conducted Mount Lawn Cemetery. The pallbearers, all Salva- tion Army. bamdsmen were W, |Reid, L. Halliday, .M. Nelson, Roy Owen, Jack Coule and Frank Phelps. nounced Thursday. Monday, June 3, at the Oshawa the service, Interment was in| elec- has President Milton J, Stark an- nism was to be rendered imop- erable by removal of an essen- tial part which would remain in U.S. custody. The informant said this miss- ing paat could have been fitted to the missile within five min- utes of a warning of approach- ing enemy aircraft. This would be well within the period be- tween first warming of an air attack and the arrival of the planes within Bomarc range. The second part of the plan envisaged Canada's five Voodoc jet fighter squadrons, for which there are both nuclear and con- ventional armament, shifting to American bases. for muclear OTTAWA (CP)--It was like training while an equal or even | Ogilvie dropping acid in an ulcer to\greater number of American|22 Pete aquadrons moved up to Cana- dian bases. This suggestion evidently was unacceptable to the Americans at the time, for within a month of. it being made the state de- jpartment was describing it as|Swlada not sufficiently practical to con- tribute effectively to North American defence. Now that Mr. Hellyer has said informal intimations' have been received that the U.S. wants to send more planes to T Canada, the Conservatives ar- gues that it wasn't so much the |Canadian proposal that was un- |acceptable last December as the |government which made it. Biggest Train |Wednesday the Voncereatial Holdup Victim VANCOUVER (CP)--Andrew| Herbert Mitchell, the victim of Canada's biggest train robbery, was buried here today. He died |Tuesday at the age of 82. He was the bank messenger who was robbed of $120,000 in gold bullion aboard a Canadian Pacific Railway train by a three-man holdup gang headed |by Billy Miner in September,| hapel, Saturday, June 8, at 2)North Bay, Ont., and La Ma-| 1904. The bandits commandeered jthe train just: west of Mission, |§ B.C. in the Fraser Valley, un-|$P00 buckled cars over a mile stretch of track and forced Mitchell to open the safe. Miner and his gang were later captured and sentenced to the penitentiary but escaped. Miner, known in the Old West as the Robin Hood of the Rock- ies because of his boast that his loot all went to the poor, was later recaptured im the United States, still holding up trains. Members of the gang now are all dead. Mitchell lost his job with Do- minion Express as a result of the robbery and started a plumbing business in Vancou- ver, | BROOKLIN PLANT Precast Slabs For Sidewalks "Instant sidewalks" spell bad | The machine was manufac The price was not disclosed.|news for a pest contractors|tured by Fielding and Platt jresident of Canada for besa ly np ened ae nad with you! years, Mrs. Duffy was a mem- 'You left us so quietly, But Biooget gh a memory bag ear ed d b h She was predeceased by her slavitay) remembered by husband husband, William Michael ¢ udrey, son-in-law. Vie, Duffy, April 3, 1948. Mrs. Duffy | of Oshawa, She leaves four RIMAR |brothers, Arthur Johnson, of Oakland, Henry Johnson, of |Brantford, Charles Johnson, of MEMORIALS json, of Texas. There are two MONUMENTS ON DISPLAY | grandsons, William and Ronald IN OUR SHOWROOM Duffy, of Oshawa, and five great-grandchildren. Inscription Service |held in the Armstrong Funeral 152 SIMCOE SOUTH |c ! Phone 723-1002 |P.m., and will be conducted by | MEMORIALS MARBLE and GRANITE Designing, Corving, Lettering Installation, Repairs Open Evenings Untij 9 Monument Company 1435 King Street Eost Telephone 728-3111 'BINGO _ -| Stark Electronics ORANGE TEMPLE | Sold To U.S. Firm AJAX,. Ont. (CP) -- Stark SATURDAY, JUNE 8 | Electronic Instruments Ltd., a 7:30 P M |tronie service equipment, f ' . been sold to Hickok Electrical Instrument Co. of Cleveland, Share the Wealth 4--$40 Jackpots to go 1--$150 Jackpot to go about $1,500,000, is one of the Children Under 16 Not Admitted largest in its field in