Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 2 Apr 1956, p. 3

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VALUABLE COLLECTION OF SALT, PEPPER SHAKERS Oshawa Woman Has Rare Hobby AMAZED. 1 reaction of collect stamps, some have been known to collect beer bottle labels, but an Oshawa woman has started a new hobby collecting salt and pepper shakers She is Mrs. J. L. McCabe of 66 Farewell street, Oshawa. Mrs. McCabe has more than 125 'china salt and pepper shakers, a collection valued at several hun- dred dollars The collection has been gathered together from many parts of the world, all provinces of Canada and many states of America Many people PEOPLE seeing Mrs the same, "Why, be per Which Who mother pouch? But that is no more ice I never so many different salt and pep shakers isn't would salt and pepper kangaroo and apple pie and big rabbit or the with hard think eof most knew to cream people McCabe's collection i there believe making set from a model joey in her odd than the set, the detachable daschaund with 4 could PUC Gives Background On City Fluoridation Socially, as in most other ways, Canadian Press Staff Writer Fogo is typical of the 1,300 settle FOGO, Nfld, (CP)--The winter- ments around the time existence of happy Fogo folk coast. It has about has changed in no real way since the first settlers came here to fish 300 years ago. Fogo dreams under the guard of a great granite mound called Brimstone head, and craggy, en circling hills. Salt ice-scum slith- ers with the tide under the bridge that divides the town and joins | Fogo head with the 100-square miles of Fogo island, off the north shoulder of Newfoundland from the bridge fish- are drawn above the tideline at the harbor's edge Above them on the rocky shore perch fish stages and square little houses HARNESS The glazed By GERALD FREEMAN some. There altogether Tilting, Seldom smaller than about 5,000 people Fogo Island in Fogo, Batt's Arm, Barr'd Island, Come-By, Little Seldom, Cove, Cape Cove, Shoal Bay, land Harbor, Stag Harbor Hare Bay Seldom-Come-By was an of 'St dor John's going to the fishery before it dwindled, Now they seldom come by at all In the spring and fall Fog § husky young men work in lumber and construction camps. In sum- mer they harvest codfish dry on the flakes enough to go awa make fishing a year-round job Work becomes scarce in parts of the province in | cast Eastward ing boats BELL! and spread it streets of Fogo town echo merrily in the early morning to the clash of bells on the cbllars of wiry little Newfoundland ponies being driven to the woodlots They return at noon or in evening, with firewood, horse and cutter plodding along together though in conversation A morning's work can sleigh with the scrubby grows near the town. But stands of spruce are eight to 10 miles away across the barren face of the island. It means a full day's work continues on the months the way their as cestors did--with the modern sistance of unemployment insur ance benefits. Arthur Gill, manager the two companies that buy alt fish and sell provisions, people are happy here wouldn't leave at all if they wood- a few a fill a fir that alt Wild Is- and im- portant port of call for vessels out Labra- return to help old men to But nobody hale to other winter, and men with roots going back 20 the staked sled piled high generations come home to spend an- as- of one of dry says They had iv. Fogo Folk Change Little During Three Centuries everything movable the plane provides a chance for travel and Newfoundignd serves as an ambulance in regu- 1,400 people and is larger than most outports, are hospital on Joe lar or special flights Fogo has a doctor and a cottage now. A dentist makes periodic visits. Otherwise Fogo has made few concessions to the 20th century. | Only 'a few houses have electricity ~for light but not appliances-- from their own generators. Plumb- ing, if it exists, is rudimentary, The only telephone at Fogo is at the telegraph office, connected to mainland Newfoundland. There are battery radios, no television, | Cash from outside jobs, unem- ployment cheques, family allow- ances, and old age pensions have brought a few small stores, buf . most trading is done through the two fish merchants, who still carry families on credit if times are hard Merchants' premises are a maze of buildings including fish packing shops, a general store, and ware- houses. The year's supplies come in between August and December, and there is practically nothing that cannot be found on the shelves RCMP Constable Howard Dur- nan who polices the surrounding islands and the mainland shore from headquarters here, says there's next to nothing in the way of actual crime in Fogo. *'But," +11 Council Gave Approval On February 11, 1952 The addition of fluoride to Osh- awa's water supply was approved by the city council on February 11, 1952 This s stated today by Pub- lic Utilities Commission general manager George F. Shreve. The matter of fluoridation came under discussion at the UC meeting last week, he said. Mr. Shreve explained that, the PUC carried out plans for addi- tion or fluoride to the water only on approval of the Oshawa Board of Health, city council, provincial department of health, At its meeting on February 11,! 1952, council approved the recom- mendation of the board of health for fluoridation of the water sup- ply and expenditure of $3570 for nine months supply of fluoride, STARTED IN 1948 Mr. Shreve said that the issue of fluoridation was initiated in 1948 by the board of health At that time, the provincial au- thorities luding Dr. A, E. Ber. ry, urged.a cautious approach to the subjecis said Mr. Shreve During 1951 support for fluorida- tion came from in the form of motions from the Oshawa Dental Association and the Medical Staff of the Oshawa General Hospital. and the| In the previous year Ald. Finlay Dafoe and Ald. E. Bateman were appointed by council to investi- gate the question, Subsequently a committee was appointed to proceed with the add- ition of fluoride. The committee consisted of Dr. H. B. James, board of health chairman, Dr. A. F. Mackay, MOH, ard G. F. Shreve. On February 19, 1952, Dr, Berry gave tacit approval to the scheme and in a letter to Mr. Shreve term- ed it a "gratifying" development. FJuoride was added to the water in late 1952. It was not till it had been added for some time that the change was given full publicity. The legality of the power of the city to add fluoride to the water supply is now in doubt, following a Court of Appeal ruling for the metropolitan Toronto area. WANT PLEBISCITE Ald. C. Thomas has suggested that a plebiscite be held to de- cide the matter locally Mayor W. John Naylor has ex- pressed concern at the doubtful legality of the Oshawa policy and wants a "legal basis' for the proj- ect Letters containing the above in- formation were tabled before the 'PUC last week. Heart ARilment Takes Life FASCINATING long It represents one of fascinating collections ware in Oshawa. Mrs. McCabe he grins, 'we usually manage to have something for the magis trate." The official makes the round of the islands by boat in summer There is little for the men of Fogo to chop their a chance to make a decent living wood and make the return trip. here.' The softwood poles are stacked A fisherman may make only like teepees to dry in the back $500, rarely more than $1,000 for yards of Fogo's flat-roofed homes. his year's work. He can pick up a "ogo people are staunch church- bit of extra cash during the goers. They are members of An- winter by knitting cod traps out glican, United Church or Roman of twine and soaking them in a Catholic congregations. Church so- bark brew as a preservative cial and card parties provide Most company employees get sation and occasionally movies $900 during the eight months of shown. But when there's noth- the year they work, and receive doing in the church halls the unemployment insurance during flock to homes of neighbors the other months playing, singing, or old The main change in wintertime If the northern iceland drifting hfests Fogo from a century ago is the with the Labrador current misses DRY IVITIES mail plane, which usually arrives Fogo it usually passes harmlessly Their festivities are usually dry. oftener than its once-a-week sched- out to sea. But if a corner of the Of CCF's ].W. Noseworthy OTTAWA Joseph w Noseworthy, was in turn a woodsman, miner, miss i onary carpenter, teacher and member of Parliament, died Saturday of a re- curring heart ailment complicated by pneumonia, He was 67 The CCF member of the Com- mons: for the Ontario constituency of York South entered hospital here last January for a few days after a heart attack. He returned briefly to his parliomentary seat a and early last week re-entered hos- pital, where he died The son of a fisherman, at one end and pepper at the other There is a small hat stand with two hats as shakers, The base of collecting the stand carries tooth picks. There about four years when her is a toad and toadstool and husband presented her with a cute sets made in the shape of washing salt and pepper set in the shape machines, petrol bowsers, brown of turkeys jugs, beehives, toaster with toast Since then the collection has mouse with cheese, a clown on a grown steadily and gifts to Mrs, drum, and kitten with a milk bot McCabe on her birthday, wedding anniversary, at Christmas and other occasions are usually salt and pepper shakers. . The collection is now growing at the rate of about six sets a month More than half the existing col- lection has been given to her by the of most china (CP) who preaching, performing marriages and giving aid to the sick. HARD WAY UP He arrived penniless in Toronto in 1910. The next day he got a job as a carpenter and worked his way through Albert College at Belleville, the University of To- ronto and the Ontario College of Education, For two summers he worked as miner near Timmins, teaching by night at Frontier College and preaching on Sundays. He later taught at North Toronto Collegiate and Vaughan Road Collegiate, He was married and had three children. Funeral services will be {held in Toronto Tuesday at Forest Hill United Church. began ago, set in the way of competitive sporis; But Fogo dwel- fers are keen bird hunters, and make hazardous expeditions on foot to hunt seals when ice jams the harbor in spring Fogo island is blamed for ice moving in on Bonavista, Trinity and Conception bays farther south are ing people for card fashion tle MANY REPLACES Every common piece of fruit and vegetable has been reproduced as shakers, and most of the circu animals There monkeys ducks, are elephants, bears, pigs, cats, deer, Mr. L. McCABE OWNED BY MRS. J. Deceased Members Department and answer- fires in the col In her more OFFERED WIFU CONTRACT VANCOUVER (CP) George Stulac, high-scoring forward on the Ontario Nortowns basketball bomber cent- ocean [from a jet ral Pacific over near de who Mr. the Mr, solo also at Association : 3 gE | meeting at 5 & 5 ; | eek me I . ae x £3 3 Ro i v oe 1 1 SE 3 at ates for Lib- HB 8 3 3 43 i | the On 4 k 3 3 3% EEN 5 Har- speakers |then gritted: "It tastes like io- 1g will be ; Y wd N dine." Ss NE Hl De i 3 5 i 3 | Mr. Massey, beginning the third 1d in Whitby 4 : a sa * : 3 _- {week of his Arctic tour, is sched- h EF % : bi : uled to arrive back in Ottawa from [the 10,000-mile flight late Thurs day On only one occasion has some- squirrels, cats and dog by mail, the only means of winter lation after boats stop running in pivots about and jams against the o . Nfld., consistently cham one given her a set the same as One manufacturer with a sense transport, and brewing is not a January because of ice. Besides lower coast, delaying spring for hin the 'causes of better Mion The McCabe home has an ex- like structures seen in unsewered B ] Bl cancy in the 265-member Com-| panding dining room table, but areas. att e aze Pictures Of Stalin Massey Leaves | mons and leaves the standing: modate the collection to get larger cabinets. I B m t Growing Fewer | \ . . TPR redit 15; Independent 4; vacant Mrs, McCabe has three alter- COLLECTED CUPS nl basemen re P rawl in sermany . 3 , a isplay the much room so had to stop.' valls sev In the lobby of the foreign min- (FO) g So th Hn es 3 pla igi Mr McCabe, who Werks i» the o calls to several, small |istry building, there is an empty in u i |in Toronto to enter Parliament in| diers are i cusiody following a : By JOE MacSWEE 1942, winning his seat in a by-|brawl between 5 The Easter morning service at; in memory of the late Mr. and|of removing the collection from ca-! Many of his workmates, when tra-|ing at the corner of King and Al-| \ gd 2 7 E Cedardale United Church featured |Mrs. Fred Deeley by the Deele inets for display on the dining velling, keep an eye open for new pert streets. cation, Stalin's picture once hung ernor - General Vincent Massey yars earlieh, he had been defeated jured, Canadian brigade head, there is a nail and a hook | leaves the high Arctic today after on his first try for a seat in Quarters said here today. members of Cedardale United hymn books in memory of Mr. Wal Beverley claims that putting None of the shakers in a damage estimate are not avail T Han 2 J Church nine hymnaries were in| lace (W alter Darvent by wife Ma- away the collection is the worst lection has ever been used able 3 f Fireme n are still investi hang in many halls and museums | Join im in festivities and prayer over to Canadian military police SFA Athort § Mr : 2 of Moscow. The giant statue of| Laden with gifts from the land ora), election hu Nag etme go who put them under guard at he doners being Mr. Albert Cran-! and family Mr. and Mrs. Lorne an hour plastic salt and pepper shakers. {ook than an hour dell, Mr. and Mrs. Bert Crandell Dervent and family, Mr. and Mrs -- guish scribed his collea S . " i rague as "a fine] The Canadian spokesman said of rest and culture is still dotted south of the Arctic circle to the oo "0 "oreo A of Parlia- the braw at i beer hall 3 G 1d with busts, statues and inscrip- | Northwest Territories oil town of id of Toronto, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence | grand-daughter Norene, Mr . ay ou erty at Simcoe and Bloor streets Crandell and family, Mr, and Mr Mrs. A. Morris and family Saturday night, No serious From Norman Wells--which he land, Mr. Noseworthy worked in|a similar incident Friday night at will visit for five hours after a|tha woods and the mines and tra-|a village near Iserlohn, where Ca- M X .M I i Pol LONDON (AP)-The Daily Ex idk: Xi ¢ I r anc rs .eonarc elow | illuminated picture of the Head of Ave " i rd rererni on Sunday was quickly extinguis and family, Mr. and Mrs. John|Christ, presented by a long-time |For Sav8 Britain's first hvdrogen ed without much damage to the flies on to Whitehorse, the Yukon|gion of the Methodist Church, inn. X y American railroad heir F rank capital - p-- Gould, the 'sad millionaire Gananoque, Ont. One hymn book chancel in memory of the late Mrs Christmas of i f was presented in memory of Mr. Elizabeth Young Island days was kept alive by injections ( trials hers, Was offered 2 0 hs hroadc ast from radio station i i : . The 78-year-old expatriate Tremia Was ziven as the cause of sional football contract before he CHAK, erected by Canadian Army e Express says it may be the inherited $10,000,000 and whose fi and family of Oshawa: four were J S Young. Special music by : : h RK y = | choir under the direction of millionaire" among residents of | the British Columbia Lions, said HOME THURSDAY a | . S. J. Locke, organist, and has not yet been announced, but| friends at $115,000 a"day, died at |Juan-les-Pins who seldom saw him. | Wednesday Stulac gave no indica- Before Mr. Massey's visit to the Liberals Meet by Mr A. J. Barassin wert |the express says a team of engin-| his villa Soleil d'or (oldensun) 3 a single servant cial Football Union club. | All Saints, along with Eskimo and On Wednesda - - es -- | Indian ministers, and heard a ser-| ; Y The Oshawa Liberal One of the most touching mo- |ments of the tour came Saturday More than 2 from Oshawa | 160 boys and girls who are under the care of He Sisters of Charity addresses from candi eral nomination to contest [by George Bankstand, 16-year-old| scion of a whaler and an Eskimo| ris will be two of but there may ing convention to be April 11 friends and relatives mice, penguins, horses, rabbits, It is impossible to bring in liquor ule. It has ended the crushing iso- solid ice island snags on Fogo, it Nosewortliy, 'a native -of Lewis. another in the collection of humor made a set of shakers popular pastime bringing mail mail includes weeks _ | and the rights of labor. EXPANDING TABLE from models of those sentry-box His death causes the only va- when it is fully extended every "It is an interesting hobby Liberals 170: Progressive Con- C di S 1di inch of space is needed to accom: says Mrs. McCabe," but we'll have F N h | servatives. 53: oe 22: Social anal an 0 1ers | / ; i 1 MOSCOW (AP)---The process of ar ort 1] natives, She can get a larger ta- ' tried collecting cups and| The Oshawa Fire ow tt ali y r » collec aucer: n ; an destroying the Stalin myth goes on BEAT MEIGHEN | ISERLOHN, West German f ble, stop taking the collection saucers once, but they took up too had a busy weekend | Me lef Veughan Road Collegiate! (Reuters )--Fourteen Canadian sol- O Church Honored Her daughter, 14-year-old Be-|GM parts and service, assists Mrs. | The most serious blaze was in| | space on the wall alongside the A , hall last F - : : : 8 N Canadian Press Staff Writer [election against former Conserv-/mans at a beer hall last Friday verley, usually performs he task McCabe in accumulating new sets. |the basement of the Kaiser build: |prirait of Lenin. The only indi-| AKLAVIK, NW. T. (CP)Gov-| ative leader Arthus Melghon rv. which three Germans were in- the dedication of 21 United Church) family, and one in memory of Mr, |room table. It takes her more than and unusual shakers for Mrs. Mc- The fire occurred at 135 am yi n hymn books in memory of former Lew Gledhill by the family; six!'half an hour to set it up Cabe. vesterday. Cause of the fire and Stalin's portraits have come a Christmas-like Easter that saw Parliament. The soldiers were detained by : down elsewhere but others still Eskimo, Indian and white man| yo woo defeated at the 1945 gen- German police and later handed Albert ( «1 BE Mr D tp it u ly takes re than kitchen Mre MeCahe uses plain gain cause of the fire, which t to bi Stalin still dominates Moscow's |of the reindeer, Mr. Massey con- Yeader fF *7 Col well de. Camp Deilinghofen, near Iserlohn. | Vnudkova Airport. The large park |tinues his air journey, dipping Coldwe de: and family of Toronto, Mr. and|Herbert Dervent and family t Another small fire occurred on Mrs. Russell Crandell and family daughter Alice (Mrs Sireet Bri ish Pre arin the' Department of Highways prop ment i 1d f 1! hich he -d ibed " t : ! thw { A , oT Wells ent and a very old friend which he described as 'a notor- nd P g Hons of the once revered Soviet | IN man I s a young man in Newfound-| ious place," had nothing to do with 0 eader Robert Crandell and family, Mr. Bowmanville, Ontario Hydrogen Bomb Dies In France damage was caused and Mrs. Douglas Crandell, Other gifts dedicated were an A truck fire in King street west flight taliop him along the Mac: yelled the Newfoundland coast as|nadian soldiers were alleged to JUAN-les-PINS, France (AP enzie river--the governor-general|a missionary for the Grenfell mis- have wrecked the furniture of an Moore and family and Mr. and|worker in Cedardale Sunday School, bomb will be dropped next year Jay vehicle 3 || Mrs. Byron Smith and family of'also wine satin drapes in the the who - ' : . Sunday Mr. Massey spoke to all| created the gay Riviera resort bedridden since 1954 and in recent | [63M eliminated from the Olympic i the Mackenzie delta in a radio Juan-les-Pins, died Sunday and Mrs. John Moore bf Manches- A fine Easter message was x r= ter by Mr. and Mrs. John Moore livered by the lay minister death {left for his Toronto home Signals and turned over to an avi- first H-bomb ever carried aloft nancial astuteness gave him an! Gould was known as the "sad| Phil Webb, general manager of ation committee for operation. by a plane. The date of the test income estimated by some of his Despite his tremendous wealth he tion whether he wilt accept the radio station Sunday he read the | : | features of the Easter service eers and scientists will leave soon where he had been almost a re-|lived quietly and was cared for by |offer of the Western Interprovin-| lesson at the Anglican Cathedral H tended by a large congregation. for the isolated atoll cluse for many years. He had been mon by Most Rev. D, B. Marsh, Anglican bishop of the Arctic. will hold a delegate the E. A. Lovell | when the governor al was en- |tertained at a reindeer lunch by will attend the Purpose of the meetir the Roman Catholic 1 ion, The toast to the Queen was given tario Riding feder: Dr, C, H. Vipord an fil woman. George took the first taste| 4 of wine in proposing the toast and | Dele given [ Cred delegate convent ever | on party ( 'ons tached to banc i I I x i " x 3 : : eo W BOXI Oshawa is the largest m v 5 ry i ' : Gh » CHALO? in the ri jv 3 4 (AP)--Emile Chemama, French form th | bantamweight boxing champion, the nom | died Sunday of injuries received in an auto accident > Rich took lace ly 48 hours after he won the CBM To Hear 3 Us. Speaker CHAMP DIES - sur - SAONE, France delegat ngle group ien convention EARLY SPRING ARRIVALS McCutchson Who has. a fem. near London, Ont. title. Chemama won the title These young goats are anxious Saturday night. we week old, they are part of a Barne Thu ay night, He was injured to explore a strange new world. Timken-Det 12 King St. E. RA 3-3633 stian Busi He is a f director ness mer Meat Specials! Tuesday & Wednesday! SMALL STEAKS 00 Ibs. 1 . PORK CUTLETS Sliced Breakfast BACON . 39° SLICED COOKED HAM wu. 7 9* Smoked Bacon SQUARES 2..39¢ Moody Bible The dinner 6.30 pm Memorial COMING EVENTS CLUR R Hall BINGO AT AYVIEW EV \Monda Door CUBED VEAL $30 § Sy = mE HSSIST WILDLIFE ADVISORY COMMITTEE ~~ | business, planned. Y rt The | Second Marsh wildlife. With of the club; Bill Owens, public come 61 and placed in the nature club and officer of the Wildlife men, this arca eould b advisory committee; and Don of the finest outdoor studios Rice, chairman, of the wildlife nature stud Fhe above advisory committee shows the presentation ~--Times-Gazette Photo bird houses by the Oshawa Na- turalist's Club. The right, is composed of Lloyd Sturch, publie relations officer of the Oshawa Naturalist's Club Alf Bunker, program chairman | the help | sport Club types of of . the The club donated Marsh Oshawa Naturalist's group, left relations 12 bird song bird and tree wildlife ducks styles. The marsh mittee in the development of the | is now an ideal sanctuary for all became the first out one t for photo the | COME BINGO Simcoe April 2, 8 pm ide or to assist the of houses ting anization 20 games, four $40 pots Oshawa advisory com ne Tia of

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