Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 18 Aug 1964, p. 4

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\§ THE PGHAWA TIMES, Tussdey, August 18, 1964 Traffic-Choked City Breeds Many Hoofers : ps pte European countries, the * LONDON (CP)--The stranger traffic-stalled buses to hoof it to|survey shows. | in this traffic-choked city may work in the rain, or to the motor-' As well as 1,250,000 "personal| find himself mildly curious about ists who complain they spendjuse" cars and 260,000 mo or-| innumerable "Marples must half their days on Sheemedleycies, London has about 191,- lsince the heyday of George has provided just that. murdered inca sapien 1k ak go!" stickers on automobiles. streets. 000 goods vehicles and 9,000) : . i 'Bernard Shaw. | An intellectual spectacular, from the dead in a. scene Then, sooner or later--prob- But criticism of Marples on|buses, mostly double - deckers.' OB oa ' : ; | The play, The Royal Hunt ofan epic for eggheads," saysithat parallels -- or, parodies-- 'ably sooner -- Transport Minis- this particular score seems un-/The total number of. vehicle-| : ithe Sun, opened at Chichester| Alan Brien of The Sunday Tele- Christ's descent from the cross, ter Ernest Marples, 66, opens just because at least he ordered|journeys within London in a) Festival Theatre in Sussex and graph. | OV oe chinatale aint. nike tae his mouth and even to the|the £600,000 ($1,800,000) survey day is nearly 9,000,000, witn 94 lis slated to move to London's! "Mr. Shaffer has baked @ Spaniard to the dead sun-god, casual observer everything be- --one of the biggest ever under- per cent beginning and ending, | West End before long. It is the|giant layer-cake with theology. aware thal Melk wleh" ane comes clear in a flash. taken--to determine how people Within the survey area. But jfirst. new, English | play to be/sociology, history and_phildso- dressing his own kod, Gritie The loquacious Marples has a move about within the 950 visiting vehicles fs equivalent to |presented by the National The-|phy all spread together under aj; evin writes of the chilling mo- gift for saying things that seem square miles of Greater Lon-\the éntire population of Man-| atre headed by Sir Laurence|pink icing of popular entertain- ; ment: "Qutside the flimsy shell . . "heat rossine: London's bor-| | Olivier. ment, He has put the gilt back } 'hile siete aren seen. pag re aus. owares "iad outwards, Playwright Peter Shaffer, onion the gingerbread." pipeogtincs yen Me ; : ; ' 3 " , " | he ' "ee fm Ff e anh \whose grey, close-cropped head! Levin of The Mail, a critic nas Sityis ee Stem ar Eden neW MANY WALK The trallte thombosis on nar-| 3 ape 5 the Shavian laurels have been/noted for hatchet-job reviews, : Releasing the results of a 'Walking is particularly sig- ow streets has caused count-| placed by critic Bernard Levinjvisited the play twice in four) . , 5 3 F The Daily Mail, is an un-|days and apparently can't find traffic survey, Marples re-Nnificant as a mode of travel to jess Londoners to embellish with ie gag oct Mee eile ; ee ae ua marked that what "surprised" work for central aréa résidents, profanity the words of Sir Win- Weis meh . oa ima sett al or "the him most was the number of|S@ys the survey. ston Churchill, who once de-| elor ol whose ho les a nest new play ave ever people who walked to work in 'Walking accounts for 35 per jared: tebe a ad saree te describes it "total London. | jeent of these work journeys, but «1 have always considered thai, pW Siabode dau ardsn a aloha: resect of Christian: This was not really surprising even in most lower - density in. substitution of the internal ists come to the Bowman- al and unusual picture but |?04" ' : site" and says that if the lord to the thousands who have|peripheral areas at least 10 per combustion engine for the horse! the liama as he curled up on ville zoo and stare at me. 'never have I heard of such a |., He has two solidly successful) : cent walk to work." ; ftrea i Santla if 'not epoch-making plays be-\Chamberlain -- Britain's stage marked a very gloomy mile-) the ground. "If you want to Many of them take my ple: request, No, no, no, no... lind dies aha te pp i grid the|censor--had truly understood Hail Spectacular Drama As Big Treat For British By CAROL KENNEDY | In contrast to the "kitchen- LONDON (CP)--A spectacu-jsink" dramatists, Shaffer be-|he is divine and has the power lar drama about the Spanish|lieves there should be "more/of resurrection. conquest of the Inca empire of/magic, more beauty and more' The climax comes when Pi- zarro, won over to the beliefs } god of the Incas, who believes -- has been "rake here as/entertainment in the theatre." "the greatest play our gen-\London's drama critics, nearly of the civilization he eration" and the biggest theatri-jall of whom enthuse about The' 167 adventurers have pelt cal treat for British audiences)Royal Hunt of the Sun, say he conquered, waits in vain for the LONDON LLAMA TAKES A BREATHER "Don't be silly!' exclaimed Marples stressed that Brit- stone in the progress of man-) take my picture for The Osh- ture when I prance around, 64% Township Taxes Collected COLUMBUS -- Sixty-four per cent of current taxes in East , it was reported at the last township counci! meeting In addition, 1.5 per cent of taxes in arrears from 1962 and 4.2% per cent of taxes in arrears ain's traffic problem is. "'en- tirely different" from that of the United States and Canada, ~with their newer cities and broader highways. He contrasted London's situ- ation with Los Angeles, where a similar study showed 8,000.- 000 people spread over 9,000 square miles, and Chicago, which had 5,000,000 people in 1,200 square miles. The London report--only the kind." Federal Building Architects Named OTTAWA -- Architects: Bar nett and Rieder-Creighton have been appointed to design the new $350,000 federal building in Port Hope, it was announced : ede tt smile and things like that ! Will not stand on my nead!"' | But what you ask is just too (Editor--Sorry, we tried.) much! I can sympathize with your editor wanting an origin- awa Times, fine, but I abso- lutely refuse to pose the way you want me to, All day 'ong, trom 10 a.m. until dusk, tour- Bowmanville Family Back From West Coast Vacation --Oshawa Times Photo Ontario County Agricultural New York Critics' Cirele award|the play's message, he would for the best new foreign play Mave banned it. with Five Finger Exercise, a| "Fortunately he has not, and) study in cross-tensions in a sub-| the greatest play of our gener- urban household. jation joins hands with the} jyears."" YEARS TO WRITE He Aik He has been working on his|RELIGIOUS THEME . play about the Incas for six! The basic theme of the play years, rewriting the draft about/is the clash between the Spanish, six times before. it satisfiedjconqueror Pizarro, who is in} him. Even now he is still prun-|search. of something his native) ing ang shaping scenes beforejreligion cannot give him, and A Flavoured Wine "SERVE COLD ON THE ROCKS OR WITH YOUR FAVOURITE MIX" sun-' from 1963 have also been col- lected. In other matters, council: --awarded the contract for the construction of a new cul- vert for the Spry Bridge to Ontario Culvert and Metal! Products Lid., Waterloo. The firm submitted the lowest tender; --received replies from Dr, Buchanan's findings have been Matthew Dymond, MPP and Shelved. Following a three-year the Ontario Provincial Police/Study, Buchanan and a group acknowledging letters sent tof experts recommended re- them regarding speeding on|building on such an immense County and township roads; scale that no official body has --learned that the dog control et dared to estimate the cost. officer picked up 23 dogs during FORECASTS FUTURE July and destroyed 19. ___| The present study merely out- jlines conditions now, looking to- FORGIVE FORGETFUL ward a forecast of patterns in DARTMOUTH, N.S. (CP) -- 1971 and 1981 to be published The regional library board here/late this year. From this infor- has endorsed a recommenda- mation, the development of an tion by the chief librarian call-|over-all plan for London will be ing for a "Forgiveness Week" investigated. to enable library patrons hold-- Car ownership here in 1962 ing long-overdue books to return was about one car to seven or them without being-fined. Theleight persons compared with library reports several hundred/one car to three or four per- books are overdue. sons in North America and DEATH OR MUTILATION first part of the three-phase pro- ject' has been completed--was jdescribed as the first step in 'implementing the recommenda- tions of Professor Colin Buch- anan, whose massive Traffic in Towns was published last year Marples dismissed as "abso- lute nonsense" reports that ~ today by Durham MP Russell Honey. The building, to be located on John street, will contain facili- ties for the post office, cUS-) reiurned on Sunday from a two- toms house, national emp'oy-'week vacation to the West ment services and all other fed-| Coast. They travelled both ways eral services in this area by train ee Mr. and Mrs.. Roy. Gropp, Search Continues Douglas and Pat, returned me ' ss from a motor trip to the East For Missing Pills : east " % a . Barney BOWMANVILLE (Staff)--On-| street north, is 'spending the tario Provincial Police todayjciummer with the Department : : sleeping and | et ohi pills eh. if ppl bv|, Mrs. D. Armsistead is spend- children, could be harmful ing the summer with her sister The black purse, lost by a| i" London. England Toronto woman in the Bowman-| Joseph P. Conner, has been ville West Beach area on Sun-|transférred to the branch of day, contains two types fo sleen-| Lombank Canada Limited and ing pills and one type of nerve| Lombank Finance Limited from pills the Hamilton branch. Mr. Con Police ask that parents in the nor is a native of Kitchener area make sure their children| Miss Victoria Brisson, Vic- have not found the purse and toriaville, Quebec, is spending the pills. Anyone having any in-|the summer with Mr. and Mrs | formation should contact Bow-| Alfred Allin and family. Miss manville OPP immediately |Patricia Marr has _ returned BOWMANVILLE -- Mr. and 'irs.' Joseph Cuddahee, Gwen and Marlene, Prospect street, Hawthorne, Liberty The Ultimate Terror Of Wa By KEN SMITH his son Malcolm, who flew Ty- SAULT STE. MARIE. Ont.)phoon fighter-bombers in the (CP)--The ultimate terror of Second World War. war is death or mutilation on So when he talks in a calm the battlefield." voice almost bare of emotion, Those are the words of Henry|°! the terror of war, you listen. §. Hamilton and he knows what| Because he knows. he's talking about, for he holds HORROR UNEXPECTED two distinctions in connection' wr Hamilton now is 77 and with Canada's role in two world <i}; practices law from the of- were. fice to which he returned In the first, on Feb. 19, 1915,|shortly after the First World he became almost certainly the War. . first Canadian serving with the Interviewed in that office pyrene. Rinne grag a Force surrounded by. long rows of le- In the second, in September {gal tomes, he talked of the 1939, as Liberal member of Years 1914 to 1918. Parliament, he moved the ad-' "I haven't held details in my dress in reply to the speech) mind. It's mot the sort of thing pnt pr Btw a oo Can-| vou dwell on--men killed, some He has other intimate con- nections with war, too--his rec- ollections of the front in 1915|, '! suppose there was a feel: after he returned to action|i& of excitement, because the from hospital; his younger horror of war wasn't known to brother Robert killed in action "5- in August, 1918, just a few) "In the sécond war, it must weeks before the armistice;'have been different because the good, some bad... fear. . the trenches, . memory of the, slaughterhouse) Instead, officers with no bat- in th first was still vivid." He said, after a pause, his most dominant impression of the early days at the front was Germany's preparedness, es- pecially as far as equipment was concerned "They had, in some sections four times the number of artil- lery guns while ours some- times were even rationed on the number of shelis they could fire in return. "But eventually we got equal ity and then a preponderance of guns. And that was sweet mu sic to scared soldiers, when we could outshoot them "Equipment saves human lives in war, and you have ta pay for the lack of it with hu- man lives." CRITICIZED POLICY Another, and bitter, memory he has kept of the early days of the war was the army's pol icy of not commissioning men from the ranks at the front © knows nothing of the individual tle experience would be sent to France to take command of| war - toughened soldiers who had learned at bitter cost about) the hell that surrounded them It wasn't, he said grimly, the best of morale. boosters That policy. eventually was changed and by the end of the war he rated the Canadian Army one of the best fighting units on the Western Front. Mr. Hamilton, who had grad- uated as a lawyer in the spring of 1914, left his home town with the Sault contingent of the} 2nd Battalion Aug. 20. After re-| ceiving preliminary training at} Valcartier, Que., he sailed for Europe in September. Five months later he was! ishipped into action | He was wounded 15 hours) after going to the front as a sergeant 'with the 2nd Battalion, | Canadian Expeditionary Force. A German shell exploded} over him, showering screaming} hot shrapnel into his right leg.| All day he lay in the trench,) waiting for the cover of dark-| ness so he could be carried to} safety On his back for two months,! he returned to the front in five months COMMANDED MILITIA He received his commission at the front in\ 1916 and when the war ended he was major. During the Second World War, as a. lieutenant - colonel commanding the Sault militia, he was in charge of civil de- fence for the area, rated a key spot because of its vital canal It was his September, 1939, address as Liberal member for Algoma West replying to the throne speech that summed up his philosophy of freedom and the dignity of man, "We are confronted," he said then, "with a philosophy that man but his obligation to obey, that knows nothing of the value of human individuality and hu man liberty, whose instruments are ruthless and unscrupulotis force and violence an_ utter negation of all the things we have been taught to value. . . "Believing this, to me this war is Canada's war. To me the defeat of Britain is the de feat of Canada. The defeat of France is the defeat of Canada To me the death of every Brit ish, French or Polish soldier, sailor or aviator in resisting German force and violence at from a conducted tour of the British Isles Mr. and Mrs. E. V. Hoar, left on Friday by air for an extend- ed trip te Europe. Flight Lieutenant W. J. Mur- doch was transferred to RCAF Training Command Headquar- ters, Winnipeg. Mr. Murdoch is a native of the town and has been stationed at the Central Officers School, Centralia. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs, P. N, Murdoch, Lambs Lane. James Kennedy, Parkway Crescent is spending a month in Cork, Ireland. | Honey Leaves For Denmark OTTAWA--Russelly C. Honey, Durham MP, leaves here today to attend the Inter-Parliamen- tary Union Conference in Copen- hagen, Denmark, from Aug. 20 to 28. The is Canadian delegation }comprised of eight members of Parliament, representing all parties in the House of Com- mons and two Senators. Over 1,000 delegates most countries of the world will! be attending the conference which will be opened in the presence of His Majesty King Frederick IX of Denmark The conference will provide parliamentarians with a means for a useful exchange of ideas on matters of common concern House Clears Girouard Case Of Bribe Rap from Fairs, Meetings the play goes to London 'Atahuallpa, emperor and FABULOUS TIRE BUY FOR ALL CR OWNERS! Tuesday, Aug, 18, 8 p.m.-- Uxbridge--August meeting tor, the Port Perry 4-H Dairy Calf Club, Port Perry Lions' 4-H) Grain Club and the Scott Jun-| ior Dairy Calf Club at the farm) of Gordon Ward, Uxbridge,| RR 3 Wednesday, Aug. 19, 8 p.m.