Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 4 Sep 1964, p. 4

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DAIRY PRINCESS Elizabeth Crawford, 24, of Port Robinson, Ont., smiles after being crowned Ontario Dairy Princess 1964 at the Canadian Nationa) Exhibition NUCLEAR CONFERENCE -- Fairport Plans Outlined GENEVA (CP)--Desi tails... $266, power ion t built 'in southern Ontario w mounced here today at the United Nations conference on peaceful uses of atomic energy. | 'They were contained in a pa- prepared jointly- by Atomi: near of Canada Limited, fed! eral agency responsible for hu- clear research the Hydro-Elec- tric Power Commission of On- itario and Canadian General Electric Company Limited. The station will be built under Ha federal-Ontario agreement at 'airport, Ont., four miles east of Metropolitan Toronto. It will consist of two generating units each producing 500,000 kilo- watts of electricity. The paper said the station is Veal And Hog Prices Steady On Stockyards TORONTO (CP) -- Demand improved after a dull opening this week on the Ontario pub- lic stockyards and some initial losses on slaughter cattle were regained. Veal calf prices were steady, hog prices were mostly un- changed and lamb prices were lower. The percentage of good cows received at the stockyards was low. Bull prices suffered the least with good bologna bulls selling at steady or nearly in Toronto Thursday. Miss Crawford represented Wel- land County in the competi- tion. (CP Wirephoto) Chinchilla Theft Pickering Charge Chinchillas came under grave, consideration in Pickering Mag-| istrate Court' Thursday when an) entire afternoon of evidence was) heard by Magistrate H, W. Jermyn. Convicted of stealing tattooe chinchillas was Franz Sabata 9' 971 Naroch Blvd., Bay Ridges. The owner of the animals, Jack Oliver of Locust-Hitt; told) the court he had obtained gov-| ernment permission to tattoo the animals 0.J.M. on the le of all his animals. Oliver said he had met Sabata) in May of 1962 and had visited) his home a gd afterwards. said he a the accused ha' made an oral agreement in the ac- d f | t. | The nt, said Mr.| Oliver, was for Sabata to supply} the. animals with food, shelter! and care at his. expense and that Oliver was to supply the; animals. When they were sold, Sabata would receive 50 per cent of the profits. Oliver stated that a chinchilla female was wo $150. Under their agreement, w was later put in writing, Sabat was eventually to move onto a farm when the herd became large enough. Oliver in June of 1963 there were chinchillas housed in the base- ment of the Sabata home. Oliver testified that six weeks after the signed agreement! Sabata claimed he could no 4 t longer afford to feed the animals had accompanied the Olivers to ton T e-|the accused's home on July 21\paying more for t and that his wife was not pr Youths Fined _For Drinking youths were convicted of. con- suming liquor while minors by Magistrate H. W. Jermyn in Pickering magistrate's court Thursday. All three charges were laid after separate inci- dents. Jaseph H. McCarthy, 19 of 33 Roosevelt avenue, Ajax, was charged after he was stopped on Highway No. 2 by Pickering Police Constable Ray Hobbs. Constable Hobbs testified that the accused smelled of alcohol, and had admitted to him he had) been drinking. Magistrate Jer-| ,myn fined him $50. \\Robert Lalonde, 19, of 312 Dyson road, Pickering, was also fined $50 when he was convict- ed of the same offence. He was charged on August 23 by Con- stable R. Speakman on Picker- ing's First Concession. Con- stable Speakman told the court) that the youth was a border- line drunk. Carl T. Scott, 17, of Cherry- wood, had a charge of being intoxicated in a public place) withdrawn by Crown Attorney, Affleck but pleaded guilty to) drinking while under age on) July 2 at 12.23 a.m. when he} was apprehended by Pickering) Police Constable P. Nichols. Magistrate Jermyn fined him $50 for the same offence A mother testified against her son, and informed Magistrate) Jermyn that her son, Jack) Bolton of Pickering's Third Con- cession, was saucy at home an had