Canada. ANNIVERSARY SUNDAY JUNE 9, 1963 Services at 2 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Guest Speaker B.Comm; B.D. Superintendent of North Winnipeg Mission AT ROBERT MEMORIAL UNITED CHURCH 1957 to 59 Special Music by the Sunday School. Over $500 in Prizes SATURDAY, JUNE 8th ST. GREGORY'S AUDITORIUM SIMCOE STREET NORTH ADMISSION: 50 CENTS CHILDREN UNDER 16 NOT ADMITTED 100 GIBB ST. 8 TO 11 P.M, FRIDAY, JUNE 7TH PRICE 35¢ MEMBERS -- 60c NON-MEMBERS jber of St. Andrew's United Your voheillbntl ede jis survived by her son, Hen |Lethbridge, and Edward John- Complete Monument and The memorial service will be Canedion Makes and imports Oshawa manufacturer of 20 Games -- $8 EBENEZER SUNDAY SCHOOL REV. GEORGE MORRISON Now Associate Secretary Board of Home Missions AT 8:00 P.M. Entertainment by Royal Blue Tones «| Ltd., Brooklin, Ont, patio slabs The Stark firm, with about 100/ have had to put up with for employees and annual sales of years -- the type who writes his initials or leaves his foot- | prints in fresh concrete. | Precast concrete sidewalk |slabs and curbs are finished jand cured at the manufactur. }er's plant, and are ready to walk on as soon as they are placed, Their big disadvantage to date has been their slow |rate of production. | Brooklin Concrete Products| | Limited, Brooklin, Ont., is now |producing them at assembiy |line speed -- 100 slabs and 60 |curbs per hour -- with a new | hydraulic press, the first in| | Canada. R. A, McCOY, president of Brooklin Concrete Products » holds up with new Ltd., Gloucester, England. A representative of the company supervised its installation and iitial production. The hydraulic press replaces a slower vibration system for- merly used by the company to produce curbs and slabs. A pressure of 400 tons is exerted on each unit, resulting in a | strong, dense slab or curb. The pressure forces out ex- cess water, and the density of the product results in a low water absorption, so that the slabs and curbs are resistant to 'spalling and damage from freeze-thaw action. +5 20% + y%|Jock ws 12 65% + Vir th ee augh Low a.m. Chage $10% 10% 10% Exquisite p 2100 Falcon 295 iy ag Fam Play 120 Ford (US) 7220 $58% 58% GMC 640 pk Hed GL Paper 250 bee $23% 23% 10% 7 280 280 280 $19% 13% 13% + % $14% 14% 14% 23 23 Magna El 200 M Leaf Mill 100 Mass-F 239 Met Store p 225 $23 Mid-West 600 265 210 210 --6 Nat Drug 100 $15% 15% 15% Nat Trust 225 $28% 28% 28% 41 Noranda 465 $364 36% 36% NO NGas 700 $20% 20% 20% +% Nor Phone 250 $8% 8% 8% NW Util pr z10 $8 85 85 NS LP 200 $24% 2% U% + 240 $13% 138% 13% 100 $14% 14% Page-Hers 350 $22% 22% Pow Corp 2815 $10 10 Premium 155 }QN Gas jan Gas pr | Revelstk pr RD ell Rockowr pr. Royal Bank 200° 155 1090 $8% 8% 8 100$114 114 114 100 20% 20% 350 100 315 300 $20% 450 450 450 --20 $7 7 $10 Sayvette 100 250 250 250 | Shaw In rt 18138 7 5 6 Shelt Oil | Shell 1 pr {Shell I wts 225 | Simpsons 52 |Steel Can 2002 Suptest ord 100 Tor-Dom Bk 235 500 27%--% Trans PPL 200 Un Gas 750 WCoast Tr 2140 Westeel 100 Weston A 761 Weston B 584 Wood J 100 Woodwd A 100 $20 Wadwd A w 1000 500 500 500 Zenith 225 8% SH Sh OILS 10 16 10 50 50 50 $11% 11% 11% 140 140 «6-140 9 5000 Bailey SA 210 C Oil Las 500 C Homestd 1000 Cent Del 1267 800 795 795 Duvan 2000 «68 6 8 Fargo 100 234 Home B 200 Long Point 2500 Medal 280 305 N Davies 210000 24 Northeal 10000 Northid 2000 Provo Gas +5 + Canso vt Un Oils I W Decalta 688 126 1233 7 Iron $78% 78% 784+ % rd 10 610 500 $17% 17% 17%» -- V| Mariti 234 234 +1 $12% 12% 124 --% 4 4 T MINES Sales High Low a.m. Ch'ge 10171 60 100 500 2600 1400 Stock Agnico Anglo Hur Arjon A Arcadia 1 A Are Bw Bankeno 500 Belcher 1000 Bethim 500 i ua $17% 17% l?