Daily Times-Gazette, 16 Jun 1951, p. 3

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237 Oshawa Citizens Attended Blood Donors' Clinic | THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE Appreciation Is OSHAWA Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle- WHITBY Expressed For Co-operation While the number of blood donors who appeared at the mobile blood clinic of the Canadian Red Cross Society here on Thursday was not up to expectations, the number of 237 who attended the clinic and donated blood was considered very creditable, said William Duncan, chairman of the local blood donor committee today. The Red Cross staff who came here with the mobile clinic was well satisfied with the day's work, and particularly with the splendid arrangements made 'OSHAWA-WHITBY, SATURDAY, JUNE 16, 1951 Oshawa City Father Also Tops for Father's Day VOL. 10--No. 141 PAGE THREE Pickering Village Is Waiting Decision On Ajax Supplying Water Pickering--Residents of this com- munity are awaiting the outcome of a meeting with the Ontario Muni- cipal Board on June 18 which will decide whether they will get their water supply piped from "nearby Ajax or continue to draw it from wells. MUCH OPPOSITION Considerable opposition to the move to the development has been expressed by a group of landowners in the area. The supply agreement calls for planned development in the 2,100-acre strip between the two communities, forbidding building of retail and mercantile structures. Harry Arnold, a landowner in the area, complained that small busi- nessmen' are being discriminated against and that the green belt and water supply have no logical con- nection. : "It's hard on the small man who'd like to start a factory or small busi- ness in his back yard," Mr. Arnold said, "The existing businesses can't be enlarged and may have to close | up." n member of the planning board, Trustee C. M. Morley, denied the charge of discrimination, and said that the restrictions were "a logical development." PROMISING AREA "We consider the Ajax-Pickering area very promising for industrial development, and that residential development should be controlled. We don't want wildcat and hodge- podge building." Referring to the charges that the development would put the existing busine ses In the green belt, Mr. Morley said: "That is entirely in- correct. You can't go back and take | a man out of business. The Ontario Municipal Board would never per- mit it." Interest in the outcome of the Coming Events INTERNATIONAL TEA, WED- nesday, June 20; home of Dr. and Mrs. C. Kell, 54 Aberdeen Street, 3-6. (140c) ETRAWBERRY SUPPER GOLD- smiths farm, Thornton's Corners, June 26, 4-8, Centre St. United Church W.A., West Group. Price | B0c 25c. (Jel4,16,23) | SIMCOE CHURCH, 50-50 CLUB, | Strawberry Social at the home of | for a busy schedule of training. Recreation Leaders To Attend Camp On Sunday evening, June 24th, approximately 80 young people from Oshawa, Ajax and Whitby, inter- ested. in Recreation Leadership will board a bus for a week's Training Course at Cream of Barley Park in| Bowmanville. | The course is designed to give practical training to people who will | {be acting as Community Leaders land instructors during the summer | | months, and is particularly designed | [for playground supervisors, swim- | ming instructors and life-guards, | playground 'specialists, craft person- | nel and sports leaders. | | The instructional sessions will be lof three types -- (a) General sessions | | which all par must attend; | --1in sports, swimming, general p layground activities. Osh-|appear in the picture shown above. In the group, ticipants'at the camp | Alderman Cephas Gay is one of Oshawa's city fathers--and he also | Ruth, Ray, June (Mrs, Essex), Jean, Ted, Doreen (Mrs, Jeffries); middle (b), Specialist sessions | ranks as probably the outstanding father in the city. On Father's Day | row, left to right: Arliss, Velma (Mrs, Johnston), Earl, Alderman Cephas crafts and | he will receive loving greetings from his seventeen children, all of whom Gay, Mrs. Cephas