Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 3 Sep 1965, p. 9

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' MANY OSHAWA, Ontario and Durham County resi- dents are participating, as well as attending, the 1965 Canadian National Exhibi- tion in Toronto -- and walk- ing away with prizes. Mal- colm Bailey and Sons, Elm- grove Farms, Uxbridge, ex- / hibited eight Aberdeen Angus, Mr, Bailey is shown holding a mature cow that placed second in its class. RUDY SECERBEGOVIC, of Oshawa, looks over a "super sport' motorcycle worth about $30,000. lt was built in West Germany in 1954 and has never been beaten in races throughout the world, The bike was re- built by its owner, John Leathem of Northern Ire- land, who spent more than 15 months restoring and pol- ishing the machine, LESLIE TAYLOR and Son, RR 3, Burketon won a reserve grand champion rib- bon with this Tamworth sow pictured above. Mr. Taylor is shown with the animal. The Taylors won 25 ribbons for their swine exhibits at the Canadian National Ex- hibition, --Oshawa Times Photos Second Section City and district features, social and classified advertis- Ohe Oshawa Times OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1965 Catholic Get Cool The city's first air-conditioned school was endorsed by sep- arate school trustees last night. A sketch of the new St, Michael's school by architect William Saccoccio was finally accepted by trustees after weeks of discussion. The eight - room, one - storey building, to be opened for the 1966-67 term, adjacent to the Civic Auditorium on Thornton rd. s., will cost $160,000. The air-conditioning was add- ed at the urging of Trustee Dr. George Sciuk who has cam- paigned for summer use of school buildings. Trustees at one time consider. ed building-@12-room school but partment of Education. fhe lengthy discussions re. Pupils School height (one- or two-storey), the washrooms' location, the neces- sity of a sisters' room and ini- tial and expansion costs. The sisters' room was de- der next January. Mass Discussed For RC Schools The Oshawa Separate School Board continued to push for daily mass for its pupils last night. The trustees voted to send a delegation to discuss daily mass with Monsignor Paul Dwyer. The board had not received an answer to a written request two weeks ago to arrange mass in schools without an adjacent volved around the building's church. leted. The school will go to ten-| One-Way Streets Cutting | Travelling Times In Half Rush hour traffic on Osh- awa's two major one-way streets is moving up to 55 per cent faster than when the streets carried two-way traffic. City traffic department em- loyees made speed tests on ing and Bond sts., between Stevenson and Harmony rds,, a distance of 2.6 miles, before and after the June 21 start of the ene-way system. average speed was 20.3 mph compared to 16.4 mph when the street carried two-way traffic, an increase of 24 per cent, Friday tests on King st., east- bound showed the one-way aver- age-speed was" 21:3" nip con; pared to the 14.6 mph two-wa traffic average speed, an in- crease of 46 per cent. Friday tests on Bond st., Speeds during peak hours) westbound showed the one-way 3.30 p.m. to 6 p.m.--were check- ed on Thursdays and Fridays by employees who travelled the route without exceeding the 30 mile-per-hour speed limit. Thursday tests on King st. showed the one-way average speed was 21.9 mph compared to the 18.8 mph two-way speed, an increase of 16 per cent. | Thursday tests on Bond st.,| westbound showed the one-w4y! average speed was 20.2 mph compared with an average speed of 13 mph when the street carried two-way traffic, an increase of 55 per cent, Robert Richardson, deputy city works commissioner, told The Times that a 22 mph aver- age speed in peak periods is considered to be "very good"; 18 to 22 mph, "reasonable"; and below 18 mph, "problems." No Stick Handling Around Wednesday RC Bd. Mee There'll be no more mid-week/"I don't like this, I'm afraid it/province's i The kids took in all the clinical details Thursday when Graham Fuller of 24 Jones ave., donated blood at the monthly Red Cross blood | donor clinic held at St, | Gregory's Auditorium. Mr. | Fuller, a General Motors IF DAD CAN DO IT SO CAN I - Ltd. employee, took along Julie, 10, and John, aged four, to see how the biood donations are made, They are shown above with a Red Cross nurse as Dad gets ready for the needle, Four hundred and fifteen donors showed up at the clinic and gave a. total of 393 bottles-- falling short of the clinic's target of 400. Clinic chair- man Robert Stroud said he was "very pleased" with Emergency Numbers Hospital 728-2211 Fire 725-6574 Police 725-1188 the turnout: "We had 95 new donors that will be good prospects five months from now and we got about 50 bottles of 'O' type blood, twice as much as usual. --Oshawa Times Photo AJAX (Staff) --That fa- miliar slogan If you drink, don't drive -- can now be extended to "driv- ing' a motorboat. Richard Bellanger of Don Mills was fined $50 or seven days in Magistrate's court here Thursday after Magis- trate Harry Jermyn found him guilty of impaired driv- ing of a small vessel. A tentative union contract has been agreed upon by the bargaining teams of the United Auto Workers and Duplate of Politico Pickets Not All Followed Oshahwa was someting of a financial "maverick" in 1964, According to a Department of) 145 per cent. |Municipal Affairs statistical re-} Education costs constituted 39) yiport, a summary of the finan-|per cent of the municipal levy! icial transactions of each of thelin the province in 1954 and 45} municipalities,|per cent last year. la Oshawa! 978 jwepeping 233 per cent while sub-| jsidies to the city have increased) | NHL games for separate school will destroy our committee work|Oshawa did not follow all thel10 years ago education costs trustees. | The Separate School Board last night voted to have regular) meetings every Wednesday eve-| while appreciating the néed for/per cent while the total munici- ;more meetings, said he would pal debt in Ontario increased) best tax collection record, 94 per ning. and I feel this is pretty impor- tant." general trends. The city's municipal debt jconstituted 35 per cent of the jmunicipal levy and last year, 41| Trustee Terry O'Connor,|(funded) in 1964 decreased .9)per cent. "Business has grown tremen-| have to take more time off work/8.4 per cent. dously. We've gone past curfew) only way to handle it is with) more meetings,"' said Trustee! Trustee Dr. George Sciuk said|$!54,146,000, Michael Rudka. | Chairman William O'Neill said the two extra meetings per) month would considerably re-! without pay and asked if trus- expenses. this hadn't been considered. An admitted hockey fan; Dr. Sciuk opposed the Wednesday meetings. The department says the On- (11 p.m.) continually and the! tees would be compensated with|tario municipal debt climbed to : increase of} Frank Markson,/nual municipal levy being col-| Oshawa's! lected. $1,985,055,525, an city treasurer, says Cities in the province show the jcent of the levy compared with 98 per cent in Oshawa. Town- ships lag behind towns and vil-| }lages with 83 per cent of the an-| |debt last year decreased $16,218; ----_--__--_-- |to $18,666,882. Total municipal debt in the duce committee work and pre-| The board had been conduct-/Province passed the $1 billion Oshawa drivers will be among tiie all-star line-up for the Indian Summer races to be held at Mosport this Saturday. Dale Neil and Max Castle- berg will be competing in a 1@-lap touring car race. Their mounts will again be the Corvairs that have car- ried them to many racing successes this season. A day-long racing spec- tacle gets underway at 11 a.m. Spectators will get a chance to see a selection of motor cycle races. Financial Trends yen castepERG TO DRIVE AGAINST STARS AT MOSPORT Motor cycle classes will be run for sidecar machines, lightweight 500 c.c, and 500 ¢.c, unlimited, The big sports cars will also be on the scene. Lud- wig Heimrath in the big Mc- Laren-Ford has entered and so too has Bob McLean in his Lotus 23B. The pair will be fighting for Canadian championship points. The day's racing will close with a celebration dinner and prizegiving at Bowman- ville, eRe Force Non-RCs Protest An "informational" picket line was thrown around a Champlain av, construction site yesterday by members of an Oshawa construction union, Don Urquhart, representative for Carpenters Local 397, said today that the picket line would remain at the site of a new motel until union men_ were hired on the job. "Right now the workers on the job are crossing the line," he said, "This is really an informational picket line which will let the people of Oshawa know what is going on here." The carpenters object to the use of non-union labor by Scu- gog Lumber Co., of Port Perry, on the 22-unit motel, The Port Perry company is building the f on the $100,000 project. Griffin, a Scugog Lumber Co, executive, said today: "I don't know why they are picket- ing there. It's because our men are non-union, I guess." He also said the pickets did) not hinder construction. Disliked Lads, Shortchanged Them On Drinks | Because he did not like two jOshawa youths coming into his store Chismate S, Provenzano \decided he wouldn't give them Pickering Township police laid the charge against Mr. Bellanger last June 12 after a complaint had been re- ceived about "the operation of a motorboat" on French- man's Bay. Const. Laurie Watson told the court the accused was driving erratically, making sharp turns with the motor Canada Ltd., union spokesmen said today. Steve Melnichuk, a member of the union negotiating com- mittee, said today that the agreement will be put before Oshawa membership at a rati- fication meeting Sept. 12. NO DETAILS "We can't release any details until the membership decide to approve the package," he said. "T feel sure that they will accept the contract enthusiasti- cally." The agreement climaxed Boundary Jum OK'd By Board Paul Morison will continue to attend St, Joseph's School, sep- arate school trustees voted last ight. The Grade 4 student was transferred from St. Joseph's to the new Sir Albert Love School on Wilson rd. n. until his moth- er, Mrs. G. A. S. Morison, ral- lied to his support. She explained to trustees that she had to drive Paul and her other son Charles to school from their Pinecrest rd. home. Since Charles was attending St. Joseph's on Simcoe n., and Mrs. Morison 'just can't cope with driving to both schools', the trustees reluctantly made the exception, | Voting in opposition, Trustee} Ivan Wallace said the board had already a request for the trans- fer of 100 pupils from Sir Albert Love and "we must say no to further requests". The majority of trustees voted for the exception because prece-| dents had been set. wo DRUNK 'DRIVING' IN BOAT wide open and taking on water, He said the accused was soaked with water, his eyes were glassy and he had to be assisted onto the dock by police. Mr. Bellanger said he had been drinking the previous night, and that he had been in the boat since about 7 a.m, in the morning. STE, RN elalad Duplate- UAW Reach Accord months of negotiations between company and union. The new contract, if approved, will replace a three-year agree- ment which expired Aug. 31. MASTER PACT Harry Benson, UAW inter. national representative, said earlier that a master agree- ment covering Duplate factor- ies in Oshawa, Windsor and Oakville was being hammered out. Previously the three plants were covered by individual con- tracts. Duplate, a manufacturer of automotive glass, employs some 700 hourly-rated personnel in Oshawa aione, The men are members of Local 222, UAW. Fittings Case, Council Meets Executive members of the Ontario Foundry Council met Thursday at the Steelworkers Hall and reviewed the current industrial dispute between Local 1817, United Steelworkers and Fittings Ltd. Kenneth Levack, OFC chair- man, headed the executive com- mittee meeting. He. assured Local 1817 representatives of OFC support in the dispute. The ofc represents unions in some 40 foundries across the province. NEEDS POLICE GUARD PENKRIDGE, England (CP) --Every time James Parrott wants to move his cows from one end of his Staffordshire farm to the other, he has to call the police. His land is cut in two by the busy A.449 highway and he needs police help to get ithe animals across the road. 'HYDRO-JET SCHEME' Oshawa - Toronto dicted slowing regular business the first/™@rk in 1957 and is expected) cat ann" ner of OO vixcrsus | LO Pay Shot? |T]legal Shooters' Plinkingi:=" "= "=" = Trustee Ernest Marks said,! month TAX INCREASE s r Ss pt T ct 10 fine, tario last year increased 8 per m 0 force non he a cost him a $10 cee ' eee aE eg Municipal taxation + rd: Esc ;\ ! a] or seven days i | . A ys in jail when he z ar iva $ pe |cent compared to a 12.5 per cent|SeParate school supporters to D . Wh th Cl k is-| Highway "hold'ups" may g a increase in Oshawa. Taxation in|pay fees for their children at:| angerous ® ] y er woe & ae el - : plage Bank Ontario municipalities increased/tending separate schools was) A B D ss D i trate's Court this morning thing of the past for Oshawa- ppear, But Decision Deferred (or'sirain vit t'secora wey anne, Semarate schools was charged with theft. Toronto commuters, of $805,236.76. In Osh ' Out of season shooting in the|there was a township bylaw; Provenzano, of 374 Wilson rd.) Motor City residents who com- , fi 805,236,75 shawa, tz *} itbv , ; ie worry.! en i | i MONTREAL (CP)--Two men|{'™ Montreal's Bordeaux Jail.|.i,) pi @L158,516 1a **"!school Board. | Whitby Township area is worry-/ which prohibited the discharge'. Pleaded not guilty to the) mute to Toronto will be able to charged as accessories in .the| He has been recaptured and ex-/record $10,412,644. A motion by Trustee |ing township clerk, Bill Wallace.! of firea ip Charge. |travel to their jobs in a water- Dr.) « " a rms in the township) i Pade by a of a pug sh ap-|tradited to Texas where he is} Department statistics indicate George Sciuk to enforce this, he ber jiedbe hi Sage bara Rasslond ea. Fe sicses sala thet patptecny tet bridle hogy calc as arabs a grornt aaseal held pending trial on narcotics that B pron taxation has} legislation was opposed by Trus-| ly children and they have been sccdanat" skandae Ole tl ne ithe store with a friend. He got| Jacob Pearlstein, QC, reveal- Gabouty deferred tis décinion charges. move upward at a faster PACE! tee Ivan Wallace who insisted} C@USing quite a bit of trouble in iowen sed gs ot a "ltwo soft drinks out of the cool-| ed yesterday he has formed the y lc ,,, (Since 1954 than in the previous| |the rural areas of the townshi tween March and Sep-/.» and Provenzano a dol-/Lake Ontario Transportation until Sept. 9. The two are Ar-| Cadieux, co accused with! period 1942 to 1954. jon notice of motion since the)' "" would like to remind these| ember. lar bill. He should have received Company with plans te supply and Sebasti my ~ a ae ch a Mee gens Municipal taxation in Ontario|proposal was not listed on the|people that they are breaking) Shooting was not allowed atl79e change. |80 to 100 passenger - carrying were aad wp viene wih Bi with protection of the court. [has increaséd by 163 per centlagenda. the law. If they are caught/ any time of the year inside the) Provenzano, in the witness| boats to speed commuters over vard in a multi-force Selies raia| He Said Rivard had been alin the past decade while provin-| Trustees voted to table the Charges will be laid, town limits of Brooklin. jbox, said he did not give him|the waves at 90 to 100 miles an on a cottage in nearby Wood-|2uest at @ summer cottage Ca- nd = ey 'soe oe motion until next meeting when "te Shooting season does not) "These people should be|the money as he did not want hour. --s i ave increase y 221 per ce . p i varned."" r ~ cai i < | vi » i finds in mia" aieus had rented at Shipp fa Staal e" 2 PEM toca anther ramon on STU a, mame." Mr "wale sai hem Inte sore Headed hat ie wil oer the yar rund Rivard escaped last March 2 lyte for $100 a month, jade, taxation has in d alti i ; ined t t ped." | i I i . a creased ajtions could be examined, Mr, Wallace explained that| should be stopped. the youths for some time. vided dock facilities are ar- A they'd "die a in. On- Just 20 Minut ranged in the central part of To- ronto, Mimico, Long Branch and New Toronto. The water-taxis are described as flat - bottomed "hydro-jets", 65 feet long and weighing 12 tons. If docking facilities can be provided, Mr. Pearlstein esti- mates the service could be in operation next summer. Amendment of the public transportation monopoly held by the Toronto Transit Commis"'nn in the Metro region and the ap- proval of federal and provincial governments would be re- quired,

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