BRIDGE PROCEEDS AID CEREBRAL PALSY WORK Proceeds of the event will go Caught by the camera, from is Mrs. K. Young, convener of to the Cerebral Palsy Associa- left, are Mrs. I. Smale, Mrs. the bridge. Bride geste Hyacinth was held recently by Ontario Gamma Epsilon Sacer of Beta Sigma Phi. tion and the chapter's an- nual music _ scholarship. R. N. Hall, Mrs. F. Lee and Mrs. T, B, Kidd. Looking on --Oshawa Times Photo FORT ERIE ENTRIES FRIDAY, APRIL 10 FIRST RACE -- Purse $1800 ($2500) maiden claiming, 3 and 4-vear-olds. Cool: Jazz, No Boy 110 rincess, No Boy Rapid Starlite, Walsh 105 Also Eligible: Esprit De = % Frei 12; Relic Armour, lus, No Boy Wick 110; Bright Colleen, XXX100; Devil Lecom, Parsons B-X105. A--F E Lynett and $ M Paulson entry on J Paterson, J W Elkins and J tyr nd entry CJ and M George and J M Hardy entry 125; Moret seperti SECOND RACE -- Purse $1800 ($2500 and four-year-olds, foal- raphy, Fountain Giow, No Boy 10? THIRD RACE -- Purse $2100. Foaled In Canada, maiden two-year-olds. 2 Isle of Mull, No Boy A-118 "Chinese Gambier, No Boy 8-118 Woomera Counts, No Boy Cllg Sali Along, Walsh D-X113 Liffie Cricket, No Boy 115 Order, Fitzsimmons C118 Old Mort, No Boy BII8 Jacket O'Bive, Tawse XXX105 reer Walsh X113 That. Pass, Bohenko X11 Nedeav E-115 Nearco, Walsh D-X113. Also Eligible: Black Diver, No Boy A-T18;. Slik 7 Bors igen Dittfach B-115. A-Stafford Stable and EB 5 A- Fur- {Bourbon Blue, Rogers 116 'My Bunty, No Boy 108 Willhooks, Walsh X108 Count Page, No Boy 113 Ocean Pearl, No Boy 114 Mad Count, Barnett 116 Falsun, Robinson 111 EIGHTH RACE -< Purse $1800 ($2500 claiming). Four- vices and up, foaled In Canada. 5¥2 Furlongs. Pancho's First, No Boy 116 Sassie Maid, Harris RKXX104 Bright Circle, Walsh X106 Miss Bassano, Harris A-XXX101 Mr. Yo Te, No Boy 116 Willowdale Girl, Benjamin 114 New Flight, P: Croatan, Harrison. 116 Canted, Fitzsimmons 114 Tiny Fruit, No Boy 114 A--T Ziegler and L C Morrisroe entry. X--5 Ibs. apprentice allowance XX--7 Ibs. apprentice allowance XXX--10 Ibs. apprentice allowance Post Time 2 p.m. * Replenish Ship's Tanks Oshawa firefighters answered two calls Wednesday, one to as- sist replenishing water tanks in the first ship to dock in city harbor this year. Some five tons of water was pumped into the reservoirs of the "Sea Transporter' during the evening. The other call in- volved a small grass fire. bulance calls during the day and one emergency to assist in a fatal traffic accident at Church and Elgin streets, SHIP MORE SHEEP ROMNEY MARSH, England (CP) -- More Kent pedigree sheep are going behind the Iron Curtain to help build up flocks in Russia and Poland. Russians find the Romney Marsh breed admirably suited for the frigid There were two routine am- Soviet winter. OBITUARIES MRS. MICHAEL J. RYAN BELLEVILLE In failing health for some time, Mrs. Ex-Lawyer Remanded For Fraud TORONTO (CP) -- Samuel lawyer, was remanded Wednes- day to April 15 for trial on 12 charges of theft, fraud and con- version involving a total of $187,277. Resnick was charged on. his oy Frets 4 Sor 5 Malor, AS rd end b Gauci entry @+Lenson Farr. ' POURTH RACE -- Purse $1800 ($2500) aiming) three- and four-year-olds, foal- 'ed In Canada (Division of Second). § Fur- ale nN Foxy Reward, Harris mga nope Jil, ecg hy Nd Can Doo, No Boy ty , Harris XXX! Bive Shutter, Fitzsimmons me. FTH RACE -- Purse $1900 ($3500 Rie ap ng 5 Furlongs. Rip, No 16 French Twist, Walsh X106 Stem the Tide, Harrison 106 Jenet Orr, No Boy 111 SIXTH RACE -- Purse $2500. 5, Furiongs. Cool Fool, Fitzsimmons 117 , Gomez 123 Alpenhorn, Forest Rover, No Boy 114 Capricious Miss, er' x16 Playampa, Dittfac! QUINELLA BETTING SEVENTH RACE -- Purse $1900 Ne hee Four-year-olds and up. March $1.and taken to jail. It "The Black Rock" Allowances. Three-year-olds. return from Tel Aviv. He was picked up by Metropolitan Tor- onto International Airport was the end of a 10-month in- Resnick, 42, disbarred Toronto) Maude Winnifred Ryan' of 96 Bridge street east, died at the Belleville General Hospital Mon- day, April 6. Born in Deseronto she was the daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. John Joyce. She had lived in this community for the past 12 years and previous to that in Montreal. She was a member of St. Michael's Church and was very active in the Catholic Women's League and other parish activi- ties when health permitted. She was a well known and highly respected member her community. Surviving ere a daughter, Sister Mary. Polycrap of St. Joseph's Convent, Belleville, and two sons, Michael Joseph of Oshawa and Thomas Bern- ard of Montreal. She was pre- deceased. by her husband, Michael J. Ryan. ternational search for him. The theft charges include one involving $125,506 from a repre- sentative of the Woodsworth Me- morial Foundation, a charitable organization set up to honor the memory of J. S. Woodsworth, founder of the former Co-oper- ative Commonwealth Feder- ation (CCF) Party. | Resnick was a CCF candidate in Toronto St. Andrew's riding in the 1951 provincial election and president of the foundation. Police issued a warrant for his arrest last May, shortly af- ter he flew to Israel with his wife and three children. He worked briefly on a communal farm while attempting unsuc- cessfully to obtain permission to live in Israel. In the interim, the Law Society of Upper Can- ada disbarred him for profes- fargo Bound, Dittfech 113 'sional misconduct. COMING EVENTS NOVEL BINGO THURSDAY EVENINGS 7:45 at ST. GEORGE'S HALL (Albert and Jackson Sts.) Pag ong $6, $12, $20 he doubled or tripled. $190 IN JACKPOTS Door prize $15. OSHAWA JAYCEES BINGO TO-NIGHT 20 games at $20, 5 games RUMMAGE SALE FRIDAY, APRIL 10th 1 P.M. Y.W.C.A. -- CENTRE ST. McGregor Street entrance. (Downstairs) Also surviving is a sister, Mrs. L. S Roy of Lachine, Quebec, The funeral mass was sung in St. Michael's Church at 9 p.m., Wednesday, April 8. In- terment was in St. Mary's Cemetery, Kingston. MRS. EDITH MATTHEWS PICKERING (Staff) A Rouge Hill woman died Tues- day night when she fell from a truck and was crushed under the rear wheels. Mrs. Edith Matthews, 49, RR Pickering, was a passenger in a stake truck which swerved out of control into a ditch during dense fog. She was thrown from the vehicle as it crashed, -and the right rear wheel passed over her body. A doctor pronounced her dead at the scene of the accident. Driver of the truck was Carl Alexander Cameron, 40, of Rouge Hill. Police say he es- eaped injury and that no charges have been laid. of! son of C. E. McTavish and the held in the chapel of the Mc- Eachnie Funeral Home, Picker- ing, Saturday, April 11, at 2 p.m. Interment will be at Er- skine Cemetery. DANIEL I. McTAVISH Dan McTavish, a former star of the Oshawa Generals Junior A Hockey Team which defeated the St. Boniface Seals in the Me- morial Cup finals in the late 1930's, died suddenly Tuesday of a heart attack at the South Peel Hospital. He was in his 46th year. Mr. McTavish had resid- ed at 1346 Avonbridge drive, Port Credit. Born in Regina, Sask., he was late Ethel Margaret McTavish. The family moved to Oshawa shortly after his birth and re- sided on Simcoe street north. Daniel received his education| at North Simcoe School and the Oshawa Collegiate and later graduated from the Genevai Mo- tors Institute of Technology in Flint, Mich. During high school he was active in hockey and football and played hockey in the United States during his uni- versity days. Mr. McTavish married the former Margaret Lorraine Dan- iels in St. Andrew's United Church, Oshawa, Feb. 15, 1941. After graduating from GMI, he worked for a time with General Motors in Oshawa, later mov- ing to Toronto where he was employed at Auto Electric Ser- vice Company Limited for eight "It's not going to be too long before the most popular energy supplied in the home will be electrical energy," was the per- tinent opinion voiced by W. Ross Strike, QC, of Bowmanville, chairman of the Ontario Hydro Electric Power Commission, guest speaker at the at luncheon meeting of Oshawa wanis Club. At the point of his informative address at which this comment was made, the Ontario Hydro chairman was specifying that electrical energy is not 2 fuel but that electrical energy will before long be the mos: popular; method of hea sa home, in SPECIAL GUESTS The regular attendance of Ki- wanis members at this week's meeting was greatly augmented by a large number of special guests of the Hydro Commission. Head table guests included E. F. Armstrong, chairman of the Oshawa PUC; H. F. Baldwin, vice-chairman; Kiwanian Bill Gibbie, secretary - treasurer of PUC; Roy Fleming, PUC com- missioner; J. B. Annand, gen- eral manager and chief engineer of the PUC and Alderman Hay- ward Murdoch, acting mayor ad ex-officio member of the Commission guests included several representatives of the Oshawa Builders' Association; Oshawa and District Real Estate Board; electrical con- tractors, electrical suppliers, Hydro inspection; Oshawa and District Master Plumbers Assoc., Holshawa Develop- ments; Industrial Commissioner Jas. Williams; Pickering Public Utilities; Oshawa PUC em- ployees,: and also representa- trial factories, The guest speaker was. intro- duced by' Kiwanian Bill Gibbie, who related that W. Ross Strike had first entered public life as mayor of Bowmanville and began his association with the supply and distribution of electrical power in 1932, with the Bowmanville Public Utilities Commission. He was appointed a Commis- sioner of the Ontario Hydro in 1944 and became its ninth chair- tives of the city's major indus-| Electric Home Heating Popularity Growing man in June, 1961, the same year that he was chosen "Elec- trical Man of the Year", for outstanding contribution to the electrical industry. BORN OF NEED At the outset of his address, OD, |the speaker pointed out that since there was no native energy in Ontario, when the coal shortage became acute, elec- trical power came into being. He reviewed the beginning and early steps of the Niagara Development and the passing of the Power Commission Act, as a result of a mass demonstra- tion and resolution presented to the Ontario Government in June 1904, "Municipalities pay for their electrical power and always have and except for some iso- lated rural areas, not a cent of Dominion or Provincial tax money is used to pay for supply- ing electrical power. Hydro Commission chairman Strike briefly reviewed the steady growth in capacity and amounts of kilowatt hours used. "The Ontario Hydro kept pace with Ontario's economic growth and one of the main factors in the steady growth of our prov- ince is that there has always been sufficient quantity of low- cost electrical energy available. Centering his talk on the local district, the speaker gave a short history of what has hap- pened in Oshawa, pointing out that this story is similar to the picture across the province. In 1887, a bylaw was passed in Oshawa, authorizing a two- man company to supply 15 arc lights, at 20c per light per night, to be lit 300 nights per year, from approximately six o'clock in the evening until 11.00 p.m. and until midnight on Satur- days. Power was supplied by a small dynamo plant, located on the Oshawa Creek. Later. that year, 20 Oshawg stores were supplied with electrical are lighting. The steady progress made from 1907, when poles were put up; the purchase of the "City Gas Company" by the Seemore Power and Electrical Co. in 1911; the sale of this company to the Ontario Hydro in 1916 and finally the big step taken in 1929, when Oshawa took over the tion of its own electrical societies of professional and au- tomotive engineers. During the Second World War, Mr. McTavish was associated with the armed forces as an forate of Design and Engineer: ora' a) r- ing P cmcpenoannge with the army. His work with igi Mr. McTavish is survived his wife and four children, Ri ert, Diana, Mary and Karen, all at home. He also leaves his father and step-mother, Mr. and Mrs. C. E. McTavish, of To- ronto; a sister, Mrs. K. M. Kelly (Audrey), of Aylmer, Que. and a brother, Stewart McTavish, of Bowmanville, be system, these main steps, con- stituted an educational revela- tion to most of the speaker's audience. The steady decrease in the rates, obtained by the increase of "customers", made another from its use, that it merely heats the air that is there, the speaker said that "electrical heat is on a par now with any form Of heating and that the day is close age electrical energy will be the popular method of heating". --- In closing the speaker ---- citizens of sion, The city of Oshawa has one of the lowest, if not the very lowest rate in the province and) the Oshawa PUC is regarded as one of the finest. "The people of Oshawa should be grateful to and proud of these men, who had served so well," he con- cluded. Kiwanian Doug Trivett, on be- half of the Kiwanians present and large number of special guests, voiced the sincere ap- preciation of all, in a vote of thanks, which was seconded by the Club president, Reg. Lan- caster. Living Cost Index Up OTTAWA (CP) -- Canadian living costs rose to record lev- els in February, with the con- sumer price index at March 1 advancing one-tenth of a point to 134.6 from 134.5 a month ear- lier. The bureau of statistics said today that the rise was caused by higher prices for housing, clothing and transportation. All other components in the index remained unchanged. The index -- yardstick of ur- ban living costs--is based on 1949 prices equalling 100. At March 1, the index was 2.5 points above the index for the corresponding date in 1963. The February rise followed an increase in industrial wages during January. The index of average industrial wages. and salaries at Feb. 1--latest date available--was 197.8, compared with 190 a month earlier and 190.9 a year earlier. BASED ON 1949 levelse qualling 100, represents an average of total wages paid This index, also based on 1949/f Canada's ducks are return- ing home after their winter stay in the south. During National Wildlife Week, scenes such as the above will not be uncommon in this area, Members of the New- castle Sportsmen Club are CLUB FEEDING WILD DUCKS Placing nest boxes for mal- lards in the Second Marsh. To promote National Wildlife Week, the club is stepping up its campaign for more recrea- tion areas for Canadians. --Oshawa Times Photo 15 persons in a wide range of industries. The clothing index rose eigtt- "ny of a point to 118.6 from CITY AND DISTRICT Increases for both shelter and household operation pushed the housing: index to 137.5 from 637.3. The household operation in- dex rose .2 per cent mainly due to higher prices for furniture, floor coverings and textiles. A wide range of factors in- creased the transportation in- dex to 143 from 142.6. They in- R. F. Benson, a son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Benson, Glad- stone avenue, is the prize win- ner in Class D-8 'at the Provin- cial Institute of Automotive and Allied Trades, Mr. Benson, who is apprenticed to Cliff Mills Mo- tors Limited, Oshawa, will re- ceive his prize at the gradua- ton exercises being held this Friday night. cluded an increase in the On- tario gasoline tax and substan- tially higher licence plate fees. The food index was un- changed at 131.3. BUYER L) | SELLER 728-9474 PAUL RISTOW REALTOR 187 KING ST. E. by firms employing more than sneer HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL "313 ALBERT ST. 24-HOUR SERVICE 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS | semester nique tsereeunennene mn interesting highlight. CO-OPERATION VITAL Pointing out that a change of attitude will assure further suc- cess and progress, Hydro Chair- man Strike said '"'the whole elec- trical industry must work to- gether to supply the best pos- sible service, the Commission, Public Utilities, committees and industry, must all co-operate. Reminding» that electrical energy is not a fuel, that there are no fumes and no residue The funeral service. will held in the Skinner and Middle- brook Limited Funeral Chapel, 128 Lakeshore road east, Port Credit, Friday, April-10, at 3.15 p.m. Rev, Joblin will conduct the service. Interment will be in Springcreek Cemetery, Clark- years, His many Oshawa friends|son. EYE EXAMINATIONS PHONE 723-4191 by appointment F. R. BLACK, 0.D. 136 SIMCOE ST. NORTH visited him at his home in "The Valley", near The Old Mill. For the next five years, Mr. McTavish had the GM Chevro- let, Oldsmobile dealership at Newmarket Motors Limited in Newmarket. He returned to the Auto Electric Company as gen- eral manager where he was em- ployed to the time of his death. Mr. McTavish was very ac- tive in United Church work. He was a Mason, a member of the Newmarket Lions Club and the Newmarket Curling Club. He was also a member of various Mrs. Matthews was the wife of Francis Matthews, RR 2, Pickering. She was the former Edith Gore. Surviving are her husband and three children: Reginald, Scarborough; Patricia (Mrs. Ken Bath) RR 1) Pick- ering and Maureen (Mrs. Brooks), Oshanva, Bhe memorial service will be NEW HOMES OR RENOVATIONS by Expert Tradesmen CALL 723-7122 James O'Malley Const oat $30 -- $150 Jackpot 2 -- $250 Jackpots NUMBERS 53 and 57 Eorly Bird Game RED BARN SUNNYSIDE PARK MONSTER BINGO CLUB CAMELOT (VARCOE'S PAVILION) Friday, April 10th $1200 in Prizes Jockpot Nos. 55, 50 7:45. Early Bird Games Door Prizes Admission 50c BINGO HOLY CROSS HALL EVERY FRIDAY 8 P.M. 20 games $8 and $10 Five $40 Jackpots Shore The Wealth Owing to popular demand there will be a ST. JOHN'S PARISH BINGO Corner Bloor and Simcoe FRIDAY, APRIL 10th 7:45 P.M. 20 games -- $10 and $15 Shore the Wealth $100 Jackpots in 50 Nos. $25 Consolation Twe $25 Gomes Specict DANCE Saturday, April 11th 8 P.M. THORNTON COMMUNITY HALL The old school house - one block north of King Street West, off Thornton Road. ADMISSION $1.00 Prizes Lu GLECOFTF'S SUPERMARKET 174 RITSON RD. SOUTH OSHAWA ®@ Open Daily 8 a.m. to 10 p.m, © SHOWERS OF FOOD VALUES FOR THURS., FRI., and SAT., APRIL 9, 10, 11th a and Joons Shoppe" ent COMMUNION DRESSES ony 4.98 MEN'S PENMAN VEILS ., 2.98 BRIEFS OR TOPS "i..." 59° CHILDREN'S SIZES 4 & 6 ONLY PER PAIR . SCORE HAIR KOTEX REG. Sle RUMMAGE and Bake Sale Friday, Apri Club, Best Waitb, ' 1 10, 1.30 p.m, at the UAW Hall, Bond TEA TOWELS Street. Sponsored by Coronation School FLEECY LINED PANTIES 25° CREAM ": 85° SPECIAL AT PKG. 45° mm Son OF 3% "If You Come Once -- You'll Come Again--to" FOOD NORTH END wanxer 909 SIMCOE KN. PHONE 728-3361 "If Its' the Best, We Sell It' 1! "It We Sell It, It's the Best" ! RED BRAND STEAKS }, Wing or T-Bone SPECIALS 87: CHICKEN ROLL tb. 47° NIAGARA-VAC PACK SEX BACON LINK OR FARM STYLE lb. 65° PORK SAUSAGE |b. 45° BOLOGNA RED BRAND lb. 29° QUARTERS ib. 61* HAMBURGER PATTIES vox 2000 x je Fresh Barbecued Chickens ATTENTION NORTH END FOOD MARKET Now Cerrv a Full SHOP and SAVE HERE! Line of Groceries MU-2AN UFO @