Gay, George, Helen; at knee, David; standing in front, which was taken some | Gloria, Dianne, Linda, Audley and Ronnie. Alderman Gay, who is very (awa people at the camp will be allo- | time ago, is the whole Gay family, as follows: back row, left to right: active in ciyic affairs, is proud of his fine family of seventeen children. {cated to one of these divisions and | non-Oshawa people may select the | | division in which they wish to take {part, and (¢) Social sessions which | |all participants must attend. | | Instruction at the camp will be |provided by Recreation Leaders from Oshawa and Bowmanville, the {Community Programmes Branch of | the--Department..of Education and | | by visiting specialists. | The course will be severely prac- | [ tical and participants will be given | an opportunity to practice leader- | {ship skills. | | Accommodation for those attend- ling the camp is in cabins for three | or four persons to a cabin. Hot and | | cold running water will be very | | popular with those who attend as) showers will be very welcome after | a hot day in the sun. Meals will be provided and served | by the camp management. Meals | will be served on three shifts to accommodate the camp attender. | Visitors to the camp will not be | admitted 'except on Friday, June | 20th, between 8:30 and 10:30 p.m. | So the whole week will be set aside | In addition to the busy schedule during the day, those attending the camp will have a chance to witness a top notch lacrosse game between the 'South Area and the West Area, also a Pee Wee Baseball game. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Taylor, Cour- tice, Saturday, June 23, 3 to 5 pm. and 7 to 9 p.m. Children 35 cents, Adults 50 cents, (Jel6,20) TEA AND PARCEL POST SALE Tuesday, June 19 at home of Mrs. G. E. Ansley, Rossland Rd. W. given by Group No. 1, Simcoe United Church. Take Ross' Corners bus to Christie and Rossland Rd. W. All in all there will be a busy week at Cream of Barley Camp. meeting was heightened by the open- ing of Pickering's new high school | | next September. The school is at | present without any source of water (141a) | supply. REMEMBER YOUR DEPARTED LOVED ONES Decoration Day Service Sunday, June 24th, 1951 -- 3 p.m. UNION CEMETERY SPONSORED BY THE 1.0.O.F. {the report of the | lieve human Odd Fellow's Community Welfare Is Grand Lodge Prominent In Activity Opens Sunday gf Oshawa Rotary Club Toronto--One of Ontario's largest fraternal assemblies, the Indepen- dent Order of Odd Fellows and affiliated branches will begin a week-long session in Toronto Sun- day, June 17. More than 1,100 dele- gates from all sections of the prov- ince will meet at the Royal York Hotel to discuss business related to fraternal affairs and community service. One of the highlights of this year's session will be the 100th anniversary - of the founding of the Rebekah Assembly, a branch of Odd Fellowship. The centennial meeting, - with special empasis on the important part played by the Order, will attract more than 500 women delegates. Mrs. L. A. (Jean) | Burch of St. Catharines will pre- | side during the Rebekah sessions. | The Grand Lodge IOOF meetings will be presided over by Charles Hutcheson, London. Other branch- es of the order which' will meet during the week are Grand En- campment and Department Council of Patriarch Miltant, including 'the Ladies Auxiliary. The various branches will also elect officers for the coming year. Interest will be centered around IOOF Cancer, Poliomyelitis and Tuberculosis Fund, the Order's main branch of public service which, since 1947, has raised more than $300,000 which has been expenfled in the fight against disease and to re- suffering. Another project of the IOOF is their hos- pital bed program which is car- ried out in many of the cities, towns and villages in which lodges of the Order are located. The Or- der is also building a rehabilita- tion centre at the Gravenhurst Sanitarium. Ontario branches of the Odd Fellowship represent close to 65,- 000 members. Guest Odd Fellows from New- foundland, Ohio and Michigan, will attend the meetings which will open on Sunday evening with a service of song in the Concert Hall of the Royal York Hotel. Rev. David Gallagher will be the speak- er. Sessions will be formally opened Monday evening by Alderman Ar- thur Frost, who will extend a civic welcome on behalf of the City of Toronto. TRADERS' HEAD Montreal (CP) -- W. J. Collins has been elected president of the Quebec Radio Traders Association for the coming year. T.F. Mc- Govern was elected vice-president. The | Ontario Regiment All officers and all other ranks attending sum- mer camp 1951, will parade on Monday, 18 June, 1951 at 2000 hours. Information in revised unit training of interest to the above personnel and departure times will be detailed on this parade. DRESS: MUFTI Signed, : A. G. COULTER (Lt.-Col.), Commanding Officer, Ont. Reg't. | this> event & With the dates of Rotary Fair, {June 18 and 19, just around the | corner perhaps no more appropriate [time could be selected to remind {residents of the district of the work which the Oshawa Rotary Club is doing and the contribution it is making to a fuller community life. In addition to its great work of | rehabilitating crippled children, it | sponsors the, Oshawa (Chadburn) | Air Cadet Squadron, No. 151, which {bears the name of th te Lloyd | Chadburn, an Oshawa boy who gave { his life while serving with the Royal Canadian Air Force over Normandy | during World War 11, ORGANIZED BY ROTARY The service club was responsible for the organization of the squad- | {ron during the dark days of the] |war when all that. stood between | | Hitler's hordes and victory was the | | air force made up of gallant British and Canadian boys. A number of the members of the squadron dis- tinguished themselves by winning their wings. With the return of peace the { squadron, though less in numbers, | has continued its activities and has been the means of further knowl- | edge in the aeronautical with the | result that some of the boys have | learned useful trades, Perhaps more | important, however, has been the | part the squadron has played in the | development of good citizens | through the provision of training in discipline and wholesome recreation and work periods which: tend to | drain off the exuberance which in | [youth might lead into difficulties if not properly controlled. HALLOWE'EN PARTY Last Hallowe'en the Youth Com- mittee of the Rotary Club sponsor- | ed a mammoth party in the Oshawa | Armories which was attended by | hundreds of the children of the city. At the party games were play- | ed and entertainment provided which helped to keep the children | out of the rush of traffic and out! of mischief. As a result the night was one of the quietest on record in the community and vandalism reached a new low. . CIVIC DINNER Standing high among the club's community projects is the dinner at which members of the Oshawa and East Whitby Township Councils, to- gether with the heads of their civic departments and board members are guests of honor. Sponsored by the club's Civic Affairs Committee, the dinner, which is held soon after the civic elections, is in the nature of a tribute to the men and women who give so unstintingly of their time and effort to the advancement of the communities they serve. It has been the custom to bring to Oshawa for these dinners, mem- bers of the Ontario cabinet or the | heads of government departments | |so that a better understanding of | civic government will result. It has! {been the: good fortune of the club | | to secure outstanding speakers for ! which has grown | in | popularity with the passing years. In addition to raising money for its own purposes it has been the policy of the Rotary Club to spon- sor events for the cultural advance- ment of the community. This past winter it was co-sponsor with the Community Recreation Association of a play in the OCVI auditorium which was' produced under the di- rection of a professional director. In the entertainment field the service club has always been to the fore. Last fall it sponsored the visit (to the city of the Hollywood Hell Drivers, a troupe of death-defying drivers who drew near capacity crowds to Alexandra Park with their feats of daring. ROTARY PARK AND HALL | "Many residents of Oshews will of \ 4 | superintendent Old Friends 'Have Reunion After 54 Yrs. A happy reunion was held | in| classmates in an English school | saw each other for the first time in 54 years. Mr. and Mrs. Michael | time. Eastbound, it will leave Tor-|Danforth. The new train will not | | Bouckley, 17 King Street West, onto at 10.15 am. Daylight time, stop at Oshawa. | went from Oshawa to meet Thomas | Willgoose and Herbert Worley both | of whom live in St. Thomas. The last time they saw their | two friends was on the streets of | Wigan, Lancashire, when they were | | all young school children. Now Mr. | Bouckley is 71 years old and the two other gentlemen are 70 years | of age. | "Both Thomas Willgoose and | Herbert Worley came to St. Thomas | {in 1904 and I came to Oshawa in| | 1906 but although we have lived | s0 close together we have just| each other," Mr. Bouck- | never seen ley said. | Memories of schoolboy capers | were recalled and the days when | they were together as a gang were | relived, | "Like all kids, we were in a lot of devilment and had a lot to remember," said Mr. Bouckley with | a chuckle. | Gifts Presented | To Teacher At Harmony School MRS. K. R. FLETCHER Correspendent Harmony--Miss Dorothy Gifford, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Lloyd Gif- ford, for many years a teacher in the Primary Department of Harm- ony Sunday School, was the recipi- | ent of some lovely gifts last Satur- | day. The occasion was the annual | picnic, and good wishes were ex- | tended to her on her coming mar- | riage, from those present. | n behalf of the Primary De- | partment, Mrs. C. E. Nichols, the | superintendent read an address ex- pressing their congratulations and a sense of real loss, while Mrs. Chris Willoughby presented Miss Gifford with a lovely cup and saucer. The senior Sunday School also conveyed their appreciation of the part she | had played in the life of the Sun- | day School, in an address read by | Mr, Percy Allman, chairman of the Advisory Board, while Mr, R. Moon, | of the Sunday School presented her with a table | lamp. ' | remember that it was the Oshawa Rotary Club which developed Ro- | tary Park, the beautifully shaded area on Centre Street South. It. secured from General Motors a building which is now Rotary Hall and constructed the swimming pool which is such a popular spot for old and young during the summer months, 7 During the past year, under the direction of Rotarian William H. Karn, Rotary Hall was completely | renovated and painted from top to | bottom and today stands as a credit to the service club. In the pleasant | | surroundings provided by the build- ing the Oshawa (Chadburn) Sea | Cadet Squadron holds its weekly drill sessions. The building is also | used by the club as a place of meet- |ing for club councils and the board J ' ™ New Fast Train On CNR Will Not Stop Here Canada's newest name train, The Lakeshore Express, will be intro- duced to the travelling public on June 24, A. A. Gardiner, General Passenger Traffic Manager, Cana- dian National Railways, announced from Montreal today, Designed for fast summer-time travel, the new train will operate 8s a daily pool service in both di- rections between Montreal and To- ronto from June 24 to September 29, inclusive. Its travelling time has been set at six hours and 55 min- utes, Westbound, the Lakeshore 9.20 am. Daylight time, and arrive at Toronto at 415 pm. Daylight Ex- | St, Thomas last week when old Press will leave Central Station at by the local unit of the Society. A special word of appreciation o was expressed by Mr. Duncan to the officers of Temple Buildings, Ltd, who kindly donated the use of the Masonic Temple building free of charge for the clinic. Vis- iting Red Cross workers who had charge of the clinic operations on Thursday were loud in their praise of the facilities wnich had been provided in Oshawa. They said they were the best which they had found as yet in the itinerary of the mobile clinic. The Oshawa Branch of the Cana- dian Red Cross Society is grateful to the 237 citizens who came to the clinic for their co-operation. Al- though the objective set by Oshawa has not been reached, the response to Thursday's clinic was very grati- fying. The hope was expressed, however, that before the clinic makes its next visit here on Thurs- day, July 12, many more citizens will have volunteered as blood do- nors. The following is the complete list of Oshawa citizens who came | forward as blood donors on Thurs- day. G. H. Atha, Mrs. Helen Ayres, Mrs. Irene Adams, H. Alexander, L. J. Arp, E. Adams, J. Ashby, H. C. Andrews. Mrs. Dorothy Bradley, R. W. Bassett, Geo. Black, J. H. Belling- | ham, Mrs. Elsie Bryck, Zella Bur- | gess, Wm. Bueke, Mrs. L. Bryant, | Mrs. E. F. Bourne, J. W. Bonnetta, Mrs. Mary Brown, Mrs. Ida Barry, Irene Boes, R. Burr, Maureen Brown, W. J. Bryan, Mrs. E. and arrive in Montreal at 5.10 p.m. | Daylight time. Two modern parlof-compart- | ment cars, the Lake Couchiching and Lake Makamik, have been as- | signed to this service, as well as the | latest type air-conditioned coaches | with sleepy-hollow seats. Dining | car service also will be provided on | the new trains, o En route between the two cities, the Lakeshore Express has been scheduled to stop at Cornwall, Buchanan, K. Buffham, D. Bright, Reg. Burr, G. J. Brown' D. E. Clarke, Mrs. T. Collins, Mrs, W. R. Chapman, G. Coulter, @G. Clysdale, A. E, Cox, Mrs. D. Cole- man, Mrs. M. Campbell, Nick Coty, C. L. Cousins, W. G. Candy, A. Cocker, L. J. Curran, J. E H, Clough, L. J. Commelly, Jean B, Cameron, Elizabeth M. Clayton. M. Dale, Mrs. Mary Dick, E Drinkle, F. A. Densham, W, E, Dy- er, K. F. Dell, R. L. Dawson, P, Donnelly. Mrs. A. Etchells, R. A. Edwards. Mrs. A, Fowler, H. Ford, Mrs. M. French, O. Fallis, W. Forrest. Olga Greenwood, Ray George, E, K. Goodman, Mrs. H. R. Gilchrist, A. A. Gillespie, W. H. Gibbie, T. H, Grant, C. Game, Mrs. May Glover, K. Hejna, J. L. Haigh, D. Hall, Mrs. Dorothy Harrington, R. Hall, Mrs, Edith Holdaway, Frank Harris, A. 8. Hill, Betty Helliwell, Clarke Hubbell, M. G. Hart, M. M. Hood, W. R. Howarth, C. J. Hagerty, Jean Hawkins, R. Holliday, C. Hayes, R. G. Harding, J. Hedger, E. Hoy, Mrs. Edna Huband, R. N. Heard, A. W. Harmer, Mrs. Marion Hall, J. A. Huband, Mrs. W. Harding. R. Jarman, Mrs, J. B. Jackson, R. Jeyes, J. B. Jackson, Bessie Judd, W. C. Judd. M. Kellar, H. Knight, Paul Kennedy, Alison Knauff. P. Levine, J. Lezun, Mrs. Elaine Lowak, E. J. Logeman, Laura La- Plante, Mrs. Eva Langfield, G. Larocque, S. Loscomne, A. V. Lar- way, W. Legge, G. Leaming, Mrs. C. Leddy. S. Mans, K. Madujski, L. Me- Govern, C. Miller, G. Morey, Mrs. S. McConnell, Mrs. Dorothy Maple- beck, D. McCann, P. E. Martin, J. McCoemick, K, McFadyen, E. Mon petite, W. Monpetite, E. A. Middle- mass, Elda Mountjoy, A. Moore, Mrs. Violet Mills, Mrs. G. Miller, G. Murless, Mrs. Lorraine Morgan, F. McMahon, J. Motby, Mrs. Winni- fred Mark, W, E. Marquette, Miss Mary Marchand, Miss Mary Mac- w, | Brockville, Kingston, Belleville, and ---- BLOOD DONORS (Continued on page 5) Retail, Who HELP F DO NOT CROSS THE PICKET LINE. STRI Some 45 employees of the Oshawa Dairy are .on strike for a 40-hour week and union security. The employees are members of Local 561, lesale and Departmental Store Union (C.1.0.-C.C.L.) which is an affiliate of the Osh- awa and District Labor Council. Until a satisfactory settlement is reached, we urge Oshawa unionists to buy their milk and milk products elsewhere. In addition all labor men are urged to help picket the Oshawa Dairy and thus show their solidarity with the strikers. it feels the settlement. ED. CLINE President * Local 561 regrets if the strike may have in- convenienced the dairy's customers. However, because they refused to negotiate an adequate Oshawa & District Labor Council responsibility is the management's 1 (C.C.L) M. J. FENWICK Secretary-Treasurer

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