Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 16 Jun 1964, p. 9

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

Seana aster rem wie seecessoientbaioe GENERAL MANAGER Bruce Annand of Oshawa Public Utilities Commission (left) has just announced the Assistant GM Of PUC Named Appointment . of Lloyd J. Algar to the position of assist- ant general manager of Qsh- awa Public Utilities Commis- sion was announced by General Manager Bruce Annand. An outstanding professional engineer who has held a num- ber of responsible positions with Ontario Hydro, Mr, Algar: brings wide experience to his new position. He had been a member of Ontario Hydro's Central Region engineering staff since 1955. On January ist this year he was promoted to the responsible position of Dis- trict Operating Engineer at the Commission's Head Office. He assumed his new position with OF GIRL, 8 o B A coroner's jury Monday night attached no blame in the death at the Oshawa General Hospital April 2 of eight-year- old Theresa Ann Treleavan, who died six hours after an appen- dectomy. tay was out 55 minutes before deciding that the RR 1, Whitby Township girl died of shock and haemorrhage follow- ing the commonplace operation. Dr. Hector Hall, of Oshawa, who performed the half-hour In Death lame She Oshawa Time: ] SECOND SECTION OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, JUNE 16, 1964 Pathologist Dr. Rolland Clarke, who performed the post mortem, confirmed the cause of death and said he had been unable to find the tigature be- cause there was 700 cc of fluid and clotted blood in the abdomi- nal cavity. "It would be like looking for| a needle in a haystack, com- mented Coroner Dr. R. G. Irwin, Crown Attorney Afflect. com- City Council O Summer 'Recess mented that it was "most un- usual for a child of eight to die after what we laymen con- sider to be a routine operation. "But it seems that every- thing possible was done for the operation, said he tied off three arteries and a post-mortem showed that one ligature (cat- gut) had come off causing blood to leak into the abdominal No Pay Cut appointment of Lloyd J. formeriy was an engineer with Algar (right) as -- Ontarit) Hydro. General Manager of Oshawa io: Hydro Phot Public Utilities. Mr. Algar (Ontario Hydro Photo) cavity. Under close examination by Crown Attorney Bruce Affleck, the doctor said that after the operation he, anaesthetist Dr. G. B. Doherty, and a nurse had A graduate of the University of Toronto with a BASc. in elec- trical engineering in 1954, Lloyd Algar worked for a year with Canadian General Electric Com-| § pany at the Peterborough works after graduation. He joined Ontario Hydro in Feb- ruary 1955 and took the junior engineers' training course for six months, and then was post- ed to the Meter and Relay Sec- tion of Central Region. Six years later he became Operat- ing Supervisor. Lloyd Algar actually started his Hydro career as an Opera- tor-in-Training in.1948 at Port Arthur. However, he realized! the advantages of further. edu- ARTS GRADUATE Paul Stanley Goldstein, son of Mr, and Mrs. Herman checked the child for bleeding. Asked whether there had been any neglect or impropri- ety in the handling of the case two doctors Dr. Donald Sproule and Dr- Doherty--both replied there was none. Dr Sproule said that "all that was possible to do was done. "Ligatures do slip off some- times so it can't be called neglect . . these things do happen," Dr. Sproule said. | ses Teaching PilotsIs Rewarding | "Teaching people to fly is one of the most rewarding things you can do,"' according to Jim Pengelly, instructor at the Oshawa Flying Club. 'People brag ot he said, "the remain- child .. . and we must realize that the practice of medicine is not a cut and dried thing." Picket Line Halts Work ork on a 65-unit apartment building was halted today by a picket line thrown round the project by the Oshawa Building and Construction Trades Coun- cil. A total of 50° workmen at Georgina Mansions, Park road north, had to halt work when three concrete - pouring trucks honored the picket line. The apartment building is under construction by Walter Roma- nuk of Oshawa, Fred Beckstead, president of the OBCTC, said today that picketing would continue until a working agreement was in force between the council and the builders. "Only two Osh- awa men are employed on the der have been brought from Toronto and are working at Oshawa PUC on June 1. Get Cost jeation and went back to high school and got his senior ma- triculation. Then he entered the University of Toronto in 1950 and graduated in electrical en- gineering four years Jater. Born in Toronto, Lioyd at- Goldstein, 485 Simcoe street north, who received his Bach- elor of Arts degree at the recent University of Western Ontario convocation, He plans to sdo postgraduate work at McMaster University in the ltended Danforth Technical fall. Buildin g |School and took the industrial electricity course. Then he fol-| lowed up later with the Senior} Matriculation academic course. | | below union rates." | | Mr. Beckstead stated that the best because they want to learn. | council meant to conduct a cam- Not all teachers have pupils|paign against all apartment who are so receptive."" | builders in Oshawa who did not who take up flying do their Mr. Pengelly, like many of|have contracts or agreements ' his students, wanted to be a) for their men. Carpenters, iron- pilot when he was "a kid'. He| workers, laborers and hoisting learned to learn to fly as ajengineers are all actively in- newspaper carrier during his| volved in the strike. high-school days. He soloed in| "The picket line will stay 1946, a year later, and received|there until there is a signed Program OTTAWA (Special) -- Cost of inistration, inspection and advertising of the Government's Winter Building Bonus program was about $100,000 this past winter. This information was supplied in the Commons Mon- day in response to a question from Michael Starr, MP for On-' Dorothy Bolduc of Toronto and they have three children. Approve Plan For $115,853 An engineering report listing |work worth $115,853 was ap- He is married to the goons ome by, city council Monday night. "The work-paving, granular During his school years, Lloyd} played football, basketball and| also was on the swimming team) at Danforth Technical School.| He also played basketball for) Toronto University. tario. Mr. Starr, former Min- ister of Labor, asked how many qualified for the $500 bonus under the winter construction program as of April 15 when the program ended. He also asked for the total cost of the pro- gram, In replying, Labor Minister Allan J. MacEachen said that 28,000 dwelling units had quali- fied under the program. The total cost was estimated at $14,500. This figure covers the incentive payment, administra- tion, including advertising costs and the cost of inspections car- ried out by the Central Mort- gage and Housing Corporation. Of the total cost, $14,400,000 is directly attributable to the $500 bonus paid on the 28,000 units, leaving about $100,000 as the cost of the other items. The government has indicated its pleasure at the success of the program this past winter in providing winter jobs and it is expected that the program will be continued another year. on arrival at the Oshawa Gen- base and curbs and gutter -- ig all on subdivision streets and boundary subdivision streets, city engineer Fred Crome said. _ He said the curb and gutter s Man, 67, Dies = 38 At Dentist S |work is prepaid, the paving is on local improvement and 'a Frank Herbert Singer, 67, Of| the work is eligible for subsidy. % Conant street, Oshawa, died|'; The city's share is listed as in a city dentist chair yester-| ang 319: private property own- day. He was pronounced dead ers will contribute $37,533. A {Ome-third Ontario Department of Highways subsidy will cut the city's share total. Streets on which ments will be made eral Hospital after he had been rushed by ambulance from the office of Dr. P. J. Riordan, 3) Simcoe street south. He appar- -- pnb ee ae Bernhard Crescent, Conant Mr. 'Singer had collapsed al-|Street, Gatineau street, Glen- most immediately after he sat|Male avenue, Grenfell' street, down in the dentist chair, Muliana drive, Keewatin south, to < 4 have his dentures refitted, Mr.sL@brador drive, Linden street, ] j avenue, ' Marigold, Singer had a history of heart|Lorindale e trouble, having suffered a Co Brenig and Melrose avenues. onary thrombosis last year. To} Olive, avenue, Oshawa _ boule- reach the office he had to climb|'vard north, Ridgecrest avenue, two flights of stairs. Surrey drive, Viewmount street, Dr. Riordan applied oxygen to}Wayne avenue, Willowdale av- Mr, Singer until the ambulancejenue, Grandview street south, arrived, but all efforts to re-{Oxford street, Annapolis avenue, vive him failed. Montrave avenue. improve- include: his private license on his 17rh| working agreement," Mr. Beck- | birthday. He received his limi-|stead said, "with all trades, |ted commercial license on his/This is just a start on the apart- |19th birthday. Now he has an|ment builders although we are jairline transport license, the|prepared to meet them any-| highest kind issued, as well as|where and at any time to re an air engineer's. He is married| solve any differences, and has six children and lives) The contractor for all form in Brooklin. and concrete pouring work on ANYONE CAN LEARN the building, P, Valoroso of To- At the Oshawa Flying Club, | Tonto, with representatives of his students have included|the builders, will today meet housewives, university students, | With Mr. Beckstead and. other| high school students, business-| members of the council. king-sized sunhat, before pad- dling in the waters of Lake Ontario. The little fellow was joined by hundreds of more conventionally clad sun wor- shippers. The seasonal pic- ture was taken by Mr. B. Overgoor of Burk street, LET'S It was such a hot day Sun- that the > tad did not take -- tims find his swimming pants before he rushed' down to Lakeview Park. He is shown above, coolly clothed in shirt and a lo For Absentees Blvd, intersection is a serious safety hazard, an area resident told city council Monday night. Paul W. J. McNeil, 111 Osh- awa Boulevard south, said there are 17 children under 10 years of age on his street, between Gliddon and Eulalie avenue. He said the four-tenths of a mile from Athol to Eulalie gives hot-rodders plenty of time to get going. Council 'sent the matter to the traffic committee for study. In his letter to council, Mr. McNeil claimed "stop" signs on Gliddon are being ignored by "at least 70 per cent of drivers using the artery. y (He wrote that the stop sign for westbound motorists is part- ly hidden by tree foliage.) He reports that area residents have suggested a four-way stop at the Gliddon-Oshawa Blvd. in- tersection; and that speed limit signs be erected at both ends of Bathe Park. | City Council is now officially on holiday until Tuesday, Sept. 8, 1964. Approval of the standard mo- tion by council Monday night means the city fathers can miss meetings without losing their pay. Aldermen get $1,500 a year. The motion says adjournment is in effect except for "'impor- tant business' when council may be recalled by the mayor. "In my experience more meetings are held in the sum- mer," said Ald, John Brady. "People should not feel we are taking a holiday". Mayor Lyman Gifford said he would like to see several short meetings (an hour or so long, he said) during the summer. "It has taken us to Novem- ber to get caught up in past years," said His Worship. AT COUNCIL A high, wide but 'not hand- some"' sign brought Elmer Mun- roe of 634 Park road south to council Monday night. Mr. Munroe, spokesman for a group of area residents, said a neighbor "'can't see the sky any- more' and he claimed the sign is "an eyesore from the rear, and that's the view we get'. Council some weeks ago gave a commercial establishment permission to erect the. sign. "We will all have to take the blame because we gave permis- sion without too much investi- gation," said Ald, Alice Rear- don last night, Ald. Hayward Murdoch told council City Clerk Roy Barrand has written to the firm telling of the residents' protest "but we haven't heard from them et"'. "Nobody wants to live that close to a wall," added Mr. Munroe. "It has depreciated our property Something ter- rible." Mayor. Lyman Gifford threw the problem to the parks com- mittee but said he believed a lot man, teachers, engineers, pro- A partner in the building) fessional men and factory work--COmpany refused to make any} ers. "Almost anyone can learn|Comment when asked by The STOP COUNCIL BROADCAST 'COMMITTEE MEETS' BLAMED as exciting as Mr. Pengelly's,| He has flown heavy transports . . j on the construction of the DEW! Jail Driver | their entirety. | : : ecutives and flown crop dusters Seven Da Ss | Excerpts will be taped and in.| old 6 council committee meet- in the Maritimes, As a bush y |serted in news broadcasts and|ing early this month more and pilot in the Arctic, he learned! interviews will be obtained on/more council discussion and i r,\turn off Simcoe street on to} fi i witho! , | -oun-| interestin rogram for the fabulous navigators, With a dog|KiNe, told. a police officer|air' "comedy hour', as. some[istener", team, they'll cover 60 miles of|"° thought he was on Bondio¢ the city fathers themselves| In a letter to council, Mr. One might think teaching|@uto. : : come to council,"' wondered Ald.|and more requests for eyen- |students in Oshawa dull after) Wilbur Bride, 79 Thickson| Alice Reardon. ling program: time". jsuch an exciting career. jroad north, was jailed for} and Oshawa offers a lot of ad.| _ Constable J. R. Collins _ testi-) DISCOVER THEFT | F d A ] vantages, It has good flying fied that he stopped Bride's car; Thieves broke into- the 184) oun ) eep facilities. In the North, these) @fter it made the turn and '"the/Winona avenue home of Peter M I Fi 7 eg a /and st | Man iS ined the winter shorter, and the|,, The officer said Collins was|a ladies' Elgin wrist watch, a| schools good. Best of all, I get!| obviously drunk" so I 'took|35 mm camera, an engagement home regularly, something ajhim, to the police station. with a partheitia at: shear We will|pany has. been getting "more| {could be done by getting to- | gether with the sign owners. Oshawa Boulevard south, be- |tween Atho! and Eulalie,.is be- |coming a speedway for motor- jists and the Gliddon-Oshawa 4-Lane Route Set Oshawa's creek valley traf- fic route, recommended in the Damas and Smith 20-year traf- fic report, will be four lanes wide above the central business section, city council ruled Mon- iday night. | First stage of the route, which will eventually hook up High- |way 401 with Adelaide avenue, jwill see four lanes all the way. owever, a 34 foot median ag will be included in the de- sign for the lower strip, allow- ling future development of two more lanes and maintenance of jat least a 10 foot median. | In committee last week, Ald. to fly," he says. Oshawa Times for his views on Few students expect a career| the strike. jo City Council radio broadcasts Lakeland Broadvasting Com- je gate will be heard no more -- in| pany presiderit Gordon Garrison to admire the Eskimos. '"They| 49-year-old Oshawa manitane by the station's news edi-|POlicy-making is taking place take to flying or mechanics|¥®% after, making an illegal! ior ; jin committee, "leaving a less snow covered barren land in|Street, was convicted Monday | referred to it, comes to an end.|Garrison wrote that the com- two days." }of being drunk in charge of an "Maybe more people "Not so," says Mr. Pengelly.|Seven days in Oshawa Magis-| "Most students are interesting,|ttate's Court. facilities are at a minimum,|teld me he thought he was on|Anderson late Monday evening| Here, the weather is milder,|Bond street." and stole a large sum of money,| A 45-year-old Oshawa man jring and a Bulova portable found drunk by police June 12 bush pilot can't expect." After Patrol Sergeant Péter) radio. VETERAN INSTRUCTORS | The other instructors at the] Oshawa Flying Club are also! veteran pilots. Sydney Cowley, the chief flying instructor, was a War-Time Swordfish pilot with the Fleet Air Arm. His log book shows over 7,300 flying hours. | Because many people like to learn to fly in the evenings be on weekends, the club has some experienced part-time tors on call. These include Don Mcllveen,}| a teacher and coach at Central) ' | instruc-) '| Collegiate; John Evans, a plant) manager, Vic Vierin, a public) school teacher. Mr. Mcllveen was an instructor with the RCAF, while Mr. Evans flew) Mustangs ~and Spitfires with Fighter Command, All have Government approved tor's licenses. George Slocombe, the club's| secretary-manager, was an in-| structor at the RCAF flying) training school at Oshawa dur-} ing the war. Suspend Sentence | In Motor Theft | David Hobbs, 22, 125 Mill] street, was Monday placed on his side was Monday fined $20\/Finley Dafoe called the plan instruc-|- japartment building he went to! \ Police said today that) White said he gave Collins the|entry was gained by forcing al alcohol co-ordination tests Col-|window on the west side of lins_ said: |the house. The Andersons dis- "He said I put my finger to|covered the theft when they re- my nose, I can't do that under|turned home early this morn- any circumstances." ling. Remand Accused Attempted Theft An 895 Simcoe street northtified the man sitting in the car man who tackled a man he|as Porter. | found sitting in his car June 11! Later, at the police statin] told Magistrate F. §. Ebbs Mon-| Mr. Olmstead said Porter swore! day he was told by the man: at him and told him:. "I'll get| "You're a dirty, rotten fink| you for this." | .. I'll get you for this." | On June 12 Porter was fined Trevor Olmstead was testify-|$50 or 30 days in jail for dis- ing in the trial for attempted|orderly conduct. This charge theft of Barry Porter, 20, of 89| was laid in connection with the| Arlington avenue, Porter was|Swearing incident at Oshawa remanded for a week: in cus-| Police station. or 20 days in jail, Edward Shanque, 22 Elgin street east was convicted of having liquor and being intoxi- cated and fined $10 or 10 days on each count, Police said Shanque was one of two men found asleep at Osh- awa Creek "flats" with the wine bottle beside them. A charge of being drunk in charge of an auto against Wil- liam Ridgely, 96° King street east, was remanded until June 16. A dangerous driving charge against Ronald W. Teel, 304 Fairview drive, Whitby, will be heard in Oshawa Magistrate's Court, June 29. A charge of .contributing to juvenile delinquency against Douglas Robert Broadbent, 80 Southwood street, was with- drawn at the request of the} complainant, Benjamin J, Mac-| S : wain tody for pre-sentence report and|__ Porter told Magistrate F. §.| sentence. : |Ebbs that he wasn't 'Sitting in Mr. Olmstead said after park-| the car but was standing drink- ing his 1955 auto outside his|i"8 With a friend' when two men ran by them and said "the cops bed. Around 11.30 p.m. he heard Ogee ' the car motor running, ran on'-| 2 her guy came around,| side, and found two men sitting 8™@>bed me and said 'you were in my car',"' South Bend Plant Sold To Firm SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP)-- Studebaker Corp. announced Monday that Essex Wire Corp. in the front seat. jhas agreed to buy Studebaker's| Testifying under the pro- PROVIDE CONTRAST STRATFORD, Ont.--Among elegantly attired socialites at Monday night's opening in Stratford, Ont., of the 1064 Shakespearean Festival, Paul Secheu's knickerbockers gsfood out. Mr, Scheu, a visitor Yrom Germany, attended with his daughtet, Mrs, Horst'Msyk, of Stratford --CP Wirephoto one year's suspended sentence, Both men, testified Mr. Olm- for the theft of a $275 outboard] stead, ran away but after a 100-| motor. |yard chase he caught the man| Hobbs drew his sentence in| Who had been sitting behind the] Oshawa Magistrate's Court| wheel. after being in custody since his| "I hit him on the back of the} conviction June 12. jneck and knocked him down.| Patrick J. D. Freeman, of no|Then I dragged him over to an- fixed address, was jailed for six|other apartment building where months for auto theft after hisia woman' calléd the police." | conviction June 8 for auto theft.! Mr. Olmstead positively iden-| } i*'behind the apartment main body plant here for an un- disclosed amount. The plant contains -800,000 square feet of floor space. ' tection of the Evidence Act, the friend, Donald Grant, of Whitby, corroborated Porter's evidence and said they were drinking Fe build-| ing". | BANNER PRESENTED In convicting Porter, Magis-| Rotarian Thomas Jones, a 'a fantastic monstrosity and |most costly'. He said council should follow -the planning board's recommended street plan and widen existing streets. Male Choir To Feature Concert _The General Motors Male Choir will feature the openi concert being presented at 8.2 p.m. this Thursday, by the On- tario Regiment Band, at the McLaughlin Bandshell in Me- morial Park. Major William C. Paynter, second in command of the regi- 'ment, will be the master of ceremonies. The band will be conducted by Capt. G. B. C, Quick, His Worship Mayor Ly- man A, Gifford will speak briefly. Another feature of the pro- gram will be the marching dis- play given by the General Mo- tors Pipe Band, directed by Pipe Major Alex Stewart. The program for the concert follows: "O Canada" March "Summit", Frank Seymour. Overture "Zauberflote"' (The Magic Flute), Mozart. General Motors Male Choif -- Director, Mrs, Elsie Dobson; Accompanies -- Mrs. Marie Taylor. Theme from the moving pic- ture, Breakfa® at Tiffanys -- "Moon River", Henry Mancini. Cornet Solo, Soloist S-Sgt. J. R. Entwistle -- "Trumpet Tune and Air", Purcell. General Motors Pipe Band -- Marching Display -- Alex Stew- art Pipe Major. General Motors Male Choir-- Director, Mrs. Elsie Dobson; Accompanist, Mrs. Marie Tay- lor. ) Morning', Frank Seymour. Euphonium Solo, 'To A Wild Rose', Edward MacDowell, So- loist S-Sgt. R. Whitsitt. Valse Militaire, "The Grena-~ diers"', -Waldevfel, Pipes and Brass Band, "Scot- land The Brave and The Green Hills of Tyrol', Hymn "Crimond"'. Regimental March -- John Peel. God Save the Queen. JOHN DAVID LIPSON TOBIE RUTH SWARTZ, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Swartz, Park road north, was married June 4 to John David Lipson,. son of Mr. and Mrs. 'Alex Lipson, of Picton, trate Ebbs ruled that Mr. Olm-|visitornat the Monday meeting stead's evidence was 'clear andjof the Rotary Club of Ochaws decisive and I'm not impressedjpresented the banner of his by Grant's testimony', home club -- Garston, England. | at Holy Blossom Temple, . To- ronto, The following day Mrs. Lipson received her Bachelor of Arts degree in Modern _ OSHAWA GIRL MARRIED RECENTLY TOBIE RUTH SWARTZ Languages from the Univer- sity of Toronto. Mr. Lipson is completing his master's de- gree in applied science at Massey College, University of Toronto and is the. recipient of the Donald Matheson Springer Fellowship. He will study for his doctorate at University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. --Photos by LeRoy Toll

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy