Daily Times-Gazette, 19 May 1955, p. 2

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

evs IaNS EE Lh cd Mh £ THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Thursday, May », 195% BIRTHS BIRD ~ To Dr, and Mrs, Grant § Bird (Barbara McLarty), & daughter, on Tuesday, May 17, 1995 at Roches ter, Minnesota DEATHS MAGALUSHEN Entered into rest in the Oshawa General Hospital on Tuesday, May 17, 1955. Nastia (Nel He ) Moroz widow of the late Matwy (Mike) Magalushen, in her 720d year. Resting at the Armstrong Funeral Home, Oshawa with service in St, John's Orthodox Church, Saturdey, May 21, st 9.30 a.m. Interment Oshawa Un- ion Cemetery PURVES -- In Oshawa Hospital, on Tuesday, May 17, 1955, Paul Grant Purves, of Columbus, Ont, dearly beloved husband of Marion Jean Gre gory and brother of Mrs. R. A. Son. ley (Annie), of Marwayne, Alis., and the late Mrs, Dr. R, T. Maclaren (Hilda) of Whithy, Funeral from al Home, Oshaws, on Friday, May 20, #t 2.30 p.m. interment Union Cemetery, Oshawa, Masonic Service, Thursday, May 19 at 7.30 p.m, THOMAN--At Oshawa, Ontario, on Wed nesday, May 18, 1965, Isabella Pres ton Thoman, aged #7 years Resting at the Morris Funeral Chapel, Bowmanville, Service in the chapel on Saturday, at 3.30 p.m. Interment Osh awa Union Cemetery, in his 67th year. | Luke Mcintosh Funer- | "~ 1 Ea | 'Is Remanded % For Sentence A man who told the court he {had spent close to 23 years in | Jail, William Ksowell of Oshawa | and Sudbury, was today remanded | | for one week for sentence by Mag- istrate ¥, 8. Ebbs on a charge of false pretences, Knowell plead- ed guilty, The accused purchased a car from the Ontario Motor Sales car, lot on New Year's Eve und gave a Jhonsy cheque in payment. The | price was $1,675. The salesman checked with the law office of A. W, 8, Greer, QC, dnd with the manager of the and got the! go ahead for the sale. When the cheque was presented for pay- ment it was discovered there were no funds, | OSHAWA AND DISTRICT FREE ON BAIL { After being remanded 10 times | | since November 6, 1954, Gus Knut- | {son, Spadina road, Toronto, was | 2 Biv i IN MEMORIAM w In loving memory of a dear mother Amelia' Cooke, who passed away May 19, 1953, Peacefully sleeving resting at The world, weary troubles and trials COOKE are * past In silence she sulfered, in patience she | Magistrate F¥. 8, bore God no more ~ Daughters, ™ called her home fo suffer Isabella and Jeannetle, CROWELLS In oving memory of our darling infant son William Andrew Frederick Crowells, who passed away, May, 10th, 1954 A bud the gardener gave us, A pure and lovely child He gave il to our keeping, To cherish undefiled, And Just as it was opening, To fhe glory of the day, | Down came the Heavenly Father, and | took our bud away «Sadly missed by mommy and daddy. ! | { CHOWELLS In loving memory of our first and only darling grandson and | nephew, William Andrew Frederick | Crowells, who passed away May 19th, aged 6 months, 17 days. | He was only a little white rosebud, | A sweet little flower from birth, | God took him home to Heaven, | Before he was soiled on earth, | Too dearly loved to be forgotten, grand ma and grandpa Ellegett, uncles Bud | and Billy, | BANDERS -- In loving memory of ou Witle daughter, Sandra Gale Sanders, [Of drivin suddenly, 8 years | fined $1 1047 at the ase of | Magistrate F recommended that his licence be suspended for six months, | was originally charged with drunk driving, who passed away ago, May 10th 5 years and 8 months We think of you each passing day, And seem fo feel you near, The memories you left behind, Will live forever dear, Your loving ways, your sweet smile . There never can be any, wp fill the place within. our hearts, . hat belongs to you dear Sandy y-Lovingly remembered by addy, brothers and sisters { wee | t IWAGSTANS who pass | May 19, 1953 Always remembered by daughter He | Ben, Ron and family Tast. | | Thursday remanded until June 20,] | by Magistrate ¥'. 8. Ebbs, Knut-| son is charged with car theft and| receiving. He is free on $5,000 bail { WITHDREW CHARGE A charge of vagrancy against! | Carl Wallace, 184 Windsor street | west, was withdrawn Thursday by Ebbs in police OLC May Queen Lois Billet | lowed the 'Grand March out of presides over her court in the | the College building, and onto College grounds during the May | the lawn, where she was crown. Day celebrations, The Queen ed, and then took up her posi. escorted by her courtiers, fol tion on the stage, from which | court, THREE FREED Three separate charges of vag. rancy against Colin Wilson, 375 Gibbon street, James Gushue, 149 | Albert street, and Willlam Piper 61 Bertha street, Toronto, all 2, | was dismissed by Magistrate F, §, ih Ebbs in police court Thursday. All| 7 Ne 2 three pleaded not guilty, Police | HP is) 2% said the three were picked up on| May 18 in the alley behind Collis' | Furniture store, Magistrate Ebbs said he was giving the accused the | benefit of the doubt Impaired Driver | Fined $100, Costs Cameron Lloyd Butler, 24, 491 Simcoe street north, was convict-| ¢ | ed, Thursday, on a reduced charge while impaired. He was and costs or 10 days by 8. Ebbs and it was Butler Police arrested the accused after | he was observed driving north on| Simcoe street at speeds up to 60, niles an hour. When he was stop. mommy, | Ped police arrested him and charg- ed him with drunk driving. A medical examination showed he accused was not drunk, He was In loving memory of a. ny "y " | BF dear (nther John Wagstaff, convicted on the reduced charge | ed away BUSINESS TRANSFER | SUNDERLAND -- A business | t ed In the When Wilmot J, Campbell sold his tion of some note transpir- village of Sunderland CROWNING OF MAY QUEEN ivestock trucking business to Roe May Queen for 1955 at Ontario | day. Performing the ceremony OBITUARIES , FUNERAL OF JOSEPH ST. The funeral--service for Joseph bert Umphrey. Mr. Campbell has| Ladies' ANDREWS conducted the business in the Sun. | College, Lois Billet, | 18 (left) Mrs. Walter Elliott, of from Hi ghland Creek, Is seen Stirling, Ont, and attending R hy 18 the Queen are her Counsellors, here during the crowning cere. QUEEN OF THE MAY AND HER COURT AT OLC argnts' fam, | the "spot, 0 PERFORM MAYPOLE DANCE AT MAY COURT Terminating a display of bal- let dancing, folk dancing, and physical culture, the students of for 1055, which took place the College and on the College Grade XII performed the tradi- lawn yesterday afternoon, tional Maypole Dance, This con- cluded the May Day celebrations Boegel, at the right, The Queen's attendants shown here are, Patricia Frenette, Patsy Lin- | she viewed the afternoon's activ. | ities. To the left of the picture is Joanne Strowger, Whithy, one | of the Queen's Councillors, the | sell, Elizabeth Lowes, Nancy | Queen herself in the centre, and | Russell, Geraldine Grosart, and Sandra | Susan Read, her other Counsellor, Crown Queen Of May At May Court Festival AtOLC One of the major events of the| Elliott remarked, "What a won- school year at the Ontario Ladies' | derful group ol dougtiers: ut, lle : al so, wha wonderful grou College, Whitby, was yesterday | oii one" This is your A witnessed by a large crowd of (tp ghow her what you can do, relatives and friends of the stu- Never let her down, never break dent body. The event was the May | her dream, Wille mothers Jhay be Court. Festival. t wonderful, they are not quite g fours Festival, the Zuni spring enough, We should follow in the is honored, crowned and feted by steps of Jesus Christ, We should her fellow-students, Fair weather | D¢ Petter than our mothers for we also blessed the new Queen and had their shoulders to stand on, seating capacity of the large audi-| Mrs. Osborne, wife of the prin- torium was taxed to handle the | ¢ipal, p=esented the Bible to the crowds of guests who attended. | May Queen, Lois Billet, of High- President of the Board of Direc. | land Creek, and the program in tors of the OLC, Thomas G. Rog-| the concert hall concluded with ers, mcted as chairman for the | the college song. Program , the Soncent hall of the LAWN PROGRAM 'ollege. Following the entrance| Attracting even greater atten of the May Queen and her atten-| tion from fine OE a dants, Dr, 8, L. Osborne, principal | festival was the program on the of the College, conducted the|lawn which followed. The events choir in "I Know a Bank", "The | led off with a grand march to the Gardener and 'Madrigal', lawn during which the coronation The address of the afternoon | of the May Queen was performed was delivered by Mrs. Walter El-' by Mrs. Elliott. The May Queen's liott, of Stirling, who spoke on|pin was presented by Miss Vir 'Whither Thou Goest", She began | ginia Todd, May Queen in 1054, her address by recalling an inci-| Mrs. McQuaig, representing Sen- dent in her childhood when she|ior Castle Chapter, pr ted the had attempted (0 venture to a|pin to the May Queen of 1954 and particularly entic t on her|pins for the two counse y reached | Joanne Strowger, of Whitby, 'alled, she had | Sandra Boegel, of Kitchener, were stumbld Ink' a watering trough, | presented by Miss Donna Warm. She had never reached the spot, she sald, but had learned that "it matters not if we do not reach By RON EVANS Canadian Press Staff Writer | LONDON (CP) - Britain's gen eral election May 26 will cost about £11,000,000 ~= roughly eight shil- lings a vote, That's the total amount likely fo be spent by candidates, by returning officers and on the electoral record, These are direct costs; nobody knows how much is laid out on indirect expenses, such as the cost of nursing party prestige between elections, ' The smallest amount is spent by the Aspiring candidates, chiefly because their campaign expenses are strictly limited by law, 'Under the 1949 Representation of the People Act, a candidate must make a full return of expenses within 35 days of the | election, No candidate may spend {more than £450 plus a small allowance - for each entry In his constituency register for a county seat and 1%d for an urban seat, In all but 156 of the 630 con- stituencies, the maximum amounts to less than £1,000, LOWEST LIMITS The lowest legal limits are set in Northern Ireland, where can- didates are allowed 2d a ead for voters, Belfast East must be fought on a thrifty £513, p om to between £70 and £1,000, In the 1051 cam yA candidates spent £46,000 and 1,868 shelled out £1,170,124 In 1980. 'Of The biggest part of this--£589, 887 altogether in 1951---goes for printing: stationery, posters, ad- dresses and manifestos, Pring costs have climbed about per inger, There then followed exercises by the student bedy in honor of the with her Limit Expenses British Election | THOMSON, KERNAGHAN SURVEY BALL PROBLEMS NEW YORK (AP) -- Commis sioher Ford Frick made known Tuesday he had hired a group of experienced analysts to make a thorough survey of baseball's cu sn on wih he "keeping up w getting our house in order." a The assignment en search firm, the ~ being sent singly to whole house- holds instead of one to a voter, The treasury manages to defray a bit of this expense with for. feited deposits, In the three post- war elections these have cost the Communists £17,850, All parties spend less on their campaigns these days, Between 1950 and 1951, the Socialists pared £36 a candidate off their expenses and jhe Conservatives cut £4, Labor gets the best dividends on PESHAWAR, Pi (CP)wr its investment, with one vote for |Four Indonesian for ' every 8% laid out, The Tories |pected here for ; spend 10d a vote, the Liberals 1s enmmunity devi to under the 9%d and the Communists as much anized by as six shillings, Pakistan, The tri Strangely enough, the cheapest campaigns in 1951 were wa hx sat Ssvernment the most frivolous candidat j | embo_plan, Brownrigg, a 54-year-old farmer, Oshawa ~ dis spent just £1 r fully in Penrith, Cumberland, on a ® Monuments @ NO. 2 HIGHWAY latform a "legalized cock-fight- £ OF CITY LIMITS ng, sweepstakes, cardplaying and gambling." Albert Pickard, 77, who described himself as an "independent millionaire candi date," contested the Glasgow Maryhill ening =ithrnt success on a total outlay of £11, The Investment Dealers Association of Conede a "i & CO. in 16 KING ST, W., OSHAWA derland area for some 25 years, St. Andrews, 48 Jones avenue, -- who died at the Oshawa General Hospital on Monday, May 16, was held at the Luke-McIntosh Funeral Rev. H. D. Cleverdon, rector of Christ Memorial Anglican Church, conducted the services. Interment was in the Oshawa Union Ceme- tery The pallbearers were William snd David St. Andrews, Don Ri chardson, Fred Andrews, Horace Little and Roy Nesbitt MRS, C. BARCLAY On Thursday, May 12 Charles A. Barclay well-known and highly respected resident on the 7th concession of Pickering, | passed away in her 85th year, Born at Brougham, the daugh-| ter of the late Mr, and Mrs, Sam- | uel Stevenson, Mrs. Barclay was a | lifelong resident in the district with the exception of a few years in Toronto, Her husband predeceas- ed her in March, 1926 The late Mrs. Barclay was an ardent church worker, In her| younger years she was the organ- ist in St. John's United Church, Brougham and was made a life member of the Women's Mission. ary Society She leaves to mourn her pass. | ing three sons, Dr. Lyman T. Bar. | clay of Toronto, Harold and ¥ ra nk near Claremont and 3! daughters, Mrs. J. L. Haywood | of Dunnville, Mrs. Lawrence Goad | and Miss Helen Barclay, R.N., of | Toronto | The funeral service was held at | her late residence on Saturday af-| ternoon, conducted by Rev. H.| Lackey with Interment in Claremont Union Cemetery TRAFFIC RECORD TODAY Mrs. | Accidents Injured THIS YEAR Accidents Injured Killed Convict Driver Joy Riding After having a charge of theft | against him withdrawn, Ronald | Earl Munro, 17, Willlam street west, was convicted on a charge of joy riding and placed on two | years suspended sentence. The ac: | cused denied the first charge when lie appeared before Magistrate | F. §. Ebbs Evidence was that a motorcycle owned hy Fred Sprager and went to Cobourg Munro had told Sprager he would buy the bike but he had to see his partner in Sterling first, The accused took the bike during the evening of May 11 and got as far as Cobourg In a statement to police Munro sald he was going to get the money at Sterling to buy the bike, The | The price was $80, | Terry Kei defence counsel, | made a motion that the charge Munro took | should have been "taking without | -- consent." The court relaid the in formation under the Home at 3.30 p.m. on Wednesday. | saction, The defence then pleaded guilty | Sandra Boegel of Kitchener, mony which took place yesters and YOUTH GATHERING | OSLO (CP) --- Some 2,000 youth | hostel organization members from 30 countries will attend an inter- Joy Riding way BONELESS Ib. 67¢ Ib, T9¢ End Culs Centre AM Lean, Peameal COTTAGE _ ROLLS! 43 Ib. (6-7 mil PRIME RIB STEAK or ROAST in. 50. CLOSED ALL DAY MON., MAY 23rd BONELESS ROLLED TENDER WING national rally here Aug. 11-14, The Youth Hostel Association in Nor: | active. members our destination, the obstacles are May. Queen who sat more important for they develop ia counsellors and attendants in a our character, broaden our per-| bower at the south border of the sonality, | lawn to watch, These exercises Joanne Strowger, Whitby. cent since the last election and For Intormation Resident Mor, ERIC R. HENRY party workers now are trying to trim printing orders. Election DIAL RA 5-1104 Turning her attention directly to | concluded with the Maypole Dance alone has more than 19,000 the class of girls before her, Mrs, | by the students of Grade XII, TY BREAKFAST BACON (1 Ib. Cello Pkgs.) \ 2 Ibs. SKINLESS WIENERS addresses; for instance, regarded by most agents as a must, are ...at BUEHLER'S LOIN & RIB VEAL CHOPS I, 49- LEG-RUMP AND SIRLOIN VEAL ROASTS -- SLICED BOLOGNA Regular -- Smoked b. 49- i = phan 3 Shoulder » 3 4 ¥ ow 29° FRESH GROUND HAMS Minced Beef 4 .-1.00 vEAL caorss. 9 Shank End Ih. 49¢ Bult End Ib. 556¢ FRESH MADE COUNTRY STYLE 12 KING ST. E. SAUSAGE § 1.00 VEAL STEW (Bone In) 5700 For the holiday weekend we have a good selection of ® Eviscerated Turkeys ® Ducks ® Chickens : ® Pineapple Hams, ® Regular Smoked Hams ® Boneless Hams .

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy