Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 30 Dec 1967, p. 12

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THE OS! Centennial press to the truction of | pool and rec shawa Civ hornton Ro While dist wa were bi r structure ople took 'omplete th he complex ium. With football diamonds a reas need _ aterialize dream. The new opened last ing star Be ring who t diving boa pool. The $1.01 Hition to th he depart children' pool, all-pu ind stage arking sp. Although build th ame from jal and The can eed Jt: I ]2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Saturdey, December 30, 1967 gessmmenpaeger MARILYN PATERSON First 1956 Baby Best Wishes TO OSHAWA'S First 1956 District Baby | _ Enjoys Playing Softball | Marilyn. Paterson was the!Public School, where she fs an ) first district baby on New Year's 2Verage student | *) Day, 1956. Today, she's the old- est girl in a family with nine Paterson, but thé cold weather} . children. She turns 12 years old has curtailed the outdoor activi- on Monday The third child of Mr. . Mrs. Jamie Paterson, R.R * 3, Bowmanville, Marilyn walks 4 and 3, respectively. to her Grade 5 classes every "She plays ball during the summer months," says Mrs. ties of Marilyn and her friends. Her seven brothers and sis-| No.,ters are aged 14, 13, 10, 9, 7, 6,! Mr. Paterson is employed by day at the West Maple GroveiThe Pedlar People. | Merchants Offer Prizes To First New Year's Baby | The stork undoubtedly is faced) New Year, and offering prizes with a perennial flap to keep|@s well, are The Nursery Room, up with time schedules But Oshawa merchants, lyears past, will take a lot off; |the mind of the mythical feath-ing predictions are Mitchell Jury and Lovell Drugs, Birks Jewellers and Walker's clothing @s IN) shop. Also offering gifts and mak- ered friend by delivering all the;Drugs, Reed's Florist, Burns prizes they are offering to the! Shoes, Gillard Cleanit, Eastview Oshawa New Year's Baby -- Drugs, Karn Drugs and David- |the first baby to be born after midnight Jan. 1, 1968 The baby must be born to an Oshawa couple to be eligible for the prizes. son Shoes. Police Identify Races for the title of New Accident Victims | Year's Baby can be tough. I 1965 Ann Zlotnik, now going on 3 four years old, arrived at 12:01|/Police have identified Franklin) | Broughton, 42, of Welland, and/ Hugh McDermott, 36, of Dunn-| : arrive|Ville as the two men killed Fri-| &. Year's Baby, did not until 1:45 a.m. a.m. New Year's morning. But the running can be slow, too.| Sharon Brown, the 1966 New DUNNVILLE, Ont. (CP) -- day when their truck was in col-| Businesses participating by lision with a CNR freight train} making predictions as to sex/three miles north of here. and approximate weight of the first baby to be born in the'west of Welland. Dunnville is about 15 miles FIRST BABY # To The Baby's Happy Parents may we presenta... 2 LB. BOX OF Laura Secord Chocolates aw Our Prediction... A BOY ... 7 Ibs. 4 ozs. EASTVIEW PHARMACY 573 King Street East Here's to Baby's good health and happiness ! 92 Wolfe Street Congratulations To The PARENTS of OSHAWA'S FIRST BABY of 1968 ce |Christmas holiday weekend, to 6|lieved to have originated in al p.m. Friday shows that 19 were kitchen stove. 