Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 25 Jan 1966, p. 6

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THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuessey, Jenvery 25, ar a. 70447. Norwegian Liknouna SapeRewen WR 2 dane VV LEIS WHITBY DISTRICT BOWLING SCORES ing the evening. The others,; members - 4 Fartettal Bowmanville Choir I" mbers of the ting..ohsir At Peterborough Lwere:-Mrs; Rosemary -Merkley.. soprano; and Vivian Sadier, al-; meet ¥isi: Mrs. W. C. Turner organist at St. Giles. accompanied the cnoil. it isthe Rehoboth ---Cheir's PETERBOROUGH * --A two- hour concert of selections. from|Leta B Handel's Messiah was present- -- World All-Breed Show to. Pianist with the choit was Second visit to St. Giles and WHITBY H AND DISTRICT rape. \to Peterborough. MEN'S BOWLING LEAGUE PROPOSED AJAX ARENA AND COMMUNITY CENTRE The Ajax Arena and Com- munity Centre as proposed by Architects Craig-Zeidler and Strong, of Toronto and Peterborough, is shown here in a scale model. The Arena and Community Centre Building Committee hopes $75,000 can be raised through public subscription to help pay for the half mil- lion dollar building which is proposed for a 20-acre site west of Harwood ave., south of the Ajax and Pickering General Hospital. --Oshawa Times Photo Library Board Asks Increas AJAX (Staff) The Ajax Public Library Board asked for an increase of almost 50 per cent in its proposed budget to council Monday night. Library Board Chairman David Karry asked for a 1966 budget of $30,474 of which | ratepayers would pay $23,724. The 1965 budget of $20,712.74) of $13,823. for the increase was the grow-| ing circulation, more books and | 1966 library budget included: more staff and more library| joy books, hours. He said the Library Board would hire a full time | this year. council that the Ajax Library -|Board operates cheaply com- included a grant from the tow pared with other boards and has| ; " j}an expenditure of about 30 cents Mr. Karry said the reason/ye, circulated book $18,012 and heat $600. children's librarian in May of|CIRCULATION INCREASED e In Grant of the growth. He said what con-|showed that a total of 69,782) cerned him was that the library |books had been borrowed in} board had put council in an/1965 indicating a 15 per cent} embarrassing situation by/jincrease over 1964. Of this total) already having spent some of juveniles had borrowed 30,128) the money asked for. jbooks while adults took out! 7» , | 39,654. i te ead, Total library membership at : the end of 1965 showed that the| library catered to 1,984 adults) and 2,519 children in the com-! The report showed that! the library had acquired 431| new juvenile readers and 548 new adult readers during '1965 The Ajax Library had a total/ of 17,600 books during 1965 and| 1,756 new books had been pur- chased while 270- books were} report'withdrawn from the shelves. | out to } munity. Main items in the proposed $7,500: salaries, | The 1965 librarian's Council was informed that be-| ginning this year the library would be open every week night and that salary accounted for almost $8,000 of the increase. | ASSESSMENT UP Councillor E. Wetherall said, that although there had been ay 10 per cent increase in assess- ment during the past year care ain's support for the U. should be taken that expendi-| tion in Viet. Nam is aga tures do not exceed the incom- ardiing Prime * Ss Mr. Karry told council thatitime in a crucial oaleetinn Thursday in Hull. ing revenue. during the past few years the) library board had tried ifn hold| the line but that the tide) had) burst. He said that there was a| great necessity for a children's; librarian. \ Councillor said all groups, LeGross the William realizing ed for far more than their share | Orono Trustees Name Chairman ORONO (TC) -- The Orono Police Trustees held their first official meeting Jan. 17. After a short session the board re- cessed until 7 p.m. when general business was discussed and com- mittee chairmen appointed. E. R. Woodyard was appoint- ed chairman of the Orono Police Trustees on motion of D. Simpson and F. Nicholson. In appointing committee chair-, men the following will head the various departments: water sys- tem all board members; roads -- all board members; finance -- all board members; fire, beautification, tree remov- al and planting, Floyd Nichol- son. Sidewalks, street lights and municipal building -- D. Simp- son; planning and parking and libraty -- E. R.- Woodyard. The trustees accepted a letter of resignation from secretary G. Simpson. D. Simpson was temporarily appointed secre- tary. The trustees are to hold their regular meetings on the fourth Monday of each month com: mencing at 7 p.m. The chairman, Mr. Woodyard, submitted some proposals which were adopted by the board. All requests and complaints are in the future to be submitted to the board in writing. Also the new chairman called for a bet- ter system of filing than that now in-use. The. files.-ofthe police village are to be kept in the. Orono Hydro office where they will be available for all meetings. Tip Top Tailors SALE a" 77.90 ON : USS EEVE MEN'S SHOP 129 Brock St. S., Whitby PHONE 668.2091 red-bearded journalist, is run- ning for Parliament against} candidates for the Conservative, j|Labor and Liberal parties. His | sole plank is opposition to the |war in Viet Nam and a demand growth in assessment, have ask-/f5; peace negotiations. who criticie Wilson's policy on Viet Nam, | PRESENT HEATING MADE-TO-MEASURE | ay ae | Wilson Jeopardizes Seat Backin HULL, g U.S. In Viet Nam England (AP)--Brit-;ity in the House of Commons S. posi-| will drop to one vote. in jeop:| Most of the rival party man- Minister Wil-|agers admit privately that Gott! Labor government, this|has run a_ professional race--| meeting the voters, making headlines and distributing his} campaign leaflets through the mail to all 60,000 on the voting roll. on's Richard Gott, a 27-year-old MITCHELL'S CORNERS (TC) Mr. and Mrs. Kar! Innes, Taun- ton rd. e., and one of their Norwegian Elkhounds have just returned from Nassau where, Ch. Karin's Amo won seven first prize and three breed tro- phies in the first World All- Breed Dog Show. Entry in the show was by invitation, and only 11 dogs from Canada competed. Aus- tralia, England, Germany, Mex- ico U.S.A. and Venezuela were all represented. The trophies were in the form of conche shells mounted on a marble} base, and transporting ten mt them by air presented a few) baggage problems. | "T am particularly proud of this dog because he is of our own breeding,"' Mrs. Innes said. "The three puppies in his first litter now just about six weeks old, look very promising too." Amo is only two years old and previous to the world show} he had chalked up an enviable record of wins. As a puppy he breed. From 4000 to 5000 B.C. they hunted with stone age man in the wooded forests of Scan- dinavia, and were hunting com- panions of the Vikings. Compact and powerful with a heavy coat of silver grey tipped with black, they have been used as sied dogs, shepherds and guards. In- troduced into America as pets mainly, they have proven to be very gentle and tremendously fond of children. Mr. and Mrs. Innes combined a vacation with the show, and spent a delightful two weeks in Nassau, returning to Oshawa on Frid Object Sought May Be Bomb VERA, Spain (AP)--U.S. and Spanish experts were looking to- day for a way to recover an object from the Mediterranean believed to be a nuclear bomb | from the books if it was not go- jwas four times judged Best|missinz. from the U.S. B-52 }Canadian Hound Puppy in Show bomber which crashed near jalong with group placementsjhere a week ago. ° {under such internationally re-| The object was reported 1,000 jnowned judges as Haskell | feet down in the sea. A pair of |Schuffman, Newcastle, Indiana; arentae destroyers stood guard Robt. Waters, Surrey, B.C.;|over the area about 600 yards Lewis Muir, Springville, N.Y.; | off shere. Officials earlier con- {Thomas Joel,.Toronto and Vin-|firmed that radioactivity .detec- jcent Perry, Conoga Park, Cali-|tion-devices had pinpointed an ifornia. Shown seven times in/object in the sea. | 1965 he was undefeated. "ft is there, but getting it out! Elkhounds are a very ancient may be a long job,"' said one mesma tsi rcaie COE = 2 |Spanish official. "Perhaps it ld l gig can be recovered," An intense s *h had b Warn Elderly {twins sre detent jage of the bomber and a jet Not To Shovel |tanker which collided with it AJAX (Staff) -- Elderly Ajax! Villages around the crash (Thursday Nite Section) Jan. 20 Results -- Jets 3, Wal- den 'Bros. 0; Legion No. 2, 3, Lucky Strikes 0; Ottenbrites 3, Legion Old Sweats 0; Goold's Furniture 2, Knights of Colum- bus 1; Ken Smith Construction 2, Post Office 1; County Bow! 2, Firemen "B" 1; Firemen "A" 2, Firemen 1; Legionnaires 2, Red Wings 1. High Triples and Singles -- Marty Jordan 851 (344, 277); Bud Bragg 824 (316, 273); Dick Adams 799 (311, 269); Larry Hall 89. (365); Dave Walker 734; Geo. Richardson 732 (278); Doc Dafoe 701; Doug Rowden ed Saturday evening in St. Giles| Presbyterian Church by fhe Rehoboth Choir of Bowmanville. The 62 men and women chor- isters were conducted by Mell) McCoy before an audience of about 220. Bruce Cossar who sings bass in St. Giles church choir was one of the featured sosoists dur- 692 (267); Roger Reeson 693; Tom Perrow 693; Bill Moor-! house 751 (266); Warren Watson 710 (287); Lou Bedard 681; Bob Correll 675; Reg. Norris 270;) Larry Blyth 272; Ron Andrew 294; Earl Waddell 289; Chas. Skelton 273; Bill Wright 260. New Home Recipe Reducing Plan It's simple how quickly one | may lose pounds of unsightly fat right in your own home. Make this home recipe yourself. It's easy, no trouble at all and costs little. Just go to your drug store and ask for four ounces of Naran Concentrate. Pour this into a pint bottle. and add enough grapefruit juice to fill the bottle. Take two tablespoons full a day as needed and follow the Naran Plan. If your first purchase does not show you a simple easy way to lose bulky fat and help regain slender more graceful curves; if reducible pounds and inches of excess fat don't disappear from neck, chin, arms, abdomen, hips, calves and ankles just return the empty bottle for your money. back. Follow this easy way en- dorsed by many who have tried this plan and help bring back alluring curves and graceful slenderness. Note . how «quickly bloat disappears--how much bet- ter you feel. More alive, youthf: appearing and active, jlast Monday. citizens were warned by town|atea returned to normal. council, Monday night, not to| Scheels Teopened after being exert themselves while clearing|©!0sed since the day of the twin the heavy recent snowfall from|°T@Sh_ in which seven Ameri- their. sidewalks. cans were killed. Councillor O. G: Ashley sug- y gested that a group of young cit- MORE PHONES LISTED izens be set up who would) WINNIPEG (CP)--The 1966 make themselves available to|edition of Manitoba's telephone shovel snow for the town's|directory is bigger than ever, elderly people in return for a|With 604 pages. An edition of 124,000 copies was printed. fee. Mr. Ashley, in his Public} Works Committee report, said that the town snow plow had been out 16 hours to cope with the heavy weekend snowfall on the town's 35 miles of streets. Councillor R. Wright remind- ed council of a town bylaw re- quiring sidewalks to be shovel- led by 1 p.m. on the day fol-| lowing the snowfall. He said} many sidewalks on Burcher rd.| and in the Lake Vista subdivi- sion were not shovelled. He told council a child had been struck by a car Monday afternoon be- cause sidewalks were impass- able on Burcher rd. Mr. Wright asked that the bylaw be en-! forced. Councillor E. Wetherall said it was virtually impossible to clear sidewalks especially when snowplows piled four feet of! snow on to the sidewalk. He suggested that citizens not be prosecuted. Councillor Wright said that the bylaw should be withdrawn Remember this number... | ¢ wat remember this wine! ing to be enforced Most of his support comes from the ban-the-bomb advo- cates of the campaign for nu-| clear disarmament, pacifist | groups and a few Communists. | He also has ties with American protest groups on Viet Nam, es-| pecially the students for demo- cratic society at the University of California at Berkeley. Both the local and national} Labor parties are enraged. Left- wing Socialists in Parliament, urged Gott not to run. He replied that he doesn't care if he brings down the gov-/ ernment. The three major candidates, | SKATE EXCHANGE BROCK One Complete Program Each WHITBY Evening Starting at 7:30 rassanrariow cay ee recover man A Betty Etat sigh Thomas Prodecton call DIRK BOGARDE GEORGE CHAKIRIS BIR NC hile an roan wae A mane eer > Meet MeGuire-unde ser meso oy mer lif ee Kevin McNamara of Labor,| } 2.97 Toby Jessel of the Conserva-| Plus Your Trade tives, and Mrs. Laurie Millward of the Liberals, have ignored SPORTSMAN'S| CORNER WON CLOSE VOTE | Labor won the seat from the} Conservatives by 'only 1,181 votes in the 1964 genera! elec- tion. The local labor member of SUSAN STRASBERG memou were apie or Derpvnd by RALPH THOMAD GREGOIRE ASLAN Begins 9:10 ALSO --- 2nd Feature afer oat 7:30 "MURDER MOST FOUL" Starring Margaret Rutherford -- As Miss Marlie IN C@OUR Gott and are concentrating on 103 Byron St. S., Whitby domestic issues. Parliament died in November One Block West of 4 Corners and, if Jessel wins the election to replace him, Wilson's major- DISSATISFIED WITH YOUR SERVICE ? NOW... Is the time to : switch to... | "ESSO HOME HEAT SERVICE" Call . . . Your local Whitby Esso Home Heat Team | Clarence Roper _ "Imperial Esso Agent" 668-3690 Albert Randall & SONS LTD. "Esso Service Dealer' 668-2991 Buy When The Market Is Down Car buyers -- especially used -- could save themselves some money by copying the way the experts ploy the stock market. A stock market profes- sional wouldn't be in business long, if he deliberately waited until prices were ot their peok before he bought -- but that's exactly what a lot of cor buyers do As an example, Spring and early Summer ore the peck price periods for convertibles and sports cars, naturally enough, because that's when the desire is greatest to get the top down and enjoy some of that welcome sunshine. But in late Autumn and early Winter these models are very slow movers. Because it costs about $3.00 a day to keep a used cor in his inventory, a dealer with sports cars and convertibles on hand from recent trades in anxious to reduce this inventory item and usually drops the price accordingly, Despite the low. prices though, the public still refuses to buy readily and prefers to wait for the Spring sunshine ond the high" prices thot go with jit. Prices start to go up on these models in early February and reach their peak in late Spring. They remain there all Summer before declining again in the Fall, At the moment, we have three fine used convertibles ond sports cars in stock. They are a 1964 Pontiac Convertible. Fully Equipped Lic, .No, 265712 $2555.00 -- 1964 Olds- mobile Cutlas Convert, Fully Equip, Lic. No. H20942 $2455. 1965 Chev. Super Sports Fully Equip. Lic. No. 72561D $2999.00 They have been fully reconditioned with 12 month warranty and are priced 'way below "book" value, They are waiting for some smart buyer who will save himself some money and still have a beautiful car for Spring. 44 eal -@ A ee NORTHSIDE CHRYSLER DODGE (WHITBY ) 918 BROCK ST N WHITRY wea ONT You'll make 4% interest, on the minimum on your National Trust Savings Account. That's just one advantage. You'll find our office hours are arranged to suit your busy schedule. You can even make deposits. by mail. (We pay the postage!) And you can write any reasonable number of cheques on your account free of charge. But National has even more to offer you! Besides Savings Accounts, National Trust offers two other modern savings plans: High interest-earning Guaranteed Investment Certificates which can be bought for periods of 1 to 5 years, and Natrusco, National's thriving Mutual Fund that lets you share in our country's bustling economy. All are backed by the Company's experience in managing more than one billion dollars under their administration or supervision. Save with safety ... look into National. OS-26 Want a Savings Account where people show more interest? half-yearly balance, { 32 Simcoe St. S., Oshawa and 14 offices in Greater Toronto National Trust S INCE 1898

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