*t-- 16% 16% 16 10% 10 10 --2 62 62 62 ee ee aes 1 Th 48 $28% 28% 28% + 500 230 230 230 150 149 16% 16% '% ™% h--l $11% 11% 11% Bae eae 900 895 900 16 16 6 6 $28% 28% a7 2% 16% 16% 23% 2 21% 21% 14% 14 695 685 3 3% 33 400 137 137 137 205 $19% 19% 19% + % 5% 5 54+ 4% 4% 4% 8 8 8 7 7 3 63939 67 «66 $51% 51% 5% 5% 3 2 35 035 +5 Hollinger Hydra = 66 Sit --% 5% oa = 3 1 16% + % 13% 4 455 162 «152 152 19 19 16% 16% 16% getedes' = FE geissbudec' Ss safes studes? # - 7 & 8 seyed sctce tt | ES - = 8.3 * = : bs Bes FS 288. ev § s ee 3 ra 3 sSEa8sied, 4 16 UY 4% 14% 8i Bi OBL ee eee | tm & Bales te 11 «.m.788,000. By N SMITH MONTREAE (CP) -- Elderly people may make up the next lost generation if society doesn't start doing more to help them, |delegates to the annual meet- jing of the American Geriatrics |Society were told Thursday. Various speakers emphasized |the theme that more has to be done to help people enjoy the longer life now promised by the latest medical advances, as well as to educate young persons not to fear old age. Dr. Clark Tibbitts, deputy di- rector of the welfare adminis- tration of the United States de- partment of health, education land welfare, told the 300 dele- gates that a vigorous and |healthy old age means little un- |less the person has a significant place in society. One consequence of the rapid change in society was that el- derly people were living in a so- ciety vastly different from the one they were raised in. Much of their knowledge was |useless and so they were frus- Long Distance Typesetting Trial Planned NEW YORK (AP)--The Asso- ciated Press is planning to par- ticipate June 10 in an experi- mental transmission of a news story from London to the United States for almost instantaneous typesetting by mewspapers in the U.S. The story will be dispatched from London. by teletype and re- layed to the United States by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's satellite Elderly People Need Attention trated and felt out of place. The modern, highly - industrialized society had largely written off. old people and had failed to pro- vide them with a positive rok to play. OVERLOOK PROBLEMS Joseph Willard, deputy minis- ter of welfare at Ottawa, told the meeting the importance of economic problems faced by elderly persons has been largely overlooked, An adequate income won't as- sure old persons of a happy re- tirement, but it's an aspect of the problem that can't be over- looked, he said. Retirement was taking up a long period of life for many rea- sons--a man who had reached 65 had a life expectancy of an- other 13 years, and women two or three years more than that. Andre Guillemette, director of the Institute of Gerontology at the University of Montreal, said a major challenge facing eld- erly persons is the attitude of society to old age. "In the 1960s people as a whole are still viewing aging and the aged through eyes veiled by 18th and 19th century concepts. DON'T DISCARD THEM Max Swerdlow, director of ed- ucation for the Canadian Labor Congress, said industry has a social responsibility not to dis- card elderly workers 'in the name of profit and progress." Some employers believed that older workers were less produc- tive, more liable to sickness and accidents and unable to keep up with continuous technological change. But studies in several coun- tries have shown that the capa- city for work lasts longer than is commonly recognized, he said. Relay I. It then will be flashed through an RCA 301 computer at Camden, N.J., and converted to automatic typesetting sig- nals. The computer will set margins to fit newspaper col- umn widths and style the story {in capital and small letters. hydraulic press imported from England by his com- pany. Machine is now in full Production. | | receive '|copy and also a_ perforated The signals then will be re- i |layed instantly to Chicago and fed into AP's nationwide auto- matic typesetting circuits to 'reach hundreds of AP member newspapers. Newspapers on these circuits stories on a printed tape, This tape, fed into line- casting machines, automatically sets the stories into type. The experiment will include transmission of stories for auto- matic typesetting both ways be- tween the United States and Europe, as well as from South America, maT 926 SIMCOE N. 725-3144 | have 4|these programs, Today's