Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 25 Aug 1964, p. 5

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peta pe apogee ge a ¥ a - OaHAWA TIMES, Tueedey, Angut 25, 1964. § Last Second Heffernan Goal |. veusr., cncniees WHITBY And DISTRICT Whitby bureau Office 111 Dundas St. West Wendy Ockmore, 18, Carnival Queen of this Hampshire town, Manager: John Gault 4 Tel. 668-3703 PAT LESLIE, AND PATIENT Pat Leslie - A VONs Work Is. Never Done By CHRIS. DENNETT (Times Staff) "Doing to others, doing with others; but most of all helping others to do for themselves." Thus reads the motto of the Public Health Department. And it is with this very much in mind that Whitby's VON nurse goes about her daily routine. It is a busy, but fruitful life. Whatever the need or whatever the hour the task must be done. Yet balanced against the long hours is the satisfaction of a smiling welcome, the feeling of a job well done, the fulfilling of a real community need. Miss Pat Leslie came to Whitby three weeks ago; tak- ing over from Miss Nancy Ruth Bowring who left to take over a new area in Nova Scotia. Operating from her basement office in the town library Miss Leslie makes an early start. Four times a day.a call has to be made to the Police De- partment to find out if there are any calls to be made. 'Peo- ple who require VON attention should contact the Whitby PD. From there calls are passed on to Miss Leslie. The rest of the day is spent WHITBY Mrs. N. W. Adamson of Van- couver, British Columbia and her sister Mrs. C. B. Spencer, spent Sunday with Mrs. Spen- cer's son, daughter-in-law and family Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Spencer, Toronto. Callers on Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs, Walter Kick, 148 Pine street were: Miss Maude Southworth of Redlands, California; Mrs. Kirk's nieces from Cobourg and Ottawa; and Mrs. Betty Price of Rouge Hull, a former Whitby resident. Mrs. Catherine Mackey and her daughters, Alice and Winnie, of Edinburgh, Scotland, are guests for one month at the home of Mr, and Mrs. Douglas Lauder, 1513 Dufferin street. Mrs. Mackey is Mrs. Lauder's mother. * Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Steven- son; 1011 Centre street north, attended the Malenoski-Boivin wedding on Saturday at Holy Cross Roman Catholic Church, Oshawa, and were guests at the reception which followed at the Oshawa Canadian Legion Hall. Mrs. Molly Toman is at present in Sussex, England, visiting her mother, Mrs. Sarah Strain who is ill. Mrs. Toman is expected fo return home in October. Lynne, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Spellen is cele- brating her ninth birthday today, August 25. Her friends wish her many happy returns of the day Mr. and Mrs, J. E. Speers, 711 King street, have returned from a three-week vacation abroad where they visited in England, . Wales, Scotland and Ireland. They arrived at Toronto visiting her regular calls. Tasks vary greatly. In some homes it is just a regular injection or a bath for an old 'person. Other calls require strict med- ical attention. In' both cases service is dealt with a smile. Treatment costs three dollars. But this is merely a maximum price -- the Victorian Order of Nurses has a kind heart too. If the case is a needy one the patient pays only what he or she can. "Tt is a very nice feeling to know we are helping people," Miss Leslie said. "I've only been here a very short time and yet already I have met so many wonderful people." A great part of Miss Leslic's work is made up of pre-natal and post-natal calls, Starting on Sept. 30 in the Fairview Lodge Auditorium the regular annual post-natal and pre-natal classes begin. Miss Leslie is already hard at work preparing these classes. The Whitby VON Association is celebrating its Golden Jubilee this year. The story began way back in February, 1914, when a special meeting was called at the in- stigation of the town Women's Institute. The Chief Superintendent of the Order was present at the meeting to explain the aims of the Order. As a result of this meeting a guiding committee was formed. : The organizaitoh quickly got into its stride and on March of that year the town's first nurse arrived, From that date the VON in Whitby has never looked back. = Within the first year of opera- tion the organization had thor- oughly canvassed the town for membership, won a grant from the town council and set up a Home Committee to help the International Airport. Callers on Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Simp- son were Mrs. Alwin Simpson, Toronto, and her daughter, Mrs. DAM'S LAKE Work on the South Saskatch- ewan Dam will be so advanced by fall, 1965, that filling the 180-mile-long lake behind it will Roy Switzer of Lambton Mills. begin. BROCK For this WHITBY See The Cardinal In DELUXE COLOR engagement only - One complete show starting at 7:30 from the Begining 'THE CARDINAL erasnon TOM TRYON, ROMY SCHNEIDER)\ CAROL LYNLEY, JILL HAWORTH, RAF VALLONE, JOHN SAXON, JOSEF MEINRAD, BURGESS MEREDITH, OSSIE DAVIS, DOROTHY GISH, TULLIO CARMINATI, MAGGIE (MCNAMARA, BILL HAYES, CECIL KELLAWAY wo JOHN ~ HUSTON ss GLENNON Also: Bobby (Morse) and hie Adore-Bellee S| of the Haig Bow! for last night's s\They were self-installed favor- By CLIFF GORDON $T. CATHARINES -- The Brooklin Sr. Lacrosse Club, with their backs tight up against the wall came up with a stellar performance last night as they won a cliff hanger 10-9 in the Garden City over the St. Catha- rines Athletics, The win ties the best - of - seven series at three games each with the seventh and deciding game here at the Brooklin arena on Wednesday night. The Athletics were a confident crew as they took to the floor game. They had walked into the Brooklin arena last Satur- day night and handed the pride of Ontario County a 5-3 setback and taken the lead in the series. now will carry over to tomor- row night and you can bet there will be standing room only for this one... . Grant Heffer- nan, who, like Glen Lotton, was blanked in Saturday night's game showed last night why he rates with the best in the league. Jerry Burrows, while per! not as consistent a big scorer as some of the fellows, showed why he too will be mak- ing a bid for the all-star wing position. He potted three goals and played a good game both ways last night... . Baker again made several good saves. . . » Doug Vipond kept a few of the boys honest last night including the "big Smith boy" Don't forget folks, it has all boiled down now to one 60- Gives Brooklin Another Try minute game for the right to), ., meet the winner of the Bramp- ton-Peterborough series and the right to advance into the Mann), 'Cup playdowns. .. . A note to the players, we need only five more w:ss for that big shot at all the marbles, let's not stop ow. poy sand ist Period 1 St. Kitts, Smith, Berge, Davies .. 1.43 2. St. Kitts, Howe, B 3.53 3. Brookiin- Ahr 4, Brooklin, Heffernan, i otton Ludiow, G. +e 5. St. Kitts, Thorne, Berge » 6, Brookiin, G. Lotton, Heffernan, Ruttan . 7. Brookiin, Heffernan 8. Brookiin, Syrrows, Heffernan Penalties -- T 2.16, 12.00, G. Lotion 12.54, Ludlow Moore 14,31, Craggs 17.12 Howe 13.17, 18.41, itts, Thorne ... 18, Brooklin, Ruttan . Hinds 19.49, ites to cop the series. The Brooklin team were still full of fight and showed them why they won the league cham- pionship for the second year in a row. They spotted the mighty St. Kitts team, a 2-0 lead and then battled back' to have a 5-3 lead at the end of the first 20 minutes of torrid action. It was 8-7 for the "Good Guys" after 40 minutes and then it appeared as if the roof was going to fall in. The SA'r fought back and held a lead of 9-8 with 35 seconds to go. Big Ken Ruttan broke their hearts as he tied the score at 19.25. And then with Elmer Tran in the penalty box, Grant Heffer- nan really put the icing on the cake as he scored with just two seconds to go. STOP BED \PPLY IT WETTING PROMPTLY AND WITHOUT DRUGS Healthy Children and Adults Can Learn to Sleep Dry There Is ONE METHOD That Has Been Giving Good Results for Fifteci: Years AT HOME Friendly Recipes Did Not Solve Your Problem -- Resort to EXPERT ADVICE from a TRUSTED ENURETIC SERVICE For more information mail this coupon today. No obligeti DRY BED OF CANADA LTD, 106 Adelaide West, orga Heffernan, along with Jerry Burrows, were three goal men| for the Brooklin team, Captain Glen Lotton had a pair after being blanked here on Saturday nurse in teaching mothers how to feed and care for their babies. During August of that first year a children's picnic was held. Motorists for miles around! were mobilized to carry the children to the picnic ground. In 1920 the Whitby Associa- tion was one of the prime movers of the Provincial Asso- ciation. Letters were sent to Ottawa and a meeting was later held in Toronto where a pledge was made to "consoli- date the work of the province." night. Don Bruce and Ruttan had the others. For the very disappointed St. Kitts team it was Gary Moore with three, Wally Thorne with two and singles to Doug Smith, Ted Howe, Darry Davies and Ron Roy. The win last night was. with. out a doubt, the biggest one of the season and the playoffs thus far for the Brooklin team We feel that they realized, after losing the 'one here Saturday, that they owed the fans of this area just another shot at what they can really do, when they put their minds to it. Well, fans Subdivision's 'Jungle Jims' Worry Farmer The "Jungle Jims" and "Tar- zans'"' of the Rosedale-Dovedale subdivision, who take to the jungle at weekends and build' straw houses and cook beans over camp fires, are worrying you will get that big chance on Wednesday night. The game is called for 8.45 and it is one you sure can not afford to miss. JUST TALKING .. . We are almost at a loss for words to really describe the joy there was in the Brook'in camp after that big win last night... . They know they have the team and that they can win when they put their minds to it. Saturday night was a bad one out of their system, let's hope there are no more like that one... . The joy that is in their hearts Whitby farmer Earl Pascoe. These adventure-loving chil- dren, thinks Mr, Pascoe, are going to hurt themselves one lay. The trouble lies in one of Mr. Pascoe's fields near the town garbage dump. It appears that every weekend children from the subdivision take over a small corner of the field, : A huge straw and twig house was built and a camp fire lit. Not so long ago this straw house caught 'fire and burnt out. All that was left after the blaze was a few charred branches. _ "Someone might have got hurt in that fire," Mr. Pascoe said one to stop children having a bit of fun; but this sort of thing should be 'stopped. "A kid could very easily get burnt if one of those straw houses went up in. smoke, Par- ents should stop them doing it." The house that did go up in flames was apparently a regular weekend haunt for children from) the subdivision. Empty cans of food were found on the burnt out site. Worried at the danger Mr. Pascoe has recently posted signs in the vicinity, But this seems to have had little effect. The bold adventurers, keen to | } | | | | | Lyesterday, "I would be the last! 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