6 KILLED BOXING DAY -a $5 VOUCHER from | Year's holiday period. children. rouard. Fire raged | | FIRST IN 1965 On Jan. 1, 1965, Ann Zlet- nik took first place in the race to be born first in the year. The third child of Mr. and Mrs. Zenen Zletnik, 435 Glendale, Oshawa, she is now about to turn three years old. "We're hoping A national survey by The Ca- Quebec reported 10 fire deaths, including nine children| Boxing Day in a fire in Alberta jof Mr. and Mrs. Roland Gi-|the province's only fire fatali- through) ties. Dead are Olga Nielsen, 30 38 Persons Killed In Yuletide Fires By THE CANADIAN PRESS , burned in a single fire in Hamil-|Schwerner, 24, At least 38 persons have died|ton Friday. Killed in that fire|Goodman, 20, both New York in fires across Canada since the Were Margaret Maracle and her| whites, and James Chaney, 22, |beginning of the Christmas-New S0n Mark, 7, and daughters Jus-|a Meridian Negro. tine, 5, and Margaret, 2. she'll attend nursery school when she's four," Mrs. Zlet- nik says, adding that Ann is very bright. Ann has an older brother, eight years, and a sister, six years. Her father is an inspeetor work- ing in quality controls at Special Treatment Received By First Baby Born In Year The most wonderful event of jall can become more wonderful the Oshawa Genéral Hospital Jan. 1, and his parents reside lin Oshawa. A New Year's baby gets the VIP treatment. - \the first baby of the year born at Oshawa General Hospital but if the new-born baby arrives at|the first from the city. } 1959 To Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Heard, a 5 pound 11 ounce baby boy. The child was born at 8:24 on New Year's morning. . ate m 11960 New Year's babies have been) "m, yr and Mrs. David Con- 'covered by The Times for more 'than 10 years. The winning jbabies for the past 11 years \are: 1957 To Mr. and Mrs : |Christensen, now living in Mary, weighing in at 3:30 a.m. at a bouncing 744 pounds. She way, a baby girl born at 9:54 a.m. weighing 6 pounds 15 jounces, 1961 To Mr. and Mrs. John Collins | To Mr. and Mrs, Jean-Marie |Garand, an 8 pound 7 ounce boy, Robert, born at 12:10 a.m. 1964 To Mr. and Mrs. Robert Farn- dale, a girl, Karlynne Michelle, weighing 6 pounds 14 ounces jand born at 2:59 a.m. She was the couple's first child, 1965 To Mr. and Mrs. Zenon Zlot- nik, a 6 pound 8 ounce boy, born one minute past midnight, 1966 To Mr. and Mrs, Edwin Brown, Richard at 1:49 a.m. a 7 pound 5 ouncea baby girl, Sharon Elaine, "baby girl. {born at 1:45 a.m. and weighing 'Bowmanville, a baby girl,!y9¢9 To Mr. and Mrs. Orville Faught, their first child. A boy, was the couple's seventh child. |porn at 2:08 a.m. and weighing 1958 16 pounds. To Mr, and Mrs. Virgil (Rose-| 1963 6 ounces. | mary) Clarke an 8 pound_ girl} ----_--------- 8 Total Abstinence Doesn't born at exactly 12:20 a.m. Not Lingoleinsias hii dates ie a RON "4 | Sentenced District Court Judge Harold Cox! Friday sentenced Sam Holloway Bowers Jr., imperial wizard of the white-supremacist Ku Klux Klan, and Alton Wayne Roberts! to 10 years in the federal peni-| tentiary for conspiracy in. the 1964 slayings of three civil) rights workers. | Cox sentenced Cecil Price, Neshoba County chief deputy sheriff, and Bill Wayne Posey, a| former Philadelphia, Miss.,| service station operator, to six! years each. Horace Doyle Barnette, \Jimmy Arledge and Jimmy }Snowden received three-year sentences, The maximum sentence under the charge was 10 years in |prison and a $5,000 fine. The judge levelled no fines. Cox allowed each of the men to go free on appeal bonds, but specified they must not leave their county of residence or, in special circumstances, counties where they conduct business. The seven were convicted by an all-white jury in Meridian in Firemen said all were trapped| nadian Press from 6 p.m. local|0n the second floor of their two-| dence is in the hands of the fed- itimes Dec. 22, the start of the|Storey home. The fire was be-|e¢ral government. The federal Six persons were killed on| GILLARD CLEANIT SERVICE LTD. Oshawa 725-3555 Our Prediction -- A BOY -- 7-Ibs., 2-ozs. | west of Montreal. jupstairs bedrooms. Oshawa |their 1J-room home Friday near|and her five children, Arthur. |Mont Laurier, 125 miles north- . i Dead are Carmen, 18, Marie|in age from 18 months to 10 |Claire, 17, Bernard, 12, Jean-|years, were trapped in the jnine, 10, Raymond, 7, Mariette,/nome at St. Edouard, about 100 |6, Clement, 5, Chantal, 4 and So-| miles northeast of Edmonton. jlange, 3. All were sleeping in| | Nine were killed in fires injand Saskatchewan. |Ontario, three of them children) In Halifax, four persons were PHONE 725-3594 - Fost -- Free -- Motorized Delivery PJ. B. Francis, Phm.B. -- J. R. Steffen, B.Sc. Phm. J ORHR UR = Fy - Ap D Bix ater TO OSHAWA'S FIRST Our Predictior BOY 7 BABY 1968 BIRKS are Proud To Present A | FREE --) silver Mug Come in today and see our many gift ideas for that "New Baby" in your family. BIRKS OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE CONGRATULATIONS To Oshawa's FIRST BABY JURY & LOVELL Ltd. 8 KING STREET E. 723-2245 of 1968! jkilled when fire destroyed a WE PREDICT... A BOY 7 tbs. 11-02. 530 SIMCOE STREET S. 725-3546 A Suitable Girt... Will be given to the FIRST BABY with our compliments. ROSSLYN PLAZA 728-4668 FREE CITY WIDE DELIVERY |Ronnie, Brenda, Beverley, and Barbara. The children, ranging Four fire fatalities have been reported each in Nova Scotia jthree-storey tenement building on Christmas Eve. | Killed in the fire, which broke out in a ground-floor store, were George Yetman, 62, Ernest |Ewing, about 70, Robert Stew- art, 54, and Joyce Singer, 23. Three of those burned to j\death in Saskatchewan were jkilled in a single fire Dec. 23 |caused by an explosion in a stove in a home in Stoney Rap-} ids, 400 miles north of Prince) Albert. Dead are Maurice Law-| rence Mercredi, 2, and his sister) |Doris Anne, 3, and their baby- | sitter James Boneleye, 24. Three children at Caldwell Siding, two miles east of Grand Falls, N.B., were killed Boxing Day when an oil stove exploded. The dead were Billy Cormiere, 11, and his brothers, Leo, 5, and Mario, 4 all children of Mrs. Si-| mone Cormier Two persons were killed Dec. |23 in a fire in Mafeking, Man., 259 miles north of Brandon. |Dead are Claude Gordon Ste- |ven, 57, of Mafeking, and Flor- jence Zastre, 28 of Barrows, | Man. Cause of the fire in the! October of conspiracy to violate The state has never filed the civil rights of Michael|said the "seeds for alcoholism" and Andrew/are in these groups of people. 8 pounds 3 ounces. 1967 To Mr. and Mrs. Kelman Kiraly, 286 Cedar Valley, a girl jat 12:01 a.m. weighing 8 pounds Keep One Out Of Trouble NIAGARA FALLS, Ont. (CP) |conference have been registered JACKSON, Miss. (AP) -- U.S.'-- Total abstinence from alcohol-\at two hotels--one for boys, the ic beverages does not keep peo- ple out of trouble, a Roman Catholic priest told 650 teen- agers Friday. Speaking at a conference on alcohol education for teen- agers, sponsored by Toc Alpha Temperance Federation, Rev Josef Denys, 27, of St. Joseph's| parish, Windsor, said "taking an occasional drink can be con-| structive." He said if an individual de- cides to drink beer or liquor he must be prepared to take the consequences and the responsi- bility that go with the drink. Norman McKibben, co-ordina- tor of alcohol education services in Winnipeg, said both total ab- stinence and responsible drink- ing were 'viable answers" to the alcohol problem. | Total abstinence is the "strongest position' to avoid an alcoholic problem, but many people, because of their ethnic background, customs or up- bringing want to use alcohol. He Teen-agers to the five-day other for girls, The boys' hotel is out-of-bounds to all girls ex- cept for organized discussions which they have been assigned to. RULES NECESSARY Peter Bennett, Toc Alpha's |the youth section of the Ontario|Youth director, said in an inter- view strict rules are necessary, otherwise many parents would not allow their teen-agers to at- tend the conference, Robert E. Smith, director of the Council on Alcoholism in Rochester, N.Y., told delegates legislation governing the use of alcoholic beverages in the U.S. varied from state to state and from county to county within in- dividual states. He said beer and liquor can- not be served in some states after sundown while in others it can be served until 5 a.m. Mr. Smith said he favors a uniform legal drinking age limit for all of the U.S., but did not care whether it was 18 or 21. At a later session, Father Denys told the teen-agers not to wait until their parents were dead before they start appre- ciating them. "Tell them now," he said. BEFORE THE MAGISTRATE charges, contending all evi- indictments were issued under a 97-year-old law. providing a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison and a $5,000 fine. Son Testifies Against Father WINDSOR, Ont. (CP) -- Anj|counts of break, enter, and theft 11-year-old boy said Friday hejin Oshawa, and one in Whitby. heard his accused father argue with his mother hours beforelasked for the unusually high she died from injuries doctors|pail in view of the fact contra- said included brain damage and|band stolen in the break-ins is superficial cuts and bruises. Harry Tilly was testifying at the preliminary hearing into the Jan. 5 on the charges. He had non-capital murder charge against Gabriel Tilly, 38, of/been arrested by Det. Sgt. John Windsor. Tilly is charged in the Nov. 12 death of his wife, Marie Rose 40. The boy testified he heard sounds like slaps, heard his fa- ther use an angry tone of voice and heard his mother say: "Why are you doing this to me?" He said he was in hed when he heard the noises 'and later fell asleep, but awoke when his mother asked him to warm milk for the baby, one of four other Tilly children. He said he noticed then his mother had "sores" on her face, arms and legs. Later he heard both his mother and fa- ther go to bed. The boy testified that next morning his father said: 'Look, Momma's dying. Try to make her speak."" The accused then telephoned police, the boy said, and asked the children to wash and remove traces of blood from the living room walls The hearing resumes Jan. 3. lever been pinched in this town Oshawa Man Remanded, Crown Asks Bail of $5,000 cash or prop- erty was set for Wallace Chap- pell, 210 Division St., when hé appeared in Oshawa Court Fri- day morning charged with two Crown attorney Bruce Affleck believed to total close to $6,000. Chappell was remanded to Acting Detec- tive F. J. Dionne on Wednesday and charged with the break-ins 'lat the Firestone Store on King Street East on Dec. 21 and at Robinson Motors on Ritson Road South. He is also charged with break, enter, and theft at a Whitby Service Station. City police have recovered $2, 249 worth of radios and tovls from the Firestone theft and $2,530 worth of goods taken in the Robinson Motors break-in. A quick tongue saved Douglas McLennan from spending the New Year weekend in jail The 33 - year - old transient pleaded guilty to a charge of public intoxication but said, '"'I got money. I don't think I've before. If you give me a break, T'll get out of town." When Crown Attorney Bruce Affleck was shown a quantity of money by the accused, Mag- istrate Donald Dodds agreed to give him a break and sentenc- ed him to the two days he's already spent in jail. two-room shack is unknown Our Prediction: --A GIRL 6 Ibs 10 ozs. - wt Con 728-7386 To Oshawa's ( " * and for the first mother of the year A BEAUTIFUL BOUQUET OF FLOWERS REED'S FLORISTS 28 SIMCOE NORTH "Over Fifty Years Growing With Oshawa" gratulations FIRST BABY DOWNTOWN OSHAWA 59,000 Bail The magistrate then ordered city police to take McLennan te. the bus terminal immediatdy and make sure he was put on a bus. LEVIES FINE "You seem to be prepared to do your utmost to ruin your life," commented Magistrate Dodds as he levied a fine of $50 and costs or 10 days on Sandra Tompkins, 17, of 319 Bloor St. E., when she plead- ed guilty to a repeat charge of minor consumption of alcohol, Crown Attorney Affleck des- cribed the girl, "she seems to be impervious to discipline, your worship."" PLEADS GUILTY A fine of $50 and costs or 20 days was levied on John Carr, 65, no fixed address, when he pleaded guilty to a charge of public intoxication. He had a record for the offence dat- ing back to 1949. TWO FINED Pleading guilty to charges of public intoxication brought fines of $25 and costs or five days for Charles Rupert, 41, of Have- lock, and Gerald C. Wilson, of Orangeville. INTOXICATION At the previous sitting of the City Court, a number of per- sons were convicted on charg: es of public intoxication. Ru- dolph Fiala, no fixed address, pleaded guilty to a charge of public intoxication and was fin- ed $50 and costs or 10 days. Pleading guilty to charges of |public intoxication and paying |fines of $25 and costs were the following: Joseph Fournier, 549 Albert St., Frank Mullin, 26, of 193 Bloor St. E., Guy Moore, 20, of 99 Emperor St., Ajax, Wayne Wilkins, 21, Walter Rupert 1574 Olive Ave., James |P. O'Toole, 59, of Lindsay, Rich- jard Cain, 920 Willowdale Ave., jand Ronald Trigg, 639 Brassy St. |MINOR z | Robin Forbes, 19, of Bowman- jville, pleaded guilty to & charge of minor purchase of alcohol and was fined $50 and costs or 10 days. Quake Rocks Italy Coast ROME (AP) -- A_ strong earthquake shook towns along 150 miles of Italy's upper Adriat- ic coast south of Venice before dawn today, alarming thou- sands of residents but causing only minor damage. The earth shocks, lasted up to 13 seconds, and registered up. to five degrees on the 10-degree Mercalli scale. Residents were awakened by trembling buildings in Venice, Padua, Ferrara, Bologna and Forli in a triangle extending al- most 60 miles inland. MA NS. T Old IV SYDNEY, N.S. (CI end of one era and | hing of another will t at the gates of the big here at about midn Year's Eve Walking out of the the eight-hour night sh about 300 men, the |} workers to put in a s| 67-year-old mill for tt ion Steel and Coal Cor Walking in will be t yard shift of about 300 men to work in the m hew provincial Crown tion set up to extend | the plant. 'It'll probably seen for a while," says Steele, Secretary-Trez Local 1064 of the Uni workers of America. ' hope 1968 is a little 'be 1967." A troubled year, m an announcement Oc Dosco that it was getti Sydney, will come to : the new Sydney Ste KSYSCO) takes over of the biggest single employer in Nova S¢ the backbone of the ec this city of 34,000. BOSSES STAY ON Dosco management on for a short time t the mill under the e; new corporation, he: Robert Burns Came year-old Nova Scotia alis: The new provincial tion was established un lation passed by an e! session of the legislatu this month, summone prove government tak the mill, The price tas yet been determined b cial estimates have } about $23,000,000 the ec mill, its equipment ane ry--such items as scr and iron ore, The agreement w: mered out by a commit ed by Premier G. I. Sr was told of the Dosco less than a month afte ceeded Robert Stanfi committee worked w sleep for 40 days befo1 the hard bargaining w: and its parent Hawker (Canada) 'Ltd. Although the agreem new life to the mill, \ and his committ' stressed that the arr to operate the mill months past the origin: date of next April 30 long-term solution. In a year-end stater day night, Mr. Smith | respite must not le: sense of urgency"' as | find new, independent continue. Congr To Os With our compliments Wishes we will give tl A BOUQU OF FLOW! Flowe 1188 SIMCOE SOUTH

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