broken his probation re-) quirements when he left home; for two days on August 21 to go to the County of York. Mrs. Bolton told the court that her| son had lost his job because he would not go to work. Mag- istrate Jermyn adjourned. sen- tence until. Tuesday and youth will be in custody until then. | | number of dead chinchillas- to! jhe wanted nothing more |with the animals. ft ear cause of bad weather and that/cows 15- he had given up his job in the) meantime in order to feed the|good heavy bologna bulls 18-19 He/an d|mals missing when he moved! to| them to his residence. and his wife along with Ser-|9) geants V. Cooper and D. Bodley had picked up the animals with said that| their tattoo marks in the Sabata) 29) home after Sabata had told! She stated that afer she picked out two animals Sabata -- jalong with Sgt. | stated that Sabata had admitted that the aninials had been hid-|ship to increase the fire pro- den in the kitchen when Oliveritection agreement had come to pick up his herd'Town of in April. Laughlin told the Court that his Three Pickering Township Neighbor Sabata had. given him steady prices. Cattle receipts were esti- mated at about 8,377, about 2,200 fewer than last week and about 700'head more than the same week in 1963, Western cat- tle receipts at 1,455, were 384 jmore than last week. There lwere also 30 cattle received pared to move onto a.farm.|from Quebec. There were no Oliver said that he then started/shipments to slaughterers in to pay for the food. Eastern Canada but 54 cattle From October 1963 to Febru-|were shipped to the United ary 1964, Sabata reported a/States. : y Slaughter cattle: Choic 24-24.50; dry fed steers him, stated Mr. Oliver. In Feb-| steers e ruary 1964 Sabata told him that|24.50-25.30; good 22-23; medium to do|19.50-21; common 16-19; good lheifers 20-21; choice 21.50-22 50 Oliver told the court that itjodd tops to 23; medium 18-19; his animals until April be-|lings 22-24; good 20-21.50; good 16; medium 13.50-14.50; and cutters 8-13.50; move canners animals. He said that there wasjsales to 19.25; common and me- unaccountable number of ani-|dium 15-17.50. Replacement cattle: Good stockers 21.50 - 23, with good Oliver testified that after he|steer stock calves to 24; com- received some information, he|mon and medium stockers 16- : : rok Calves: Choice vealers 27-29, of the Pickering Township police) ,qq singles at 30-32.50; good 24- force, paid a visit to the Sabata/ 9. j 9-23: common 18- home at 871 Naroch Blvd. and 7 that of a neighbor, John Mc- Laughlin at 873. He said he! found six animals in the base- rth|ment of the McLaughlin home |i im and 34 in the Sabata basement.) hich| He said that several of the ani- a| mals had his tattoo markings. | /20: boners 12-17. Hogs: Grade A 27.70-28.75; heavy sows 18.85 - 19.70, with) Ihight sows gaining a $2 prem-) Sheep and lambs: .Lamb prices ranged from 19-22 _ a iti good lambs closing at 19- Mrs. iver yeatitied that abe sheep 3-10 according to quality.} Fire Protection Payment Boosted HAMPTON (Staff) -- Darling- 'ownship residents will be heir fire pro- He'tection in the future. A bylaw authorizing the town- | hem that none had a tattoo. said hat they were all theirs. Sergeant Cooper said that he Bodley. with the Bowmanville, was passed at Darlington Township John Me-|Council, Thursday afternoon. The old agreement was for $3,700. Diicais Fined At Pickering An Ajax man, Lee A. Perrin, had a charge of driving while intoxicated reduced to one of : impaired and was fined $100 Sabata explained that before when found guilty by Magis- Oliver came to take his herd he|trate Jermyn at Pickering had taken his own 16 or 17 ani-| Thursday. ae : mals upstairs to the kitchen, |-- Pickering Township Police Under cross examination by Constable John Found informed acting Crown Attorney John the court that he followed the Humphries, Sabata admitted|accused along highway No. 2 that he had advertised chin-\on June 22 at speeds up to 80 chillas for sale and he had put|mph and that the accused had the phone number of his neigh-|left the travelled portion of the bor McLaughlin in the adver-'highway several times during tisement. the chase. He said that when Defence counsel D. B. Clarke the accused was apprehended of Pickering told the court that he detected a strong smell of the police officers had seen n0/ajcohol on his breath. ore than two tattooed chin- Magistrate Jermyn gave the chillas at the accused's home. |99.vear-old accused 14 days to on oot ag oo me pay his $100 fine. that Oliver's books showed tha : Sabata's one chinchilla had one Bhan gchar ge John Skelton, offspring, not six, and that the) 0. victed of speeding in accused paid $300 for 20 anj-| absentia and fined $20 when mals when he had been author- Constable John Brown told the ized to pay only $200. court he had paced him at Magistrate Harry Jermyn said speeds in excess of 70 on High- that the agreement spoke for it-| ¥@Y 2 on July 18. Skelton who self and that the accused nad arrived after Court was. over hidden the chinchillas in his kit.|$aid he had been unable to chen. He remanded. the accused |!ocate the court house in Pick- in custody for one week for sen-|©™!ng Municipal Building and tence and put bail at $1,000. ~ he would appeal the convic- Tony Goracchia of Toronto MOSCOW (AP)--Woodcutters identified himself with a sum- near Omsk felled an old pine Mons when Pickering Constable that yielded a grim secret. In-| Ray Hobbs stopped:him on Val- side was a skeleton chained at|ley Farm road. He was charged the neck, wrists and ankles. [t with having no operator's has been suggested the skele- licence and failing to notify the ton belonged to a man who fled|Dept.. of Transport of his ve- Defence witness three chinchillas in March of 1963. He said he had intended} to raise the animals as a hobby: Sabata told the court that he! had bought a chinchilla of his own during the time he had the agreement with Oliver and that} it had six offspring before it died. He also stated that he had bought 20 animals for $300 while he had only received $200 from Mr. Oliver to purchase GRIM SECRET |$10 in absentia on each count Czarist times, hid in the tree and lby Magistrate Jermyn. ign de- whuclear ere an- )| borough; "Atom expected to produce power be- low four mills a kilowatt hour. Competitive power in Ontario from coal-burning electric sta- tions costs about four mids. Construction of the 1,000,000- kilowatt station was made pos- sible, the paper said, as a re- sult of a capital expenditure by Canada of $100,000,000 on the design of experimental power Iplants. GIVES FIGURES A total of $33,000,000 was spent on the construction of a demonstration nuclear power plant at Rolphton, Ont., some 150 miles northwest of Ottawa, an less than $80,000,000 on a jplant at Douglas Point, Ont. The Rolphton plant has been in) operation since April, 1962, and) the Douglas Point plant will be} operating later this year. This figure of $100,000,000 does not include the cost of re- search and development over a period starting soon after the end of the Second World War. i/brating their 39th wedding an- Resident Wins CNE Prize By MRS, HARRY FREEMAN MAPLE GROVE -- Congratu- lations to John McGuirk and Jeannette Taves of Oshawa, on taking third-place in- the. duet class, 16 years and under, win- ning the Bronze medal. at the CNE. | Nancy and Lorna Morton,) Base Line, spent a few days last week with their great-aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Clare Allin, Providence. Congratulations to Mr. and Mrs, Morley Burgess on cele- niversary by spending the week- end at their cottage at Twin Lakes. LAC I John Clark, RCAF, Chatham, N.B., and Mrs, John Clark, Newcastle, N.B., who, have been spending their holi- days with their parents and other relatives, have returned to New Brunswick. Mr. and Mrs. H. Cooney, San- dra, Lynda, Judy and Roney Cooney spent Sunday at the Dawson cottage at Caesarea recently. Mr. and Mrs, H, G. Freeman, The new Ontario station will be similar in design but much) larger than the Douglas Point) plant. It will use natural uran-) ium as a fuel and heavy water) to make the nuclear fission pro-| cess possible and to transfer} heat from the reactor to raise| steam