Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 17 Jul 1964, p. 4

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ARCHITECT'S SKETCH OF NEWCASTLE POST OFFICE WORK ON THE NEW post. office in Newcastle is sched- uled to be completed in four months. The contract for con- struction has been awarded to Hartwig Construction Com- pany Ltd., of Cobourg. The firm submitted the lowest bid of three at $29,202. The building measures 38 feet by 37 feet. It will be located on the north side of King street, just east of North street. The one-storey structure will have a wood frame, a_ concrete foundation with an exterior finished in prick veneer. The interior will covering the floors. Plans and specifications were pre- t Ratepayers Ask Councillors To Explain School Decision BROUGHAM (Special) --Mrs. Eleanor McKean, of the Rural Ratepayers' Association, was spokesman for a_ delegation which filled the Pickering Town- ship 'ouncil chambers and flow- ed into the corridors and street, at a meeting on Monday night. At a previous meeting Coun- cillors had, by a vote of 4 to 3, endorsed a resolution of Schoul Area 2, that a recommendation be made to the minister of edu- cation that there be but one school areain the township; beginning next year, rather than two. The new provincial legislation provides for one school area in each munici- pality, but a clause has been added that in municipalities with population over 10,000 of a rural and urban nature that there may be two. school areas, at the discretion of the minister. Pickering Township has urban development in the south part, while the north part is rural. "I am sure the Minister was not moved to make this amend- ment without consulting the Department of Education," said Mrs. McKean. "This council moved to endorese a resolution to do just the opposite. You had no jurisdiction in this field. Could you tell me what facts led you to endorse this resolu- tion drawn up by only one of bell, and the Reeve, who voted for the endorsement had facts and figures to prove that one school area would be better for the township. Each of the Councillors made statements at length, but after each Mrs. McKean complained that her question had not been answered and that no satisfac- tory reason had been given for endorsing School Area 2's rec- ommendation for one board of trustees over the whole town- ship. "These people,"she said, in- dicating the large gathering of rural residents, "are entitled to an answer." Reeve C. W. Laycox referred to a meeting at Cherrywood he attended when he said that he had reasonably solid infor-| mation that there were to be two school areas, "T feel that two school areas jare the answer to the north," he said. "But I am a represen- tative of the whole township, and I feel that it (one area) is) good for the township as a whole. I realize the problems if there is one school area. keep hesitating to say "north'"' and '"'south" --it seems li kea Mason - Dixon line. Should there be one school area, I would not hesitate to say that within two} or three years, the whole town- the school boards? Why were not all of the school trustees) ship will be burdened with the jwhole problem boils down to i j | i i ffered consulted about this before the|same mill rate that is su! resolution came up for endorse-|in the south. Because th epeople ment?" lare going to demand the same type of education they are get- DEMANDS FACTS }ting in the south." | Mrs. McKean demanded to) The Reeve said that in all] know why the rural area was|fairness anyone could go to the not considered, and if Council-| minister about the problem, and lors Wank,. Waring and Camp-|recalled that the rural group MPs Give Nod To Student Aid By RONALD LEBEL for the post office and the pub- oO WA (CP)--Squads of|lic works department. MPs trom all th ove up| Three more Quebec MPs in the Commons Thursday and|came out against the student came out squarely in favor of|!0an measure Thursday on the higher education. -- igrounds that it infringes rights After they had quoted statis-\0f the Quebec igo vee tics and surveys extensivety to|_ Paul Martineau sg yg demonstrate the benefits of a|/Temiscamingue) a ze university education, s t k ress on a brooke), both lawyers, argued al Pag 4 Ay quarentec|tat a section of the bill in Nil bank loans to needy university|fect amends the Quebec an students. |Code, This made the whole bi unconstitutional and a threat to sted th é seal mee 4 a" second, (the autonomy of the provincial reading stage and is expected|'egisiature over civil laws. ~ to roll on next week, with many|can-y sIGN CONTRACT more advocates of higher jearn- : : ing lining up to speak. Today,; The section they objected to the Commons turns its attention|would make loans recoverable) on said that not enough facts code|haq been brought out, and that to 1964-65 spending estimates|/from minors. The civil no' time|C hapdelaine (SC -- Sher-| \prohibits anyone under 21 from Pearson Flag Topless Suit Draws Crowd TORONTO (CP) -- Prime Minister Pearson's proposed maple leaf flag design won a vote of confidence at Queen's Park Thursday. Scores of men flocked to the scene when the flag was un- furled and the police dis- patcher was swamped with offers to check. a complaint about circumstances under which the flag was shown. The flag made its appear- ance as a one-piece topless bathing suit worn by model Carol Craig. . Miss Craig, who measures 36-23-36, modelled the flag at a fountain in Queen's Park. She used two of the maple leaves from the flag to cover | up when police arrived. The bathing suit was the idea of a man and woman who have been making the flags to sell. When sales. fell off they decided it would make a good bathing suit. "It certainly would inspire loyalty," one male onlooker said. lsigning any contract. | Charles - Arthur Gauthier} (Creditiste--Roberval) said the bill interferes with provincial] jurisdiction over education. He) 'lmoved an amendment opposing second reading and calling on ithe government to bring in new} legislation empowering the Bank of Canada to issue "cred- its" to provincial student loan) funds. | Only the Creditistes supported the amendment and it was crushed by a vote of 135 ot 13.) David Orlikow (NDP--Winni-| peg North) said the bill rep- resents a few crumbs compared with the federal action that is needed in education and. what jthe Liberals had promised in |the last two elections. Herb Gray (L--Essex West said he is confident the govern- ;ment will act at an early op- |portunity to implement the Lib- erals' promise of 10,000 annual university scholarships of $1,000 jeach. lthat one administraction will |better than piece - mea). I fake iH | iliness. had approached him _ without}----- consulting council. PROVINCIAL LAW "We did not go to you first jand put you on the spot," said |Mrs. McKean, "as did School Area 2, The reason we'did not go to the council was because we had read Bill 54 and saw that the matter of education is with the minister. There is pothing you can do. This is provincial law." Mrs. McKean wanted to know if when the endorsement by ;council of one school area was lrecorded to the minister as not junanimous but by a vote of four councillors to three. | Councillor Wank said the cost "I support the resolution for one school area," he said, "I don't expect that the rural area is going to be saddled with the cost the south end is burden- ed with. There would be a tran-| ' sitional period." "Possibly it might be that prior councils did not venture into school areas because there was not need to," he continued. "I agree a meeting should have been held with all trustees. This counvil did pussy - foot on the schoo] situation." "T am still asking the same question," demanded Mrs. Mc- Keen. "I want the Council to tell me why you endorsed the reso- lution. If you felt it better to wait, why take this stand? Who jis pussy footing?" "If a council has to justify its jdecisions before ratepayers, I |wonder what our council cham- bers: are degenerating to?" as- ked Councillor Wank. "Then every ratepayer would have the right to come to council and demand their right to make |their decisions." Councillor Waring said that he supported the resolution, and was concerned about the stan- 'dard of education in the rural area. He said that industrial ang commercial requirements were much higher, and that without the extra curricular ac- tivities everyone would be hurt. With one schoo) area he could see a nice reduction in the school mill rate. |JUMPED THE GUN Councillor Harvey Spa1g said the comments made were not anstering the delegation, and that council had "'jumped the gun." He explained why he had voted against the endorsement. |He said that the statement made that the north not paying the same mill rate as the south was far fetched. Deputy Reeve Mrs. McPher- |she had not been prepared to lendorse the motion until all figures and facts had been pro- uced, "There is one. counciilor who has not explained. his action," insisted Mrs. McKean "The basic idea of education for the whole township," said Councillor John Campbell, '"'is give you better standards. Gen- erally when you: get this cen- tralization you get something great exception to the implica- tions we did not give this a great deal of thought." "Lots of people in this town- ship say there is no north and no south. You only have to look back through the minutes to find that this is not so. South of 'he 3rd Concession people pay for fire, garbage, police, etc. The only thing spread over the township are the roads, which we share, I don't mind this at all. Don't let's keep IN AJAX COURT j AJAX (Staff) -- A Pickering; of speed in such a manner that Village woman who, according|he almost struck the left" side to Constable Donald Martin of|curb. Smith then followed the Pickering Township Police: |accused at speeds up to 45 mph "Lives under the constant threat) when Constable Smith asked of her husband" was convicted| Grose for his operator's licence in court here Thursday of mak-| ang insurance certificate he was ing a false statement and drink-| refused, He said he observed an ing while on the interdicted list.) odor of alcohol on the accused's Mrs. Frances K. Hopper,|breath when ie was stopped in Woodview road, was charged on) his driveway. Junegi3 after her husband) Mr, Grose testified that he struck a vehicle in the truck! had drank two beers five hours truck he was operating. When/earlier at supper and that he the collision occurred Mrs. Hop-| had seen the police cruiser fol- per was thrown out of the truck|jow his vehicle all the way. He and dragged back into it. then told the court that he had Constable Martin was inform-| only one traffic violation against ed of the accident and found the} him. : truck parked behind the Hopper} Acting Crown Attorney John residence. He found Mrs. Hop-/Humphries informed the court per in the house in an intoxi-|that the accused had several | cated condition, | traffic convictions and that he The truck was owned by Mrs.|was trying to mislead the court. Hopper under an assumed| Magistrate Jermyn fined the name, Magistrate Harry Jer-jaccused and agreed that Court Fines Woman $75 On Two Charges was backing up his trick on Tlona Park road in Bay Ridges when some children ran behind him and he swerved striking a parked vehicle. Magistrate Jer- myn dismissed the charge stat- ing that his conduct hardly con- stituted careless driving. Dam- age in the accident was esti- mated at $150. CHARGE DISMISSED "Speed alone is not enoug for careless driving," stated Magistrate Jermyn when he dis- missed such a charge against John L. Doucette of Toronto. The accused was tried in ab- sentia and Constable Donald Martin testified that he had ob- served Doucette travelling west through the Village of Pickering in close pursuit. of another ve- hicle at a high rate of speed. He said the accused then at- tempted to pass the car on both the right and left side. Doucette was convieted of fol- lowing too close and fined $20, When James St. Clair of West Hill went through a stop sign at Hillview avenue and Moore road in Pickering Township on June 1 Constable William Kolebniak was watching. When he detect- ed alcohol on his breath he searched the car and found an opened bottle under a blanket in Highway 2 shortly after with the mast tied to the roof of his car. Burry told the court he be- lieved the boat was a wreck and had floated in from the lake. Two Sarnia youths, Douglas Loxton and Richard Sauve were remanded until Tuesday for sen- tencing after they pleaded guilty to ordering and eating a meal for which they had no money, A record of the accuseds showed several thefts and Mag- istrate Jermyn commented that he. wondered if they were not fugitives from work. The meal they ordered at the Whitby Cafe came to $1 each. $100 FINE A $100 fine was imposed on Floyd G. Corey, 129 Clements road, Ajax, when he pleaded with it," said William Cole of Brighton' when he was charged .with using the wrong licence plates on his car on June 8,. | When he appeared in court he explained that the plates had belonged to another car he own- ed. Magistrate Jermyn fined him $10. ' | Baptise 4 Youths Columbus Church _-- COLUMBUS -- B a p tismal Service was held in Columbus United Church Sunday morning with Rev, R. H. Love officiat- ing. Four childrén were bap- tized. They 'were: Darlene Lynn Guy, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Guy; Eldon Ross Puck- rin, son of Mr. and Mrs. Irwin Puckrin; . Scott Gordon and Julie Ellen MacNab, children of Mr. and Mrs, A. MacNab. MASON'S' LAST Next season may be Perry Mason's lasti Raymond Burr is likely. to sign for a new TV series, "The Power," in which he would play a state governor. guilty to careless driving in Ajax Magistrate's Court. the front seat. On Thursday Magistrate Jermyn fined the ac- pared in the Toronto district architect's office of the de- partment be finisheq~ in I. M: Saunders, district archi- gypsum board with linoleum tect of Toronto, will be re- sponsible |last night reported that Mac} iShort, their road superinten-|Smith told the court that he ob-/the court that.Rurry had stolen dent, was in Oshawa General) The accused was charged on June 22 after his car struck a parked vehicle in a crescent driveway, off Bayley street in cused $25 for having liquor in a place other than a residence an $20 for failing to stop at a stop sign, FAILED TO YIELD On June 18 Margaret Mitchell backed out of her driveway at myn fined the accused $50 for| charges of failing to produce a making a false statement to get|driver's licence and failing to the ownership paper for Lp bevbeor- na Proof_of insurance be truck and $25 for drinking while| withdrawn. ; ; on the interdicted list, in Ajax| hae | Ales. Two passonyers in the se- |Magistrate Court Thursday. THEFT CASE cused's car received cuts and | : Gerald Burry, 37, of Scarbor-| abrasions from the accident, Ap-| ~ | CARELESS DRIVING ough was fined $25 and costs| parently the accused in an at- Ivan Grose, 86 Hurley road,/when he pleaded guilty to theft]tempt to dodge another car went! 11 Burcher road in Ajax. She ' ae _,| Ajax, was fined $50 when he was| under $50. |into the driveway at a high rate|struck-a car causing $200 dam- Darlington Township Council] found guilty of careless driving.| Pickering Township Police |of speed. His car was a total/age and then failed to produce Ajax Police Constable David|Constable Donald Martin told| wreck, la driver's licence, Magistrate A charge of careless driving| Harry Jermyn fined her $20 for |served the accused making aja mast from a sailboat belong-| against John Fleckenstein of) failing to yield the right of way Miglendtt eft hand turn from Bayley|ing to the Bay Ridges Seal Willowdale was. dismissed by|and $10 for failing to pro- ospital with an undetermined) street onto Burcher road,|Scouts in Frenchman's Bay. He| Magistrate Jermyn. |daoe her licence. | squealing tires at a high rate!said he apprehended Burry on| Fleckenstein testified that hel "I figured I might get away of public works. AND UPHOLSTERY CLEANING 728-4681 NU-WAY RUG CLEANING 174 Mary St, OSHAWA for he work. supervision of OFFICIAL ILL When it comes to the best place to make your next used car or truck buy, put your confidence in your Goodwill Used Car Dealer, It makes such good sense to deal with him. Right now, his new car and truck sales are booming so he has a wider-than-ever selection of used vehicles for you to pick from. He offers you the best of the latest models in used cars, popular body styles and many different makes. And among his fine selection of Goodwill Used Trucks you'll find exactly the model to fit your needs. You get the buy you want at the price you want to pay. And every Goodwill Used Car has to meet the highest used car standards. You're assured of a good, clean car with plenty of unused miles on it. Next time you're shopping for a used car, make sure you see your Goodwill dealer. You'll benefit in value and satisfaction. SEE YOUR GOODWILL - PONTIAC + BUICK » ACADIAN DEALER RIGHT --AND SAVE! |splitting hairs. Let's keep it SUGGESTS CURB --_jone educational programme for | SHEFFIELD, England (CP)|the whole township." | |A chamber of commerce mag- Reeve Laycox advised . that! jazine here suggests a method) ay points could be discussed at jof curbing teen-age hoodlum-|a meeting called by Claremont jism: Pay them from public/Schoo] Board to which all trus- funds for useful evening jobs.|tees have been invited on Tues-| The magazine suggests setting-|day, July 21, when the matter! up community development bu-|will be thoroughly discussed and| ixeaus to allocate jobs. all questions considered. P AUTHORZED GOODWILL USED CAR DEALERS IN OSHAWA and WHITBY H. DICK PONTIAC-BUICK LTD THE CLIFF MILLS MOTORS LIMITED 266 KING ST. W., OSHAWA, ONT. PHONE: 723-4364 103 DUNDAS EAST, WHITBY, ONT. PHONE: 668-5846 Be Sure to Watch. "Telescope" on CBLT Fridays at 9:30 P.M. and "Zero One" on CFTO-TYV, Thursday et 9:00 P.M. 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