-- Claremont -- August meeting for Brougham 4-H Dairy Calf Club and Brougham Junior Dairy Calf Club at the farm of | Joe Tran, Claremont, RR 2. Aug. 20 to 22 -- Oshawa Fair. Saturday, Aug. 22, 10:30 a.m., [Oshawa Fair--This is Junior) (Day at Oshawa Fair. [he Osh-| awa Kiwanis 4-H Dairy Calf] Club, Brougham 4-H. Dairy) iCalf Club, and Brougham Jun-| jior Dairy Calf Club will) hold their achievement days. | Wednesday, Sept. 2, 8 p.m.,| Uxbridge -- September meeting for Scott 4-H Tractor Club at the! Implement Shop of Stan Beach, Uxbridge. | Wednesday, Sept. 2, 10 a.m.,| Uxbridge -- Trinity United Church--4-H Homemaking Club} Leaders' Training School. Thursday, Sept. 3, 10 a.m., |Uxbridge, Trinity United Chur¢h! |--4-H Homemaking Club Lead-| ers' Training School. | | Thursday, Sept. 3, 8:30 p.m., Brooklin, Township Hall--Sep- tember meeting for Brooklin MODERN BLADED TREAD DESIGN EX NEW TIRE TREAD 5 SUP-R-TUF RUBBER FOR THOUSANDS OF TRA MILES AFETY-INSPECTED |Junior Farmers | Thursday, Sept. 3, 8 p.m.,| |Whitby, County Buildings | |Agricultural and. Reforestation) committee meeting. | Friday, Sept. 4, 9 a.m., To-| ronto, CNE--Annual 4-H Club/ demonstrations and Junior Far-} mer. Judging, ~ | Monday, Sept. 7--Port Perry) Fair Sept. 7 to 14, Orillia -- Pro-; this time is a life given in the service of Canada 'We must make every. effort to bring our whole capacity to} bear in. the struggle that is be- fore us." OTTAWA (CP) -- The Com-'vincial Junior Farmer Leader-| mons voted over Creditiste ob-|ship Training Camp at Lake} jections Monday to approve a|Couchiching. Delegates from report declaring there was no| Ontario County--Beatrice Lee, bribery or breach of parliamen-|/Greenbank and Ronald King, tary privilege involved in MP! Blackwater Gerard Girouard's break with) Tuesday, Sept. 8, 8:30 p.m., the Social Credit party. Uxbridge High School--Septem | The Commons defeated, 146 toner meeting for Uxbridge Jun- 9, a motion by the Creditiste ior Farmers. i group to refer the case back to) priday, Sept. 11, 8 p.m. Ux- ee Rsdigesy yd and) bridge, Dept. of Agriculture elections. committee and have it)hoard room,-Cornland Day com- submit conflicting testimony to ittee meetin the Ontario attorney - general's|™ sine is ng. department. | Creditiste Leader Real Caou-; TO HELP HANDICAPPED ette and his deputy, Gilles Gre-- NEWPORT, England (CP)-- goire (Lapointe), said that since|/Teams of United States airmen conflicting testimony was given} will play baseball on an Isle of under oath by members of Par-|Wight sports ground here to liament, someone must have/help raise £800 for physically committed perjury. |handicapped children. REMINDERS ABOUT YOUR ONTARIO HOSPITAL INSURANCE © rm BIRTHDAY? KEEP INSURED! When you reach your 19th birthday you are no longer covered by your parents' certificate, Register separately within thirty days to keep insured. Forms are available at hospitals, banks ond Commission offices. CHANGING JOBS? KEEP INSURED! If you change jobs, follow carefully the instructions on the back of the Certificate of Payment, Form 104, which your group is required to give you, GETTING MARRIED? KEEP INSURED! When you marry, the Family premium must be paid to cover husband, wife and eligible dependonts. Tell your group OR, if you pay direct, tell the Commission, ONTARIO HOSPITAL SERVICES COMMISSION | 2195 YONGE STREET, TORONTO 7, ONTARIO || WIDTH and DEPTH CASINGS testone oon \ CHAMPION RETREAD SALE "Any Firestone retread identified by the i Quality Tread Medailion is e a) | GUARANTEED } ! Against defects in workmanship and materals in both cord } 1. body and tread during the life of the tread. | normal Road Hazards (except repairable punctures) | £2. encountered in everyday passenger car use for 12 months. Bi) Replacements are pro-rated on tread wear and based on fist prices b| current at time of adjustment. Don't rob the bank to buy new tires. We'll put you on a set of fully guar- anteed Firestone Medallion retreads for just $49.49 exchange. Take your choice of new slimline whitewalls or blackwalls... tubeless or tube type. This low price offer is limited, so hurry! NG BY TIRE FREE MOUNTING exrerrs CAR BOAT PLANE SCHOOL BOOK COVER . COMPASS FREE Nothing te buy No obligation Drop in and pick up this educational book cover. It tells the his- tory of rubber, how Firestone tires are made and reminds your kiddies te obey troffic rules, An accurate compass with eviation type regulators, nylon. geors ond Cunife magnets. Smart chrome and colour finish. Mounts onywhere. 498 : 725-6566

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