from ordinary water to drive electric turbines. | The paper said many of the lfeatures of the 500,000-kilowatt| units in the new Toronto-area| |plant are those developed in the earlier prototype designs. However, new features had |been introduced because of the| llarger physical size of the new plant and to make technical or leconomic improvements. WILL HAVE TWO UNITS The paper said the station, in- itially will consist of two 500,- 1900 kilowatt units but will be l xpanded later to four units | producing some 2,000,000 kilo- watts, All the nuclear reactors will be in individual cylindrical lreinforced concrete buildings \but the turbo-generators will be larranged in a line in a com- mon steel-frame building run- ning the length of the station. | The two units, to be operated) iby a staff of 135, will require} labout 878 tons of heavy water) |worth about $36,000,000, 'The ini- ltial uranium fuel charge will] | had been impossible for him to|common 14-17; choice fed year-\cost about $6,000,000. The paper said these 500,000) kilowatt reactors may be at-) jtractive in several areas of the| iworld as a source of low-cost jelectric power | 'Schooldays Are | 'Recalled At Blackstock | By MRS. OLGA HILL BLACKSTOCK -- Linda Butt) of Courtice spent a few days in the village as guest of Miss Joan Horton and _ renewed acquaintances with old school friends. | Mr. and Mrs. Jack Kewin,| Elizabeth and Tommy, of Beaconfield, Quebec, are visit-| ing her father, Everett Trewin. . Morris Robinson of Scar- Mr. and Mrs. Bev. Dealy of Toronto and Kevin and Sherrie Dunsmoor of Oshawa were weekend guests of Mr and Mrs. Ken Dunsmoor. Beth Dunsmoor is holidaying in Ash- burn this week. Several relatives and friends from this area attended. the recent wedding of Lawrence) McLaughlin and Linda Ross in the Presbyterian Church in Innerkip (near Woodstock). Mr. and Mrs. Roy Turner and Mr. and Mrs. Blake Gunter) attended Coe Hill fair and a} Gunter reunion. Mr, and Mrs. Fred Colbear of Powassan were dinner guests of Mrs, W. W. VanCamp recently apd called on other friends. Eva Parr spent a few days with her brother, Clarence Parr in Bowmanville during the week. Mr. and Mrs. Wilfred Martin of Oshawa were recent guests of Mr. and Mrs. Orr Venning. Mr. and Mrs. Orr Venning visited Mr. and Mrs. Ernest) |Hale, Sutton. | Anne Werry, of Bowmanville, spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs, Rupert Werry and | Ray. | Mable VanCamp is attending a Bar Convention in Montreal for two weeks Rev, and Mrs. Merrill Fergu- son, Stratford; Miriam Ferguson and Shirley Kimble of Toronto were recent Thursday night) guests of Mrs. Cecil Hill. | Cheryl and Rickie Rahm of |Port Perry spent a few days |with their grandparents, Mr. 'and Mrs, John Rahm. Elmer Archer and family of Whitby were recent Sunday din- ner guests of Mr. and Mrs, W. | Archer. ; Congratulations to Mr. Herb} Hooey who recently celebrated| this 90th birthday; Wilbert North- cott of Hamilton, also 90 years old; Harold Wright of Hamil- ton; Mrs. Harold Lye (Rhea Hgoey) and Mr. Robert Coulter, Toronto, were guests of Mr. Herb Hooey during the week. | RETIREMENT FIXED | WELLINGTON, N.Z. (CP)-- New Zealand has decided that) public servants must-retire at 60. Until now a flexible policy) the from a Siberian prison during/hicle purchase. He .was fined has been in effect which only obliged civil servants to retire 'at 65 or after 40 years service, '| of Little Britain, were recent \ A of Wesley United Church, Ottawa. ms, bg rept 1, af Boh fem. fh inelOige on Sept. 10, at 8. m, in' church. us C Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Jeffery accompanied Mr. and Mrs. Or- land Plummer who visited their| oousins cousins, Mr. and Mrs. E, Wallace, Schumacher. _--_ Geoff Taylor, of Toronto, w aws a roommate of Gary Jef- fery last year at Kemptville} Agriculture College, is spend-| ing a few days with Gary. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Rodman, i . ry a Queen's Universi French 1--First Year Pesnethxproreaitche-xeaihd ih French F. Nights fortnightly McLoughlin Colle. ciecdecettne September 18. i tna WANTED! -- Thirty, friendly, ¥ | wos ary hh ged he dencing. Every Wednesdey i through the Fell Sunday visitors with their| Winter (shift work no problem). daughter and husband, Mr. and] an coll 725-2744 or Mrs. Ron Brooks, and family. * PETERBOROUGH je or arin re Collegiate & oo leg» al September' prere- to Ps: ollegiate & CARPET COMPANY holony : 282 King W., Oshawa @ Tel. 728-6254 a eae Mr. and Mrs, Leslie Jackson, Bowmanville, recently attended the Annual Pilgrimage and Serv- ice of the Hay Bay United) Church, and were supper guests| with the Rev. and Mrs. W. H.) Pointen, Hay Bay, a former Bowmanville boy, now minister | | DARK AGES The Medieval period in Eu- rope is generally placed be- tween the fall of Rome in the fifth ¢entury and the fall of Constantinople in 1453. to Child Psychology--Pre- Psychology 1 Ks ' Friday Nights & Saturday) Mornings----Peterborough Colle- giate and Vocational School -- fortnightly --- beginning September 25 & 26. PORT HOPE English 4--Shakesp prereq @ Seturday Mornings--fortnightly--Dr. Hawkins' School--beginning September 26, Psychology 1--~An ion to Psychology--ne quisite Friday Nights--fortnightly----Dr. Howkins' School--beginning Septernber 18. Oshawa's Rug and Carpet Centre Broadloom-Tile-Linoleum Sef Enolich Public Pibtic Reiiuaial Who can Amount of Where to a L LOANS FOR STUDENTS Guaranteed by the Government of Canada Purpose Repayment: CANADA STUDENT LOANS ACT Now Available \ The purpose of the Canada Student Loans Act is to facilitate bank loans for students who need financial help to continue full-time studies beyond secondary school level at Universi- ties and other educational institutions, Any Canadian citizen, or anyone resident in Canada for one year who intends to live in Canada after completion of studies, may apply for a loan under the Act. An applicant must be enrolled or interid to enroll as a full-time student at an educational institution approved by provincial authorities, and must meet the standards of academic qualification and financial need established by the student loan authority in the Province in which he applies. apply loans: Depending upon individual circumstances and financial need, loans up to $1,000 a year may be made, with a maximum of $5,000 during a student's academic career. The Provincial Authority receiving applications and determining eligibility will issue a certificate to each eligible student stating the maximum amount the student'may borrow. This Certificate of Eligibility is required before a student can arrange a Government Guaranteed Student Loan with the bank of his choice. Interest-Free and Delayed Repayment Period To assist students, the interest on loans during the period a student continues full-time studies, and for six months thereafter, will be paid by the Government of Canada. During this same period no repayment of principal is required, nor will any service charge or fee be payable by the student. Method of Repayment : Borrowers will begin to pay interest and to repay loans six months after they cease to be full-time students. The current interest rate to students is 534% per annum. Normally the repayment period will be five to ten years. Borrowers have the right to repay loans in part or in full at any time without penalty. Life Insured In the event of the death of a borrower responsibility for repayment of the loans will be assumed by the Government of Canada. A list of approved educational institutions in Ontario is contained in a brochure now available at banks, universities and other educational institutions. Ontario residents plan- ning to attend one of these institutions should apply directly to that institution for a Certificate of Eligibility. apply: Ontario residents planning to study in other provinces or countries should direct enquiries to: Department of University Affairs, Suite 600, 344 Bloor Street West, Toronto. The above notes are based upon the Canada Student Loans Act 1964 and are for reference only, All applications and loans are subject to the full terms and conditions of the Act.

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