Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 26 Aug 1964, p. 17

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ne Oe edn 2 4 a6 Fe Ye Geet OE a ee OSHAWA AIR CADETS Oshawa Air Cadets of 151 The local cadets are having Squadron are pictured above a wonderful time. The widely- as they attend the Air Cadet varied daily activities include Summer Camp at the RCAF drill, "sports,. rifle practice, Station in Trenton, Ontario. hobby shop work, and several rag Ng aU r aa, AT RCAF SUMMER CAMP and has had representation at every summer camp since in- ception. The Oshawa Squad- ron is sponsored by the local Rotary Club. industrial and educational tours. Number' 151. squadron was formed in 1941 about the time of the organization of the Air Cadet League of Canada, ne ae Sm nil night we may have caught the SON Teen Gang ~ Enters Four City Homes The Oshawa F OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 263 1964 PAGE SEVENTEEN Police are searching Oshawa SECOND SECTION for a teenage break and enter; : gang who smashed their way into four city homes last night. In' three of the cases neigh- bors saw teenagers approach the houses which were entered. Chief Constunie Herbert Flint off said today: I am appealing to: citizens to cali the police immediately 'the see two or three boys hanging around a house. If we had been called last gang." In each case neighbors saw two or three boys ride up to a house on bicycles. They are esti- mated at 14 or 15-year-olds. At the home of Victor William- son, 278 College avenue, the thieves got away with more than $80 -- mostly in 50-cent pieces. In all cases the boys entered houses by removing screens and pushing in the windows. They smashed up a bedroom ransacking all drawers a nd cupboards when the gang entered the home of Mr. Romeh, 917 Johnston avenue. This time they took $4 and a transistor] radio....... The two other break-ins were not profitable for the gang -- they made off with nothing. Victims 'were Roman Wia- trowski, 217 Johnston avenue,/ and Geoffrey Northy, 210. Hill- side avenue. | OSHAWA BOY, 6, IS DROWNED Bruce Thomas Henderson, who would have been 6 next month, drowned Monday in Lac Morin, 21 miles north Motorcyclist, 21 Ends In Field Six road accidents in Oshawa,)lan drive, causing $350 damage. |; rage ee Tuesday, resulted in one man|They were Ernest Mitchell, Sen ee taeraperned DA TACks to hospital and a total of|1, Oshawa, and Vito Maglione,| going more than $2,800 property dam-) 265 Park road_ south. age. Injured was Gary Carter, years old, of 746 Grierson street.| eron, eral Hospital when the motor-|on Wentworth street, the road into a field near| $350. the airport on Stevenson road) There was $225 damage in a north. Mr. Carter was treated for|Stacey avenue. bruises to his face and hands. scene of the accident with most road. property damage. The two-car) collision resulted in $1,000 worth! ' A Cyclist Hurt In Collision of repair bills for drivers Doug- A nine-year-old Whitby boy Jas Skinner, 501 Phillip Murray avenue, and Robert Abbott, 557 Lakeview avenue. A three-car crash on Simcoe} street south resulted in $550) damage to the cars. Dryers were William Edgar, 118 Prince| was street, Hessel Tot, 317 Anderson| Hospital last night after he was) yi. ¢, A avenue, and Anthony Walraven, involved in an accident Phe ed ae, mare Seen 762 Simcoe street north. * King street west and Church) street was the scene of a two- car collision. Drivers were Dirk Keyzer, 231. Rosedale drive, Whitby, and William A. Stevens,| 169 Alma street, Damage) amounted to $250. | Two Oshawa drivers collided} at Bond street west and MeMil-| Perry streets. today shock. and recovering James Cole, 82 Liberty street, 21| Bowmanville, and Donald Cam-|eral party spoke to a political 226 Conant street, were the) rally Tuesday night. He was taken to Oshawa Gen-|drivers involved in an accident 4 in which| A 7 ; : 2 © rv: cycle he was riding skidded oft| property damage amounted telat ha apart erash at Ritson toad south and) their organization if they expect | Drivers were|to win the next provincial elec- |John Blight, 332 Arthur street, Ritson road south was the|ang Clifford Harden, 100 Park! About 300 persons turned out taken to Oshawa General] riding his bicycle on Mary and Gould, member of the legisla- Kenneth Reilly, 217 Dovedale} was unable to attend the rally drive, is resting comfortably" from) Mr. Greene said '"'the people) He was in collision with a car|/Tory government, driven by David Heard, 103\time for a change. Rigor mor- Liberals Lash Ont. PCs As of Montreal. 'The family residence is .378 Jarvis street, Oshawa. Born. in Halifax, Nova Scotia, the lad had lived in PETER ARMSTRO Fat, Complacent, Corrupt toms are clear-enough--securi- ties commission scandal, gas line scandal, a new scati- al in the highways ment." NEED CHANGE Mr. Templeton said the Lib- eral party--will not win the next election if it continues doing) what it has been doing. "Tt will take a completely re- vitalized Liberal party to-do it,"| FORT WILLIAM (CP)--Criti- jon the current government as |six announced candidates for leadership of the Ontario Lib- the Pro- govern- ment has become fat, compla- cent and corrupt but the Lib- erals will have to rejuvenate The candidates said servatives' as "arrogant, with |tion, expected in 1967. no concern for the people of Mr. Copps stapped Liberal members 'of the legislature for not speaking out against "'ini- quitous legislation." to hear speeches by Robert |Nixon, member of the legisla- j ture for Brant; Andrew Thomp- Mr. Nxon said the govern- ment..was 'busy keepng their fingers in all holes which have been sprung in the dike." Mr. Sargent accused the Con- |servative government of show- ing favoritism to Toronto. He said the government is subsi- dizing a $20,000,000 subway in Toronto which is costing tax- payers in all parts of the prov- ince $20 a head."' Be He advocated equality for all parts of the province. What's good for Toronto should be good: for The Lakehead, Sudbury, Timmins, or any other aréa of the province." ercourt; Eddie Sargént, mayor |of Owen Sound and member for \Gray North; Charles Temple- ton, former executive news edi-| tor of the Toronto Star; J. J. (Joe) Greene, member .of Par- |\liament for Renfrew South; and A seventh candidate, Joseph ture for Toronto Bracondale, due 'to. a back injury. of Ontario, after 21 years of know _ it's | tis is setting in. . Mary street west, Whitby. % "SHOWED HIS SKILL Ontario Municipal Association in London, Ont., Tuesday. He Idans on the finished product which contains his name, Mayor of Timmins Leo Del- iliano showed his skill at claim. staking during a bar- beque for delegates to the « Mr. Thompson said the Lib- eral party must have a capable and dynamic leader. The day of the one-man show is over." stnathinialall easntclieecsanan sinc eeetnen Pellet Hits . . The symp- Op the} depart-| he said, referring to the Con-| this province." | son, member for Toronto Dov- | Oshawa four years and had attended kindergarten at St. Gregory's this past year. | Surviving are his parents, | Mr. and, Mrs. Malcolm T. Henderson, and a_ sister, |. Janis Anne. Also surviving are grandparents, Mr. and f Mrs., Placid Beaupre, Mrs. | Sophia Henderson and Wal- | | ter Henderson. The body is resting at the When readers of The Oshawa 'Times in the Harmony road dis- trict have their paper delivered by Carrier Peter Armstrong, ll, lin future they will notice a dif.| | ference -- Peter will be accom- |panied by his rare, recently- Carrier Boy , [Buys Rare Dog ING AND FRIEND the dogs into Europe from Asia, Other 'sources say that the Huns or Magyars invading Eu- rope more than 1,000 years ago bred the dogs. In Hungary the. Kuvasz was bred as a hunting dog and was a mark of royal favor when presented to noblemen or visi- the highlight of the day. Small '| bags of flour or sand will serve | | pilots fly.ovela parachute, laid lout on the ground to serve as a | |target. Each pilot must take :|into account * |height, and the speed and direc- 'Ition of the wind before releasing -|his 'bomb.' Considerable skill ! In pre-war days, the RCAF used The wa Flying Club's an- nual titions and picnic will be held at Lindsay Muni- cipal Airport. on Aug.. 30. This is the first time these events have been held away from @sh- awa since they were organized in 1945. | The 260 club members will be competing for three trophies, two of them donated by former presidents of the flying club. All seven club aircraft will be flown to Lindsay for the event, and members will be able to reserve the planes on the spot. Many members are planning to drive to Lindsay, and fly from that city's new airport. © A bombing" contest will be as bombs, ile the weekend| his speed and and judgment is required, be- cause no bomb sights are used. the same training method. In 1963, W. A. (Bill) Baker of Port Perry won the Schofield Trophy for his superior aimitg skill. The Royal Canadian Flying Clubs' Association is offering the R.C.F.C.A. Forced Landing Flying Club To Lindsay Trophy for the pilot who makes the best simulated forced land-" ing. Last year it was won by Larry. Melann of Oshawa, a flying club member who owns his own plane, an Aeronca Chief. Final event is a spot landing contest, with the F. J. Grindley trophy as a prize. To win, a pilot has to land and roll to a stop as nearly as possible to a line marked on the airfield. A. E. Wilson of Scarborough, an- other Oshawa Flying Club mem- ber, won the trophy in 1963. Arrangements for the day have been made by Douglas Watson, aided by the Flying Committee chaired by William Baker, Other committee mem- bers include President W. E. Gillette, Don Holloway, Robert Jack, Don Taylor, Art Keeler, Frank Moses, Stan Johnson, Bill Fertile and. Syd Cowley, chief flying instructor. Lindsay was chosen as the site of this year's meet to avoid disrupting air traffic at Osh- awa's increasingly busy airport. The Flying Committee thought an out-of-town event would add interest, and also highlight the opening of the Lindsa airport. Aware that many 0 indus- tries seek locations with air- ports, more and more Ontario towns are encouraging airport development programs. To Take Don Mellveen of the Oshawa Flying Club has been chosen to participate in an advanced fly- ing instructors' refresher course lat Kitchener. He is one of 30 lexperienced instructors from | Ontario, Quebec and the mari- times. Sponsored by the F e deral Dept. of Transport, the course is designed to acquaint instruc- Don Mcllveen Course on teaching high-school physics, He is a teacher and coach a Central Collegiate. ring the war, he was a flying instructor with the RCAF at Abbotsford, B.C. A popular figure at the Oshawa Flying Club, he in- structs there in the evenings and on weekends. He expects to be back in Oshawa about Aug. 28. tors' with the most modern in- tors at court. The dogs later became guards for farmers and warded off predatory animals and livestock thieves. The Kuvasz has always been known for his gentle manner and is an excellent dog for chil- is it an aggressive animal. ture weighs between 80 and 110 pounds when fully grown. A great advantage for those wish- ing to make house-pets of the Kuvasz is the complete odorless- ness of the animals. Peter Armstrong knows~ tha! he now has a companion the meets all the qualifications tha: a boy has in mind when he thinks of "when I get a doz." Boy In Head Doctors will today remove a@ airgun pellet from the head of a Whitby boy, 10. | The boy, James Town, 110 Dundas street east, was shot in the head yesterday while playing in a parking lot be- hind his home. | Today James was sad to be| in good condition in Oshawa General Hospital 'and relatives *\said the operation to remove the pellett would take place later in the day. James was playing with an- other boy when the acc dent occurred, | "Rabid" Skunk Is Reported Dr. C. C. Stewart, City MOH, said today that a skunk picked up last Saturday by the City Pound in the Oshawa boule- vard-Adelaide street was "'ra- bid." : The Federal Department of Agriculture so informed Dr. Stewart: who emphasized