Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 15 Jun 1967, p. 5

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rrr EER ERA Atlantic Ocean. The , stimulated the lum- try, and also caused luce to be shipped to | States. Prosperity in as also brought about imean War, the Civil the construction of ciprocity Treaty did le manufactured pro- criticism in the Unit- mounted steadily es- iyi 1 ETAT HEA '$ PARK Proposal cates Season DON O'HEARN '0 -- With the hot mes the silly season. a proposal by NDP ald MacDonald, who that the legislature ain sitting until there jeal on municipal fi- ernment, of course, aid it would not be 1y alteration in the rovincial - municipal ip until after it has he Smith report on ely won't act before report. the regular business sion concluded, what members do while waiting for the re- rchle perhaps? Donald, of course, good news play with osal, and probably a few friends among eaders also. s it so often doesn't t what you say but say it about. PC PROPOSAL instance of hot- nking was at a meet- maller municipalities ince. | they were going to Ontario Police Com- posal that policing in hich at present have ye men or less should ver by the Ontario Police. 't want this done un- inicipality concerned you have to say: ous can you get. lously under today's ditions these small t do proper police k the training, the yr the sophisticated that is required. they can really out parking tickets, nks and serve sum- pride doesn't see sally sees good old ick and Harry and cal officers. » government in the ere it has to force ization. rnment, of course, to use force with es, but in this case assured it will be reciated that today be efficient policing the province. matter how freluct- fovernment will act we have it. ly, under new legis- municipalities can sting officers as lo- nforcement officers, IBLE { shall it profit a hall gain the whole ose his own soul?" ye the whole world t and no faith for ou have missed the 1g. How sad it will ve provided for the the expense of the HOME OF | | 282 YEARS NI1 a5, Ontarie M0 TRESPASSING SURVIVORS WILL BE PROSECUTED WHITBY DAY - BY - DAY Whitby Gifts Presented To Yorkshire Mayor WHITBY (Staff) - Mr. and Mrs. Leslie McFarlane, 704 King St., returned this week' from an enjoyable 6-week trip to England, Ireland and France during which they paid a visit to Whitby, Yorkshire, after which the town of Whitby is named. During their visit te the Yorkshire municipality, Mr. and Mrs. McFarlane called on Mayor Fred Stuart and pre- sented him with a pair of cuff links and broach for his wife, each of which bore a centen- nial crest. The presentation on behalf of Mayor Desmond New- man, In return, they received a book for Mayor Newman. Their visit to England includ- ed a lengthy stay in London as well as visits to a number of old inns and abbeys in Eng- land. Legion Members Attend Service Members of Branch 112, Roy- al Canadian Legion, attended morning worship at St, Mark's United Church last Sunday morning. The sermon entitled "Tribute, Trivia and Testing" was in keeping with the theme of National Veterans' Week and Memorial Sunday, The choir sang the anthem "Great God and God of Our Salvation'. Religion and Life Emblems were presented to girls and boys of the Brownies, Girl Guides, Wolf Cubs and Boy Scouts, who during the past year completed the require- WHITBY - AJA A pot-luck luncheon was held by St. Mark's United Church Women Unit 1 and 2 with 22 ments under the instruction of Mrs. T. Wilcox and E. Quan- tril, L. Penfound, F. Milligan and C. Mesher. Leaders presenting the awards were Guide Captain, Mrs. M. Taylor, Brown Owls Mrs. Wil- cox and Mrs. A. Kozak; Akelas H. Elliott and W. Hay and and §. Nimigon. Adults of the St. Mark's con- gregation are planning an after- noon visit, next Sunday, to the Edward's Gardens in Toronto, Members of the 4W's Couples Club will be holding their an- nual camping week - end com- mencing on Friday. X PERSONALS the tea at the manse June 21. The group will resume its activities in September. Sarah Roblin, daughter of members attending. A_ short iret canoes Anta by Mrs. Ken Soble. Fifteen house calls and i6 hospital visits were reported. Mrs. E. Bond reported on the Girl Guide banguet, Mrs. H. Hare was in charge of the worship service. She spoke on Harry Emmerson Fosdick's book entitled "'Touch- ing a Difficult Day for Ideal- ists"; Hard days for Christian- ity. This was followed by a re- view of the book "Exodus," the theme "A Great Time to be Alive." Mrs. Soble thanked Mrs. Hare and wished all a happy holiday. Next Unit meeting Sept. 11. The Women's Auxiliary to Catholic Church Extension is meeting Friday evening at the home of Miss Jean Stewart, $14 Walnut Street. St. Mark's United Church Women, Unit 7, held a pot-luck supper at the church house, fol- lowed by a visit to the nuclear power plant near Pickering. Members taking the tour were most impressed. Mrs. Thomas Farndale reminded members of Sports Day Plans Ready AJAX (Staff) - The annual Sports Day, to be held here June 24, promises to be bigger and better than ever. Many special events of interest to old and young are scheduled. The day's program wil open with a mammoth parade which will move from Pennyworth's Department Store, Harwood Av nue North and proceed south to St. Bernadette's School grounds, The sports day com- mittee hopes to have all of the tremendously popular Ajax Cen- tennial floats back in the par ade as well as additional en- tries. Two well known marching groups - the Ajax Legion Pip- ers and the Pickering Blue Notes - will lead the parade. Some of the other entries in Mr, and Mrs, Stuart C. Roblin, left on a two and a half month visit to Managua, Nicaragua and Central American Count- ries. She will be the guest of General Francisco Medal and Senoria Medal. Mrs. Norma Knapp and child- ren, Garry and Stephan, Cooks- ville, were visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Angus Robert- son, 900 Donovan Crescent. The Fifth Whitby Cubs and Scouts Mother's Auxiliary is meeting at 8:30 p.m. today in St. John the Evangelist St. Joseph meeting room. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mitch- ell, Kingston, called on his moth- er, Mrs. Mary Mitchell, Col- borne Street West, on their way to Toronto Int ernational Air - port to meet Mrs. Mitchell's parents, Mr, and Mrs. 'Thomas Mitchell, Oshawa, who were re- turning from a three - week trip to Scotland: Mrs. L. F. Richardson and Mrs. H. W. Quantrill spent sev- eral days visiting Expo. George Fothergill, 142 Byron Street North, is a patient at the Oshawa General Hospital. St. Mark's United Church Women, Unit 5, members par- ticipating in the visit to Henry House, Oshawa, were: Miss Mil- dred Price, Mrs. Mary Under- wood, Mrs, Margaret Smith, Mrs. E. R. White, Miss Laura Pellow, Mrs. Gladys Pellow, Miss Eva Hartrick, Miss Lilly Saunders, Mrs. Olive Robinson and two guests, the deaconess Miss Ila Newton and Mrs. Clara Musselman. The visit was stim- ulating and interesting. Mrs. R. A Smith and Mrs. Earl Ward, represented the Whitby Branch of the Women's Institute when the national con- vention of the Federated Wom- en's Institutes celebrated the 70th anniversary of its forma- tion at Guelph. The special speaker was Madame Aroti Dutt, of Calcutta, India, president of the Associated Country Wom- en of the World. More than WHITBY -- AJAX | THE TUESDAY NIGHT meeting of the Pickering Village Council was high- lighted by a visit from Herbert Leng, centre, rep- resenting the Pickering, Tuesday evening. At the council meeting Her- bert Leng, a former native of Pickering, England, presented Reeve Ross Murison with a scrapbook of his former home. Mr. Leng told the council that he contacted the Picker- ing, England, Council Chairman Alan Pickup recently when he heard that the town intended to bells and a local choir to its Canadian counterpart, DEPICTS LIFE A civil engineer, Mr. Leng came to Canada a week ago and intends to settle in Pickering. He told the English council of his intention to visit! the area and a scrapbook de- picting life in the old English town, was prepared. send a recording of church presentation. England, Urban Council, who presented a scrapbook from the town of Picker~ ing, Yorkshire, after which Pickering, Ont., is named. Seen as the presentation Pickering Ties England Re-affirmed PICKERING (Staff) -- Ties|mer Pickering Village Reeve between Pickering Village and|Cyril Morley who, in 1963, pre- the town of Pickering in York-jsented the then Chairman of shire, England, were re-affirm-|Pickering Urban Council, in ed by a presentation held in|England, W. E. Neve, with a the village municipal building|block and gavel made from Canadian Bird's Eye Maple. PAPERS DISPLAYED The gift from the village reeve was inscribed in silver and at the Tuesday night cere- monies Mr. Morley displayed newspapers from the Yorkshire Evening Press, the Pickering Gazette and Herald and the Mercury from nearby Scar- borough in England, all of which canried the report Mr. Leng said that, although he had been in the country only a short time, the Picker- ing Village area seemed an exciting area in which to live. He said that he hoped the book would strengthen the ties be- tween the two .m and expressed the wish of the Pickering Urban Council Chair- man to continue the good rela- tionship. The scrapbook showed ruined has a population of about 5,000, while its Ontario counterpart now has almost 2,000 residents, of the was made are Reeve Ross A. Murison, left, the pres- ent reeve of Pickerinf Vil- lage and Cyril Morley, right, a former reeve of the village. --Oshawa Times Photo With The parent town in England WHITBY (Staff) - Five people including two Whitby Detach- ment Provincial Police consta- bles reported the sighting of an unidentified flying object Wed- nesday night. William Kennedy and his son, who reside on Concession Unidentified Flying Object Seen By Area Residents every 107 minutes and appears to be hovering as it swings in its orbit over the pole reported the observatory. They said the satellite would appear yellowish- orange as the sunlight struck it and would be as clearly vis- ible as the planet Venus. 7, Whitby Township, reported that a yellowish - white object appeared to hover and then tra- velled across the sky in a south direction. OPP Constable Dave Kleno- vic, who was off duty, and his wife also reported seeing the object at the same time. Constable Mike Brennan, on duty at the time, reported sight- ing the object at about 9:50 p.m. and advised the detachment that he believed it to be a meteorite. The David Dunlop Obervatory, Thornhill, said today that night observers, who do not answer the public phones, reported they rang all night. The observatory said the ob- ject observed was most likely ECHO 2 which was launched in an eliptical orbit in January, 1964. The satellite orbits the earth THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, June 15, 1967 + | Seek Workers In West Indies OTTAWA (CP) -- An experl- ment last year in bringing 264 seasonal farm laborers from Jamaica is being enlarged this year and extended to cover workers from Trinidad and To- bago and from Barbados, the government reported Wednes- '| day in the Commons. John Munro, parliamentary secretary to Manpower Minis- ter Marchand, also reported that the manpower department in a north - sough direction Officials Seeking Low Standards TORONTO (CP) -- Federal and provincial officials Wednes- day began meeting to see how the country can best standard- ize its laws governing financial institutions. F, J. Pillgrem, Ontario dep- uty minister: of financial and commercial affairs, said new federal legislation such as the]|------ Jamaicans, 2,544 workers were brought. in from the United is offering to co-operate with employers who make private arrangements to hire seasonal laborers in other Common- wealth or French nations of the Caribbean area. Last year, in addition to the MONEY 'FOR GAMES WINNIPEG (CP)-- Veterans Affairs Minister Teillet Wednes- day presented a federal grant of $17,400 to officials of the Paraplegic Games Association, marking the first time wheel- chair sports have received such a grant in Canada, The Para. plegic Games, to be staged im- mediately following the Pan- American Games in August, feature 175 handicapped athletes from six countries competing in sports ranging from archery te basketball. ASK A POLICEMAN LONDON (CP) -- A 16-year- old youth stole a motor scooter outside the Old Bailey criminal court then asked a policeman to help him start it. The suspicious constable checked the ma- chine's ownership first. The youth was fined £3. States. The information was tabled in a reply to questions by Harold Danforth (PC--Kent, Ont.). Ne ALL-ROUND CORD Marg Cockburn, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Cockburn, of Oshawa, for- merly of Whitby, a mem- ber of the 2nd Whitby Girl Guide Company, received her All-round Cord at the mother and daughter ban- quet held at St. Mark's United Church. Commis- sioner Mrs. Harvey Whale Feature Starts et 7:07 & 9:23 World's Funniest Castaway!. WALT DISNEY ma il. ROBIN CRUSOE,USN. § a2? Ks) vex VAN DYKE-nevKWAN 3 nme BROCK Evening Programs et 7 & 9 p.m. WHITBY made the presentation. Canada Deposit Insurance Act, which provides for all federally- licensed companies accepting deposits to insure against loss to depositors, makes the need for more uniform financial op- -- across Canada impera- tive. POLICE STOPPED THEM WARWICK, England (CP)-- Two boy scouts were told by Warwickshire police to stop do- ing their 'good deed for the day' before they got into trouble. They were warning motorists of a radar speed trap. FREE Estimetes, Reasoneble Retes, Repair Specialist, 24 Hour Service Fast Dependable Radio Dispetched Plumbing Service. SERVICR MADE US, Call 723-1191 WISE HOME OWNERS INSIST ON HYDRA-PREST, SIDEWALK SLABS fron... - brogklin concrete products up.) castles and the rustic country- side of the English town which was first settled by the Anglo Saxons from Denmark in the sixth and seventh centuries. At the presentation. was for- BIRDS WERE FIRST NORWICH, England (CP)-- The first youngsters delivered in a newly opened Norfolk ma- ternity hospital were born on the roof. They were four black- birds, hatched out in a nest one FREE 24-HOUR BURNER SERVICE By Our Local Service Contractors SAWDON'S FUELS FURNACE OIL -- STOVE OIL AND COAL 244 Brock St. S., Whitby 668-3524 constructed while the building 4,000 women attended. the parade to date include R. was completed around it. rw ® SQUARE AND RESULTS "hydraulically pressed for maximum durability" © COMPLETE RANGE OF SIZES PLACING AND PROFESSIONAL IMMEDIATE DELIVERY TRUE FOR EASY and B. Riding Stable. All the service clubs of Ajax will be represented and, of course, the Ajax Fire Department will also be in step. Always a favorite with the children, a display of old cars will add to the occas- ion. The Ajax Sport's Day com- mittee also has high hopes of having the famous steam en- gine back in Ajax for the par- ade. An Added feature this year will be a special section for young people entering decorat- ed bicycles, Those interested in entering are asked to call Paul Robert at 942-5725. The sports competitions will get under way at 1) a.m. at the school grounds, Many spec- ical events, in addition to the regular track and field events, are planned. One of these will probably be a tug - of - war for women. Special awards and trophies will be presented for the best float and parade entries. These are on display in the Ajax Hydro Building as are the awards for the winning track and field entries. Formal Rentals For Your Wedding Party We are agents for SYD SILVER FORMALS Ltd. drop in now and receive your FREE guide on wedding customs and etiquette, see 'our selection of wedding suits in luxurious Eng- lish wool venetion cloth. MERCANTILE DEPT. STORE _ WHITBY PLAZA U.S.A. Bound -- Must Sell This three bedroom brick bungalow in desirable Osh- awa Location is to be sold quickly to a lucky person. Notice the sharp, clean cut landscaping and neat appearance of this modern home. You will be surprised with the extras including wall to wall broadloom, basket weave fencing and pleasing decoration. All this for $18,800. GORDON OSBORNE DIAL 668-8826 REAL ESTATE LTD. WHITBY The wonderful thing about Dry Rye is the fact that it makes every CALVERT GRAND PRIX RY WHISRY FP CANADA LTD, other ordinary rye.taste unusual. That's how different the taste of Grand Prix is. You'll suddenly realize that Grand Prix is not an old whisky with @ new slogan. You'll know it is a new whisky with a new taste. A dry taste..A full rye with every shred of sweetness removed. When you try Grand Prix it could make your favourite rye taste unusual. Or: Grand Prix could become your favourite rye. GRAND PRIX * THE WORLD'S FIRST DRY RYE 70, MONTREAL Give Dad Something Special! Toiletries Jade East A Complete Range Obtainable in the Whitby Area Exclusively PETER 102 BYRON ST. S. 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