Toronto Stock Market Listinas prpopr rrom PARLIAMENT 'THE OSHAWA TIMES, Pridey, June 7,1983 19 By MICHAEL STARR, MP The estimates for the fiscal year 1963-64 were tabled by the Finance Minister and they show a spending program by the Fed- eral Government at a record 7.3 billion dollars. This, of course, does not present the complete picture, as supplementary esti- mates will be introduced as the year goes on for additional ex- penditures. It may be that the total expenditures for the fiscal year will be closer to 8 billion dollars, In his statement to the House when he tabled the estimates the Minister said that a re- appraisal would be made by the Government to see if certain |programs that may have been Ye) quite justified when originally 150 +1 |introduced should now be drop- 64+ % ped or reduced in scope in favor of new programs. It is very doubtful if many of the pro- grams now in existence could be dropped without having great repercussions upon those who been benefitting ~ from In any event the costs of operating Canada are increas- ing year by year and no Gov- ernment will be able to de- crease these costs. The payroll is continually increasing, the serveces are being demanded, and improvements on public oT are continually press- ing. In the estimates tabled an item of $164,000 appears for harbor improvements in the City of Oshawa for the current year. There has been a great improvement in this harbor since the Harbor Commission was established a few years ago and it is gratifying to know that the. present Government has not touched this appropriation that was provided for by the pre- vious administration. Last week I set out two reso- lutions that were on the Order Paper for discussion by Parlia- ment. So far there are only eight resolutions submitted' by the Government. During the last Session of Parliament on the same date, the tenth day of sit- ting, some twenty-one Govern- ment Orders were listed on the Orders of the Day for consider- ation. One of the eight Resolutions is for the purpose of. establish- ing a Department of Industry and in this connection a new Minister of Industry will be ap- pointed; also a Deputy Minister and certain other persons havy- ing special knowledge of manu- facturing industries, to assist in the work of the Department. The resolution states that the purpose of this legislation, when it is introduced, will be to pro- vide for the establishment, under the direction of the Minis- ter, of an Area Development Agency, and also to provide for' the appointment of a Commis- sioner and a Deputy Commis- sioner for Area Development, Costs Of Operating Canada Increasing -- ere 2 ieee * hoped that this expenditure be worthwhile in the dev ment of industry in this coun- try. If it is only for the purpose of advising industry, then it will be of no greater benefit than the present section under the Department of Trade and Com- merce which has the same ob- jective. During the past two weeks we have had groups of students from Ontario Riding, the first group of some forty Grade 8 students arrived from Cherry- wood School, accompanied by their parents. Another group ar- rived from the West Rouge Pub- lic School and they numbered some thirty-two students, On April 23, a group of twenty-two students from Ajax ey School visited the Parliament Buildings and on June 11, the Vaughan Willard School, Grade 7 and 8 students, will be with us here in Ottawa. This group will have some forty students and four adults, It is always a pleasure, when possible, to greet these visitors from my Riding and they in turn derive a great deal of pleasure in visiting the Capital City of Ottawa, the Parliament Buildings, and the House of Commons, especially when the House is in session. . This is an additional expense to the taxpayers of Canada as it will provide for a salary for the Minister, the Deputy Minis- ter and a whole group of per-| sonnel who will be engaged in this Department. 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