that this was the first rabid animal reported within the city iimits jsince 1959. He asked citizens in 'the Osh- awa boulevard - Adelaide street area to advise him if they |knew of any domestic animals that had been in contact wth the skunk. | WRONG ADDRESS Melville Ferguson, Sr., has linformed The Times that his lson, Melville Ferguson, Jr., fined $50 for intoxication in Oshawa Magistrate's Court Monday, does not live at 204 and the time, date and place Division street. Mr * Ferguson, of the first stake Sr., said the son uses this ad- (CP Wirephoto) |dress but does not live there. licence number for the claim Sunnyside Park Meeting . Sunnyside Park Association "held its monthly meeting with the president, C. LaVallee, in the chair. Plans were made for the park closing on Sept. 19, 1964. The Pee Wee boys' ball team are now playing in the first round of the OASA champion- ships. Plans are also being made to start the bingos on Fri- lday nights and lots of help is needed.- Anyone who can help us should contact C. LavVallee, president or Lloyd Edwards, secretary. Anyone wishing to bow! on the Sunnyside Bowling League can also contact the above giv- ing their name and phone number. oe dren, It is not easily excited nor! struction and The thick snowy coated crea-) structional technique, and to give them an opportunity to | share experiences and exchange' ideas. The Government pays for the program in the interests of improving the level of in- making flying |safer. 4 This year's 10-day course ts being held at the, Kitchener- |Waterloo Flying Club, near |Breslau. The program includes llectures by a university profes- sor on-the psychology of learn- ing, seminars on_ instructional sequences, and talks by Dennis Cather, a senior Dept. of Trans- port inspector. The classroom work is supplemented by flying exercises' during which the se- quences are practised. Mr. Mcliveen is the third -|Oshawa Flying Club instructor to take the course. Jim Pen- gally of Brooklin took the course in 1963, while Sydney Cowley was at the first program in 1952. Discussions at these courses have resulted in changes and improvements in the instructional methods every- where in Canada. |. Earlier this summer, Mr. Mc- Ilveen took a course in Toronto BASEMENT FLOODED Oshawa | Fire Fighters were called' Tuesday night in the nt where water had nooded Np the basement as}a result of th heavy rain fally At. one time there was about \two inches of water to be pumped away. The Firefighteys were also called out on a false alarm and five routine anfbulance calls. "Janda" Loft' Is Winner Racing ~ pigeons arriving in Capreol, Ont., 'Saturday morn; ing were not liberated by the railway station agent until the following day on account of rainy weather. Pigeon fanciers of the local Peterborough-Kawartha Racing Pigeon Club clocked their pigeons on Sunday with "Jan- da" Loft, Lakefield, Ont., taking all winning positions in the Club race»The winning pigeon flying 1072.1 yards per minute. An- other race was held during the week-end for nominated pigeons only being eligible to take part (pigeons that had placed in pre- vious races this year) "Janda" Lofts of Lakefield again took all winning positions to win the Cherney Bros. trophy. Th owner of the winning birds sug- gests that the positions gained in very close contests such as these two races does not neces- sarily indicate faster or better birds than those of the competi- tors. In the Cherney' Bros. trophy race there were twice as many entrants from Lakefield as from Bridgenorth aid in both contests the Lakefield birds had approximately one mile further to fly than the bridgenorth \birds, which gave them a dis- advantage. tal ef 40 pigeons from of Almer Conners, and Bob Bbiderson, of Bridgenorth and "Janda" loft Lakefield took part in these races. A the | Armstrong Funeral Home. |purchased Hungarian sheep Memorial service . will be |qog held in St. Gregory's Ro- 'Tall Grass Prince Jonathan | . 138 z SS | man Catholic Church : T- | to give his official title -- is the} day, Aig. 28, at 10 a.m. | qdog's name. He is a Kuvasz, a Msgr. P. Dwyer will cele- | breed, which can be traced brate the requiem mass. In- | through the ages to its origin in terment will be in Resur- | remote Tibet. rection cemetery, Whitby Peter bought the dog at the township. , Oshawa kennels of Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Grosart. He has : waited patiently for a Kavesz ' puppy since he met and be- tarr ue lcame the devoted admirer. of Prince Jonathan's dam, Cham- -- pion Burncranna Kinga Tasha. For Visit Peter is the son of Mr and Mrs. Harold Armstrong 0; 103 Alexandra. | The Grossarts own Jonathan's | 0 Ws |dam, Champion Burncranna aaGen \Kinga Tasha, claimed to be the OTTAWA (Special) -- Ontario|first of the breed born in Can- MP. Michael 'Starr will be one|#4@-- "'The--sire, Wish-A-Way's) OF 14 Sian dmesation Of Cana-|nnabe von Elfin, came north) a 8 Na-| from Arkansas. | dian parliamentarians who will} Jonathan is one -of a litter visit the Soviet Union andjborn June 9, an event in the \Czechoslovakia in September in| dog world as the breed is prac- the first official parliamentary] tically unknown in Canada. The} exchange between Canada and|litter has now split up with pup-/ the Soviet. pies in Los Angeles, Calgary», The group will spend one| and Jonathan in Oshawa. week in Czechoslovakia and onathan's ancestors were re- about two weeks in the Soviet|/#ted to dogs taken from Cen- Union, leaving Ottawa on Tues- oa Ams to Europe by the : s"|Huns: The Kuvasz was _ weil day, September 1. and returning] , : on Saturday, September 26. | nown and highly thought of in snecat ..|many countries but it was in The invitations for the trip) qungary that the present day were sent to Canada by the/preed was first developed : Supreme Soviet of the USSR and : the Presidium of the national| 26 INCHES HIGH assembly of the Czechoslovak; The average Kuvasz now Socialist Republic. They were| stands at approximately 26 addressed to the speakers of the|inches high at the shoulder. Senate and' the House of Com-|.The Kuvasz of earlier times mons, the Hon. Maurice Bour-|were much bigger and were get and the Hon, Alan A. Mac-|frequently used by royalty and naughton, who will head the|the nobility as bodyguards. Canadian group. It is believed that the Turks While in the Soviet, the dele.|°f the Ottoman Empire brought) gation hopes to visit Moscow, Leningrad, Kiev, Tibilisi, Baku and Sochi. They also hope to jvisit Prague, Bratislava and Brno where the Canadians will attend the International Trade) Fair. A brief yisit to London,| for discussions with officers of the Commonwealth Parliamen-| tary Association, is also planned.| In addition to discussions with \local officials in. the two coun-| tries, the Canadians plan to| tour industrial, agricultural and| scientific establishments. | Mr. Starr said he was looking| forward to the visit as a means| of getting a better understand-| ing of the two countries and| their people and to demonstrate) Canada's desire to establish) peaceful relations. | The three leaders of the| minor parties in the Commons,| | Robert Thompson, T. C. Doug-| \las and Real Caouette, are in- cluded in the group. Guernsey | 'Top Winner | TORONTO (CP) -- Beechcroft |Victors'Thor, owned by Robert) |W. Batty of Brooklin, Ont., was) |judged grand champion guern-| sey bull Tuesday at the Cana- dian National Exhibition. 'i |" Rennwood Farms Count's| These young people are |Marvin,..owned by H. 0. Mat-| Working on the mural for. the | tis of Cobourg, Ont., won the) "ew Ajax and Pickering Gen- junior champion buil title. | eral: Hospital, Left to right, rl WORK ON AJAX are Stewart Cameron, Mar- lene Herbst, and Walter Cope. The idea began with Mar- lene's interest in the explain- oN HOSPITAL MURAL ing the history of medicine to the people of Ajax. The group has worked on this mural in the art department of the high school, where. it was completed. The mural will be hung on the third floor in the new hospital. aC { %

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