Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 20 Oct 1966, p. 21

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

COUNTY LINES Rebekah Installation At Orono ORONO (TC) -- Officers of Heather h No. Wood; Vice Grand, Sister Jean Lewis; Warden, Sister Betty Rochs; Conductor, Sister Vilda Cowan; Color Bearer, Sister Margaret Graham; Recording Secr , Sister Mae Allen; Financial Secretary, Sister Mae Allen; Financial Secretary, Sis- ter Ila Martin; Treasurer, Sis- ter Irene Murray; Inside Guard, Sister Ray Doris Wannan; Musician, Sister Gladys Brown; Chaplain, Sister Mildred Rainey; RSNG, Sister Hattie Wilson; LSNG, Sister Velma Watson; RSVG, Sister Maude Cooper; LSVS, Sister! Rena Pears; Jr. PNG, Sister Lola Kennedy. The first fall meeting of the lodge was conducted by Sister Jean Wood, Noble Grand, as- sisted by the Vice Grand, Sis- ter Jean Lewis. Birthday greet- ings were extended to Sisters Gladys Brown, Isabelle Trimm Hughes; Outside Guard, Sister and Doris Wannan, Institute Short Course Profitable SRouawam (TC): -- The short course, "Choosing and Using Fabrics," sponsored by the Women's Institute, was MOST proiitavis, . Gordon Perry was hostess for the October meet- ing of the Women's Institute. Mrs, Robert Miller conducted the meeting, and gave a read- ing on the centennial train. Mrs.. Perry and Mrs. Harden demonstrated the making of salads and Mrs. Harden gave a@ talk on vitamins. Mrs. R. Harden will host the Novem- ber meeting with Mrs. Connell and Mrs, Shirk as hostesses. Brougham United Church will celebrate its anniversary at 2.30 p.m., Oct, 30. Rev. M. Buttars, minister of Pickering United Church, will be the special speaker. Mrs. Charles Liscombe is a patient in Oshawa General Hos- pital as the result of a fall in which she fractured her hip. Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Neil have returned to Winnipeg after visiting Mr. and Mrs. William Storry. Joy Rebekah Lodge has accepted an invitation to attend a reception to honor Marjorie McClean, Warden of the Rebekah Aséembly, on tne occasion of her official visit to the district, Plans were made for the installation of tae ivuge officers, Oct. 24, by the deputy district president of Oshawa District No, 7. A number of the residents of the village attended the open- ing of the new Royal Canadian Legion Hall at Claremont. Mr. and Mrs, Al. Pilkey spent the weekend in Hammond, N.Y., where they attended the golden' wedding anniversary of Mrs, Pilkey's uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs, Richard Gold- thorpe. Olive Goldthorpe, of Fayetteville, North Carolina and Louis Goldthorpe, of Wash- ington, D.C., returned with em. Patricia and Pamela Burton entertained their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. N. Burton, Stouff- ville and Mr. and Mrs, Conner, Gormley, on the occasion of their second hepgere & Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Carle: ton received their friends and relatives at the hall recently on the occasion of their 60th wedding anniversary. Bill Crothers Is Banquet Speaker BROOKLIN (TC)--The United Church recently held a father and son banquet with 98 fathers and sons attending. Bill! Cxothers, the noted Canadian runner, as the guest speaker. * Grace was said by David , Mundy, The _ : me -- was proposed ohn Medland. The toast te church was proposed by Gary Reynolds with Rev. G. A. Mundy reply- ing. A sing-song was led by Services. The members were welcomed at the door by Mrs. H. Dennis and Mrs. A. Parrin- der. Mr. and Mrs, Raymond Hod- son and Mr. and Mrs. Donald Duncan were in charge of the devotional the Couples' Club meeting. Mr. and Mrs. John Mediand showed pictures of their trip to Europe. The ted Church Women plan to hold a Hallowe'en bazaar in the Christian Educa- Carl. Johansen with Norman Williams at the piano. The speaker was introduced by Ralph Thompson. Lance Beath proposed the vote of tion Building, Oct. 29. The Teachers' Convention will be held Oct. 21 in Brooklin. The UCW is serving the noon meal at the church. The Home and Schoo] Association will serve refreshments at the school in The church. was beautifully decorated for the Thanksgiving the morning. Audley Church Plans Anniversary ? AUDLEY (TC) -- Re.v W. C. Smith, associate minister of Northminster United Church, » Oshawa, ge, the -- speaker at a.m. anni- verary service Oct. 23. The church was decorated It was announced at the meeting of the UCW, that the cook book, a centennial pro- ject will be printed before Christmas, The members of group are collecting used clo- thing for the Fred Victor Mis- (CP. Wirephoto) Report Defends Peep Holes OTTAWA (CP) -- Those much-criticized observation gal- leries--or peep holes, as com- plaining MPs call them--are defended in the royal commis- sion report into working condi- tions in the post office. The commissioner, Mr, Jus- tice Andre Montpetit of the Quebec Superior Court, says that even if they at first appear objectionable it must be ad- mitted they are being used to try to catch suspected 'thieves in the United States, Britain, Australia and other countries. "No one seems to have been able to devise or work out a more adequate method of con- trol," he says in his rt, -- in the Commons W: 8 y. He says the commission de- cided against intervening in this dispute, but suggests the de- partment consider ins the galleries only in post offices having about 50 employees. The department now plans them for post offices with 20 employees or more. The report recommends that the department issue further in- structions emphasizing the re- stricted use of the observation --. it says the department recog- nizes a majority of employees are honest but maintains the "provide the only ef- lective means of control in ex- ceptional cases where a postal BEFORE THE MAGISTRATE Whitby (Staff) -- A Bay Rid- ges man who pleaded guilty to common assault on his wife was for six months at Whitby Magistrate's Court Tue- or was William John Pow- who, said the Crown, arrived home Oct. 15 in what his wife judged a drunken condition shouted obscenities at her and i ao not struck her on the jaw with hisjing por le youth on = led sentence for a year in 'agistrate's Court here Tues- day. He chose the latter. "reget = guilty to assaulting jen Arthur Rowe following Lindsay Fair. Rowe said he and two friends met the accused and some of his friends on the main street of the village about 1 a.m. and an altercation ensued between the two groups. Alldread ad- mitted grabbing Rowe and throwing him to the ground. In the melee Rowe. was kicked in the mouth and his. lower dentures broken. "There is too much of this sort of thing," observed Magis- trate R. B. Baxter. "Don't try to settle your disputes with fisticuffs. Anyone else who comes before me in similar circumstances will get the same." Bond was set at $1,000. One term was that for the first three months Alldread should Civil Servants Seek Wage Hike HAMILTON (CP) -- Customs and excise workers voted Wed- nesday to demand a $1,400 across - the - board increase in their annual salaries in collec- tive bargaining with the govern- ment, It was one of more than 100 resolutions, many of them deal- ing with wages, working condi- tions and fringe benefits, to be considered by 140 delegates rep- resenting 6,700 customs and ex- cise officers. A Windsor delegation which was given we employee is suspected of com- mitting or of having committed one or more acts enda the security of the mail." "No postmaster or any mem- ber of his staff has the right, under any circumstances, to use these galleries to supervise employees or to check their work or conduct." presented the pay increase res- olution said this would average out to a 20-per-cent increase. Claude Edwards, provisional president of the public service alliance, which will speak for 115,000 civil servants formerly in 18 separate groups, told the delegates they would no longer be requests to the gov- WMANVILLE -- A New-| with vegetables, fruit and flow-|sion, Toronto. The program on ers for the Thanksgiving Ser-|folk services and young people's vice. George Bamsey, of Lon-| work in the church was present- don Ont., sang a solo. ed by Mrs. L. Waltham. RANDOM, WHO'S HE? ernment. They would be mak- TORONTO (CP)--The first {s-jing demands. sue of Random, first general] The PSA is to be created next magazine to be published for|/month at a convention merging the students of the University|the Civil Service Federation of Pretty Parrot Smugglers Have Customs Men Puzzled »» By VINCENT MATTHEWS . Canadian Press Correspondent SYDNEY, Australia (CP)-- What, Australian customs offi- cers are asking, will these smugglers think of next? Already this year there has been an alarming Increase in the amount of drugs smuggled into Australia and hardly a ship arrives from an East Asian without some crew mem- r being found trying to sneak ashore with his illegal packet. Now the smugglers have struck at one of Australia's precious natura! assets--birds. Some species of Australian par- rots are threatened with ex- tinction because of the number being smuggled out of the coun- try. Australian parrots, among the world's most beautiful and col- orful birds, bring high prices overseas among collectors and at private zoos. Smugglers are believed to be getting up to $1,600 for a white sulphur - crested cockatoo, one of the rarest and most sought-after Australian birds. During the last two months, Sydney customs officers have seized three shipments of Aus- tralian parrots being smuggled to The Netherlands and France. An official of the fauna panel of New South Wales said the export of native birds is banned because if a market was created overseas the demand would in- crease s0 much there would be no birds left in Australia. Overseas aviaries are breed- ing Australian birds and the high prices are being offered for fresh blood lines to improve their stock. The only legal trade in Aus- tralian parrots is from 200 to zoo. The maximum penalty for illegally exporting native Aus- tralian birds is $1,000. But with the profits on the overseas sale of tha. birds so high the fine, say cu en, is no deter- rent, The birds arg usually smug- gled by air cartons falsely marked as containing some- thing else. One customs official said: "These Australian parrets--2re se intelligent they can be taught to talk if you spend enough time with them, It's a pity they can't cry out when they're of Toronto, appeared this week with 9,000 copies that were given away quickly. It contains|- Canada and the Civil Service Association of Canada. articles on inequality of the sexes, the Beatles, a report on the Montreal Film Festival and how to eat cheaply. PAT & MIKE FISH & CHIPS being smuggled aboard a plane. It would save us a lot of search- ing time." so" COLUMBIA PICTURES rset Soury ale BUou) OLUM OPEN YEAR AROUND -- CHILDREN UNDER % YRS. FREE em settee oman tema "G Servings" WALIBUT, SHRIMPS, SCALLOPS 723-1951 Stop ENGLISH STYLE \ FISH Unfasten Your Eat Belt... at MeMURRAY'S COUNTRY STYLE ZFRIED CHICKEN 'n CHIPS | amma = ae oe i % FRIDAY « The Big Fun Dance the sounds of the Big Boot The Place te Mest The Fentebulous STITCH ubiies -- OL AAA Pe ee aN BIG "M" FRENCH CHEESE BURGER FRIES and GRAVY ¥) October McMURRAY'S = is Restourent Month ot DRIVE-IN RESTAURANT SIMCOE ST. NORTH ot TAUNTON RD. PHONE:-- 728-2291 Husband Pleads Guilty _ Assault, Gets Jail Term Mrs. Grey said that on July| myn $0 she had an argument with|,, Powell's sentence was two months gaol on that charge, plus two months on each of two other assault charges for which he was convicted in 43 of 886 Liverpool Rd, | April Another husband, Frank Grey of Valley Farm Rd, Pickering, to assaul his wife redn by strid- her in the eye and break- her ribs, ing Youth Convicted After Early Morning Fighting use his car only to go to, and ak Bae ewark suvuses += = a Veep of going to jail or sus-/ STIFF FINE Conviction for impaired driv- ing brought a-stiff fine, It was the second <ccnviction in four _ « Victor Patterson, RR The penalty was $150 and costs, or 15 days, Illegal pos- session of beer brought a fur- ther fine of $25 and costs, or an additional five days. was an automatic suspension of licence for three months. Evidence was that the ac- cused was found slumped over the steering wheel of his car, north of Orono, asleep with a bottle of beer in his hand, and the keys in the ignition. Mr. Patterson explained that he felt drowsy.so phoned a friend to come and drive him home, but when there was no answer he returned to the car and fell asleep. "In such _ circumstances," commented Magistrate R, B. Baxter, "it would be safest to fling your keys as far away as possible before going to sleep." 'JOIN A CIRCUS' You don't have to drive a car to be charged with careless driving. A Bowmanville 16- year-old student, Alan Foran, 118 Ontario St., admitted rid- ing a Honda down King St. at midnight standing on one foot with the other leg stuck straight out sideways and hold- ing the handlebars with one hand. A group of his peers weré encouraging him from the sidewalk. "If you want to do stunt-rid- ing join a circus," suggested Magistrate R. B. Baxter. 'If any of ysur friends want to try this they will get the same." The fine was $50 and costs, or seven days in jail, coupled with three months. FURTHER REMAND Russell Davis, charged with attempted murder, -- in custody for another week, WHEN | IT GOMES TO SERVICE YOU CAN COUNT license suspension for Q was Tre-i¢ her husband during which he hit her on the head and knock- ed her down in their driveway. She had treatment in Ajax Hos pital as a result, she said. Mr. Grey told the court his wife had a drinking problem, and had been "ranting and rav- ing' because he had her car keys. He said he pushed her out of the door and she swung a chair at him, but he did not use his fist, The charge was dismissed with an injunction to Grey to behave himself, Two charges of false preten- Ces Were Taceu by Muve:s cos- eph Johnston, 30, of 18 Whit- ing Ave., Oshawa. He admitted two worthless cheques in the total sum of 15 at local service stations on August 17 and August 22. + $5 Minimum Milk BEAUPORT, (CP)~The Quebec-wide Catholic Farmers' Union wants the federal govern- ment to ensure that producers of milk for dairy products ceive a minimum p dredweight for for two nights, pleaded guilty to vagrancy. He was Daniel Wilkins of RR3 Picke: who also admitted a breach of pro- on, On the original charge and to driving a vehicle with unnecessary noise on October &. He was Maed £75 with consts or 15 days. Johnston, unemployed, said he had made restitution in one case and was going to in the other. He was given a sus- pended sentence for 12 months on each charge. Police found two pints of ale under the passenger seat of a car and as a sequel the pass- enger, Clark Leonard Allen Wilcox, 22, of 55 Brock St. Oshawa, appeared in court charged with having liquor in a vehicle and with giving a false name and address to police, Wilcox pleaded guilty and was fined 25 and costs or five days on the alcohol charge. Sentence was suspended and he was put on six months' pro- bation {6 the other offence. A 1? . year » old uoy whom police found Oct. 13 sleeping in a field, where he had been Subsidy Sought [Sus cu,citet'oa.p, than between|- tiefite must not progress, valid for. the oe san me The convention also heard a call for national unity from|fj J. J. Greene, federal agricul- ture minister, who also said he shares the organization's desire to raise the farming community to the material level of other cerned with the long - term, broad national implications of any steps which are taken," said the minister in French. een oe * SATURDAY x JERRY REIDT and his orchestre Featuring: -- THIS WEEK Admission:---- 75¢ Non-Members 0.C.V.1. AUDITORIUM Here comes The Spee BReev! they presevom all to the limitt gat SAT., Oct. 22nd...at8:30 p.m. DRESS: -- Shirt and Tle NEXT WEEK:--'THE MYNA BIRDS" ROGER WOLFE UNIT MANAGER Home: 723-2883 Business: 725-4563 Life Insurance tneame Disebility Pension Plans Group Insurance Business Insurance Estate Planning SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY of CANADA Othawe Shopping Centre LST J It NAME ...ccceee UJ tf ADDRESS we ccweesesscewececeen ; : 4 OCCUPATION J i Exact Date of birth $0 0TRececesttee seeeewevoee YEARS Outstanding Service CANADIAN WALLPAPER MANUFACTURERS LIMITED NEW TORONTO We Extend OUR BEST WISHES FOR MANY, MANY MORE PATTES featuring Ait SUNWORTHY WALLPAPER First With New Decorator Ideas AVAILABLE at PATTE'S ADULT ENTERTAINMENT STARTS TODAY! \WeFun! Vive Can-Can! Vive Adventure! Vie StripYease] Via Baer i Just In case you ean't eatch the words above the roar of battle end laughter you can read "em at the bottom of the screen! BST ROTA MOE OS ALES "Y AR eS IT (rgd Seren Py by LE MALLE wd RANCLAUDELOMMRIERE. Dirac by LOUIS MALLE. Pracuces ty OSCAR Trem kaos $F od Won Coote fed Wel @ SHOW TIMES @ Weekdays 7:00 and 9:10. Cont'd from 1, Sunday from 2 THE NEW ODEON THEATRE 39 KING ST. EAST PHONE 725-5833 to il

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy