Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 24 Apr 1956, p. 2

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7 f THE DAILY TIMESGAZETTE, Tuesday, April 24, Married 'Teachers Year Pact Draws Protest From Council ne TWw1 WELCOME WITHIN HHUA 0 JERUSALEM --~ TOURISTS IN JERUSALEM Rev. Clarence M. Keen, right, astor of Calvary Baptist hurch, Oshawa, is shown dur- ing his recent tour of the Holy Land. His companion is Stanley H. Keen, of Wilmington, Del.. They pause at the world famous Mandelbaum Gate entrance to Israel during a recent visit to the Land of the Bible. ~-Israel Government Tourist Office Photo Quebec Group To Join Major Labor Congress TORONTO (CP)--The way willjexecutive would be empowered to a gathering and the first event be smoothed this week for the entry of Canada's third largest labor group into the new Cana- dian Labor Congress. The initial convention of the 1,000,000-member CLC here will recelve a recommendation--vir- tually certain to be adopted--that # admit the 100,000 members of bec"s Canadian and Catholic ederation of Labor, Discussions sought by the| French - speaking group started | with CLC officials about a fortnight | ago, and informants said they eady have reached the stage/ where congress leaders will ask the 1,600-men convention to em- er them to bring in the CCCL dod the next convention in 1958. LEAVE OPEN DOOR The convention received a hint of this at its opening session Mon- day when delegates were informed fat provision youd |} be made to care 's case des- a clause in the CLC stu barring ups organizing flelds claitned' by CLC unions. ) Conditions for the CCCL's admis- * sion have yet tp be negotiated fully, it was understood, but the CLC's {bring in the Quebec group when satisfactory terms are arranged. This action was expected Friday. Meanwhile, the new congress picked up a prospective 6,000 more | members Monday when president | George Meany of the AFL-CIO in| {the United States told the conven- {tion his huge organization is with- drawing from the field of direct organization in Canada. | ine AFL-CIO has 57 directly: chartered small unions in this | country with the 6,000 member- ship, and as a friendly gesture to| its northern ally it is turning these | over either to the CLC direct or to CLC-affiliated unions. Meany said the AFL-CIO also is stopping the activities of its eight Canadian organizers. This does not affect the organizing work of the big internation unions affiliated with the AFL-CIO and the CCL. HEAR ST. LAURENT Today, the convention was to. tarn temporarily from the wor of Freating body to hearing an address by | Prime Minister St. al| ment between the CCL of its kind since the time of Sir Wilfrid Laurier. Monday's opening stages of Can- ada's greatest labor wedding were sharpened by a lively pre-marital spat as a group of delegates fought for 90 minutes to open up some clauses of the CLC constitution which the leadership regarded as not subject to change by the con- vention. ; Th rs won bul only after unlimbering heavy artillery and after R. Mosher, 74-year-old president of the Canadian Congress | of Labor, had threatened to quit| the convention unless rank-and-file representatives followed the lead- ers' line. The argument developed over the officials' ruling that the 22 clauses in question cannot be changed because of a prior agree- and the Trades and Labor Congress, which is merging with it to form, the The convention algo gave gwift! approval--without discussion-%o a| Improvements Are Approved endorsed improvements in the prop- osed new collective bargaining con- tract between the municipality and Local 50 of the National Union of Public Service Employes. Main item in the report present- ed by Alderman Gordon B. Atters- ley, chairman of the finance and assessment committee, was a sug- gested 5 per cent increase in hourly rates, The proposed contract amend- ments call for a 40-hour week, with a five cent hourly premium for other than regular shifts. ANNUAL VACATION Employes with 12 years service with the City will be entitled to three weeks annual vacation with pay. Drivers of sanding or snow re- moval trucks operating between 4 p.m. and 8 a.m. will be allowed at least one extra -employee as an assistant. Items in the finance committee] report, adopted by City Council, the knowledge that I'm employed will be discussed with the union/ bargaining group. Khrushchev, Bulganin Look Sullen By WILLIAM L. RYAN LONDON (AP) -- Russia Prem- jer Bulganin and Communist party | chief Nikita Khrushchev strode grimly 'rom a crucial meeting to- day with Prime Minister Eden, amid waning hopes for any solid British-Russian dgreement on world issues. Moments later the Soviet lead- ers postponed for 36 hours a press, conference they had gcheduled for Wednesday. | With the talks In their final stage | on | most gullen ag they left 1D ing St. Eden did not come to th door of his official residence see them out, the normal for such high-ranking Staring stolidly ahead, sians hurried to their waiting car| to be driven to the House of Com- mons for a luncheon, | ° t 1 | visitors. | Oshawa City Council last night al- GO Protesting the Board of Educa- tion offer of yearly contracts to married teachers, the Oshawa Pub- lic School Teachers' Council told the Board of Education in a letter read last night at a regular meet- ing of the Board, that they feel the yearly contract is less advantage- ous to the married teachers than the present status of being paid on a monthly basis. The letter went on to state that the teachers' feel justified in reit- erating their request for permanen contracts in view of the fact that several teachers require the secur- ity of being able to complete the necessary years to qualify for a pension, "I am more than surprised to see this letter," said trustee 8. G. Saywell, "The teachers said they were more than satisfied with, the contract idea at the time they dis- cussed it. I can't see why they | make such foolish statements as {this at this time, RAPS LETTER "I know that I would rather have for a year rather than a month," said Mr. Saywell. "The yaarly contract doesn't give the Board much protection," sald Trustee Mrs, B. C. Colpus. "We must keep the staff in bal- ance," sald Trustee J, L. Beaton, "In times past married teachers have been hired and kept on when young teschers have been unable to get work. I don't think that teachers should be placed indis- criminately on the permanent staff, At would leave us in 2 dangerous position in the future of having too many married teachers and not enough of the younger teachers coming slong. Trustee Saywell said he thought the married teachers had been go- ing forward step by step until now, and that the yearly contract was a forward step "We can't get along without mar- ried teachers," sald Mr. Saywell, "and I'm not saying that we should do witout them. But I do think that tere should be some way of | solecting sume on the permanent staff and not making it a blanket Saywell Raps Letter's 'Foolish Statements' Mr. Bradley wrote the Oshawa School Board regarding the use of the Oshawa Schools by other than Home and School organizations. The letter stated that the union was opposed to the idea of the Guides and Brownies holding meet- ings in the schools as it would create night work for the janitors. Trustee J. L. Beaton sald that be- fore they placed a fee of $5. on night meetings in schools, the jani- tors had been called to go back t night after night and wait and see that everything was cleaned up and lock the doors after late ment- ings. This had been curbed, he said, by the $5 fee. Mrs, B, C. Colpus said that the Brownies and Guides couldn't af- 0) The Administrator, W., Gordon Bunker, was asked to write to the Girl Guides asking them how many schools were concerned. PETERBOROUGH DELEGATE The Board of Education which had gone on record as protesting the building of a new hotel on Simcoe Street South couldn't come up with a delegate to relay their protest to the Liquor Control Board] which is meeting in May at Peter- borough. Several delegates were suggest- ed but they all refused politely on the grounds that Juéy were busy with other business that day. The two lady trustees, Mrs. Col- pus and Mrs, Lee were suggested but they declined on the grounds that it was 'a man's job." They said they felt that women would be expected to protest anywa and it needed a man's firm hand. The Rev. R. E. Dargan presi- dent of the Ministerial Association was suggested but he declined be- cause he sald he was representing the Association at the meeting, He suggested Mr, Bint, rusiee R. C. Bint declined the post as delegate. Me said that he declined on the grounds that he would go along with the Board in a formal protest but couldn't hon. estly be a delegate as he liked to have a bottle of beer with his meals in hotels. It was suggested that Dr, C. H. CONLrac NO FURTHER > rd made a motion that! Public School Teach-| be advised that the > offer cf the Board of Edu-| on of a yearly contract is as| 'he i the Oshaw ers' 'Co ca the Rus-|far as tae Doard is prepared $o Director of Music on probation for go at the presen: time. JANITORS' UNION LETTER The Janitors' Union secretary f OBITUARIES KENNETH JAMES CAMPBELL PORT , COLBORNA -- Kgnneth James @§ampbell 37 McCain Figin Cu ling Club aid the Cana- Legjon brangh Pi reciecp-ed by he wife, theffor- meg Sa¥ah V. Gardiner, in s Canada's largest labor | ¢onstitut'onal i the TLC-CCL polcy of basring Laurent--the | Communi:t-led unions from affil- first time he has spoken to such'iation. clausa continting | Desegre gation WEATHER TORONTO (CP) -- Official fore- pany. street, Pert Colborne, died - urs- bs day, in bri Colborng General Hos- 4 pitzl. He was in hisj8lst year and |daughterS¥ Mrs, ° 8. C. Larner had been ill for twb weeks. | (Eve) of Oshawa and Mi. i Mr. Cempbell was born in Prince|Jefirie (Pauline) of Peterborough he Jeave$ 2y mournchis passing! two Vipond, chairman of the Board, would be requested to go, Dr. Vipond wae ahsent from the meet. ing. ASSISTANT MUSIC DIRECTOR Mrs. Jean Cook was appointed by the Board as assistant to the one year. She will receive her pre- sent salary of $4,400 plus $300 ex- ira as assistant to the supervisor plus a car allowance of $0 a month, CORONATION H AND § The Coronation Home and School Association semt a leiter of com- mendation to the Board on their APPOINTMENT OF C. W. HITE, a well-known visitor at the Johns-Manville Toronto plant, as vice-president for industrial rela- tions was announced today by A. R: Fisher, president, Johns- Manville Corp., according to word received at Port Union, Ont. by J. D. Lowry, plant manager. Mr, Hite succeeds L. C. Hart, who is due to retire May 30 after 42 years with the company. | Mr. Fisher also announced the appointment of Frank V, Gal- braith as director of employe re- latons, and R. M. King and James G. Moore, Jr., as labor relations managers. Mr. Gal- breith and Mr. King will report to Mr, Hite and will be frequent' visitors at J-M plants in the fu- ture. They will carry on the company's efforts to maintain the cordial management-employe relations already established at Johns-Manville plant and nine locations. The Children's Aid Society spends about $125,000 a year for the care of those children who need its serv®es in the City of Oshawa and County of Ontario, president W, E. Noble of the CAS told the annual meeting of the Soclety recently, "Better than $115,000 of that amount," said Mr. Noble, 'is contributed by the county and the city of Oshawa on a per diem basis for children in care or as direct grants to the society, In her annual report to the so- ciety Miss Margaret Hancock said that the Children's Aid Societies are the means through which the children and families who need them are given warmth of feeling and understanding to help them solve their problems, "Children need two parents," sald Miss Hancock, if possible, and a home to help them meet their growing nezds. This home needs to be a secure happy spot where they are made to foal they belong. It matters not to matters is that they are wanted. being used in prevention work, own home, them that it is a dirty smelly shack, or whether it is a well - established home. The thing that Because of the importance of par- ents to the child, more skills are 'First give us a chance to work with the parents and child in his where every skill is used to have the parents realize their responsibilities and to under- to change and cannot be forced." These children, Miss Hancock explained, have been let down by their own parents and in their in- ability to understand, are fearful and distrustful of adults. ACCEPTED PATTERN Miss Hancock said that adop- tions have become the accepted pattern of living today. It is a long wait for the prospective parents as the supply in no way meets the demand. We cannot say there are not as many babies but the trend is at the t in our nity for the unmarried mothers to keep their babies. "This may or may not be a good development for the child concerned," sald Miss Hancock, "There is also the common - law unions that are growing and be- cause of the numbers are being an accepted part of society. These unions are the family of the illegi- timate child and what security is there in such living? "Is there enough stress placed on the importance and responsi- bilities of marriage, in our homes by our churches, by our commu- nities? Some one sald "Every job is-aspecialized job toda needing specific training except that of be- coming parents.' Miss Hancock said that the county has now reached the 100,- 000 mark in population , . . this is an increase in 20,000 in the last four years, The guest speaker of the eve- said Miss Hancock. stand the needs of their children," "This is not easy and human beings are slow' tion of Children's Aid Societies ed a ning was Mr. Clarence Halliday, Schell; liam Noble; president, Mr. Frank Meagher; honorary vice = pres., Mrs. T. dents, Mr. J. V. Saunders, Kenneth Lee, Mrs. C. 8. Lee; sec- retary, Mr. Stanley Mason; treas- GAS Spends $125000 Year On Area Children and Director of the Children's Aid Society of the City of Oshawa and ° county of Carleton. Mr. Halliday is the first profezsional Children's Aid Society officer to be appointed president of the Ontario Associa- tion. He spoke on tance of membership in a chil- dren's aid society," "the jmpor- The Children's Ald Society direc- tors for 1956 are as follows: Honorary president, Mr, H. P. past president, Mr. Wil H. Everson; vice-presi- Mr. urer, Mr. W. G. McLarty; honor- ary solicitor, Mr. Neil Fraser, Q.C.; society physician, Dr. J. R Bayne; directors, Mr. A. W. Arm- strong, Mr. Monty Cranfield, Rev. P. Dwyer, Mr, Neil Fraser, Miss Margaret M. Hancock, Mrs. J. E. Harris, Mrs. C. 8. Lee, Mr. N. 8. McFadyen, Mr. W. G. McLarty, Mr. Stanley Mason, Mr. Frank Meagher, Dr. I. J. Metcalfe, Mr. John Mills, Mrs. C. C. Murty, Mr, W. Noble, Mr. George L. Roberts, Mr. J. V. Saunders, Mr. T. D Thomas, Mrs. A. C. McKenzie, Mr. Cyril Morley, Mrs. Eldon Brown, Mr. J. M. Roblin, Mr. R. Vickery; county representatives, Mr. Kenneth Lez, Mr. William A. Heron, Mr. W. G. Manning; city representatives, Mr. C. B. Gay, Mrs. C. Tiomas, Mr. C. Harman: ministerial association representa- tive, Rev. John K. Moffat; audi- president of the Ontario Associa. tors, Britrell and Moore, charter- ccountants. Manning Praises " anting am in- Pt nt iy the ii 7,3 ter s¢id: "Our teachers! are very Prom 3 membars of ar present y and we feel that their training and abiliifes should be recognized and reward- Albert and resided in Port Perry|and three sons, Keir of London, oq {for some time. He came to Port Ont, George of Port Elgin and | Colborne about 40 years ago and|Robert E. of Ottawa. {had been retired for the past 24| He was predeceased by a som, | years from Canada Cement Com-|Jack, who was killed in action overseas in 1944. casts issued by the Dominion pub- He is survived by one son Fred- erick Campbell of Port Colborne; Also surviving are two sisters Mis. George Syme and Mrs. Fri On Buses Ends MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP)-- Montgomery's embattled bus com- pany began unsegregated opera- tions this morning despite a warn- ing by the city commission to maintain separate seating facilities for white persons and Negroes. The bus company, for six months the target of a crippling Negro boycott which became part of a widespread anti-segregation cru- sade, posted a notice Monday night saying it had "no choice" except to comply with Monday's order by the United States Su- preme Court that segregation in public carriers is unconstitutional even when confined within state borders. The desegregation decree put the bus company squarely in the middle between the Supreme Court ruling and a stern warning earlier Monday from Mayor W. A. Gayle to continue strict segregation of the races. LEGAL ACTION POSSIBLE It remained to be seen whether the three-member city commission would take legal action against the bus company for violating Alabama and city laws requiring separate seating facilities for white persons and Negroes. Montgomery, in the southeastern quarter of Alabama, has a popula- tion of about 120,000, of which about 50,000 are Negroes. Rev. Martin Luther King, a leader of the bus boycott, indi- cated that there was little chance that the protest movement would be called off before tonight at the earliest, The Negro Baptist minister said Negroes generally will continue to refuse to ride the buses until a mass meeting is held to decide if their demands have been satisfac- torily met. He said the bus company's ac- tion would seem to satisfy demands for unsegregated seating and cour- tesy to Negro patrons from bus drivers. But King pointed out that the boycotters have also asked that Negro drivers be employed on predominately Negro routes. NO CHANGE When the Supreme Court ruling | was announc Monday, Mayor Gayle emphasized that there would be "no change" in the city com- mission's Jolley, "We will do everything in our power to main- tain segregation on city buses," Gayle said. Gayle and commissioners Clyde Sellers and Frank Parks joined the Montgomery white citizens' coun- cil last December after early ef- forts to end the Negro bus boycott failed. The boycott has been in rigid effect since Dec. 5 when Mrs. Rosa Parks, a Negro seamstress, was fined $14 In police court because she refused to move to the back of a bus. A Montgomery county grand ju indicted % Negro A a ot [three months ago for violating lic weather office at 5:15 a.m.: Synopsis: Ontario is in the centre | of a cool air mass which covers central and eastern North Amer- ica. Early morning temperatures range from 30 in southern Ontario to about 15 in the north country. An area of light rain and snow due to a weak disturbance over the southern states edged as far north as Lake Erie during the night but it is not expected to spread into southern Ontario. The weather should remain settled over all of the province today and Wednesday. Southwesterly winds are expected to cause slowly moderating tem- peratures on Wednesday. However, this milder weather will likely be shortlived because a second cold air mass is pushing southward from northwestern Canada and is expected to edge into northern On- tario late Wednesday. Regional forecasts valid until midnight Wednesday: Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Lake On- tario, Niagara, Georgian Bay, Hal- iburton, London, Toronto, Hamil- ton, Windsor: Variable cloudiness, clearing this evening, sunny with a few cloudy intervals on Wednes- day, and turning a little milder. Winds light, high today .and low tonight at Windsor, St. Thomas, Toronto, Trenton, Hamilton and St. Catharines 45 and 30, London, Wingham and Muskoka 40 and 25, Killaloe 40 and 29. Summary for Tuesday--Variable Alabama's anti-boycott law. cloudiness, continuing cool. Cooler Weather Helps Manitoba Flood Battle WINNIPEG (CP)--The weather was on the side of the flood fighters of southern Manitoba today as the Assiniboine river flood tide swirled over the flat plains and the Red resumed its slow rise in the greater Winnipeg area. Bruce Hogarth, chairman of the provincial flood forecasting com- mittee, said Monday the present dry, cool weather is beneficial. Sudden high temperatures that would move all the remaining snow out of bush lands in the upper Assiniboine and off the land "would be bad." The long-range forecast calls for below-normal temperatures. Further flonding ansurrad is Portage la Prairie area Monday afternoon when a giant "ice jam fn tha Two bridges spanning ditches on the Trans-Canada highway were in danger, many farms were sub- merged and roads were under water. Livestock was stranded and running short of feed. Threatened with inundation was the town of Oakville, 12 miles east lof Portage. The community of 150 | persons was surrounded by water | before the ice jam . crumbled. Farmer Frank Powes said the water was eight feet deep in his | front yard. Further upstream at Brandon, {the Assiniboine climbed a foot in 24 hours but it still posed no flood | problem within ity. noe - EG pe wow DIKES FOR rot crews con: | ng up major dikes as w | In Winnipeg work tinued buildi hours, the river inched upwards Monday night and by midnight had reached 19.3 feet. The May 7 crest, ranging from 27 to 30 feet, is expected to bring a peak six inches above the top of the major dikes. Elm Park, the worst-hit residen- tial district in the 1950 flood, is protected by a 24.5-foot dike. The river is expected to rise within six inches of the top of the dike by Friday. Elm Park residents during the weekend stripped the basements and main floors of more than 150 homes of their valuables and pre- i i 'aronto; hildren two grandchildren; one sister, Mrs, | Milne of 'Iorontd; 13 grand! C. B. Mulholland of Toronto and and six greai-grandchildren. "The education of our children is too important to be left to improp- erly trained, disinterested men and women, . .which is what we would have if the teachers' wage scale was not brought up to par with that of other professions." 1] Thomson Papers Premier Manning of Alberta also a bias in the news cover- paid tribute recently to the The age." Thomson group of mewspopers, of He continued: which The Times - Gazette is a| "The Thomson papers may re- member, fleet the various politics of the The occasion was the recent la-| area, or the editor, or the owner. dies' night dinner of The Oshawal|l have no quarrel with the owner Jury Shown Opium Said Worth Million TORONTO (CP) -- An RGMP corporal Monday carried a bulky cardboard box into a courtroom and showed jurors five mounds of opium and heroin sald to be worth $1,000,000 on the illicit drug market, Cpl. James Macauley said the and District Christian Business Men's Committee. When introdue- lof a paper doing that, but what drugs were seized in a police raid the Thomson papers do, no matter| last August on a Bathurst street ed to a reporter from this paper, |what the owner's politics, is carry the premier said: the news as it happens, and as rooming house. fie testified at the trial of Mrs. three brothers, Hugh Campbell of | Port Perry and Colin and Neil Campbell of Toronto. His wife, Minnie, predeceased him 24 years ago. | The body rested at the Dell-Mer- ton funeral home, 135 Clarence street, Port Colborne. Funeral ser- vices were conducted there in the chapel at 2 p.m. Saturday by Rev. E. G. Baxter, pastor of Port Col- bourne Baptist Church. Interment was in Morgan's Point cemetery. JOHN SPENCER PETERBOROUGH -- John Spen- cer, a farmer all his life, died sud- denly at his Warsaw home Sunday evening and will be buried in, St. Joseph's Cemetery, Douro, on Wed- nesday. Mr. Spencer, who was 80, had resided at Warsaw for the past eight years. Previously he had lived in Burleigh township, He was born in Douro township. He is survived by his wife (for- merly Rose Nolan), four daugh- ters, Mrs. John Doherty (Valerien), Douro; Mrs. Allen Clydesdale (Lor- etta), Peterborough) Mrs. Wilfred Huggins (Madeline), Bowmanville and Miss Katherine Spencer who lives at home, one son Thomas of Douro township and 18 grandchil- dren. He is also survived by one sis- ter, Mrs. Fred Sherard (Annie) of Apsley and three brothers, Richard of Warsaw, William of Lakefield and Leo of Smith township. A member of St. Joseph's church, Douro, Mr. Spencer be- longed to the Holy Name Society and the Catholic Order of Fores- ers. Funeral will be from the Duffus Funeral home with requiem mass at St. Joseph's Church, Douro, at 9 a.m., conducted by the Rev. J. J. McCarthy. ROBERT GOODING STURGEON Following a lengthy illness the death occurred at the Oshawa Gen- eral Hospital, on Sunday night last, of Robert Gooding Sturgeon. The deceased, who was in his 82nd year, was born at Owen Sound and was married in Toronto in 1896. : Mr. Sturgeon operated a plumb- ing and heating business in Peter- borough until 1927 and then resided in Port Elgin for a number of years. He had also lived in To- ronto, Owen Sound and Philadel phia. He was a member of the Port pared to move into hotels and moteis until the fiood is over. The Red Cross has set up a|Rotary Club. He was also a for-| Mrs. Gordon Barker, Mr. and Mrs. registration bureau for The funeral service will be held at the Davey Funeral Home, Port Ilgin, at 2 p.m. on Wednesday, April 25. Rev. D. Elmslie will con- duct the services. Interment will be in Sanctuary Park Cemetery, Port Elgin DANIEL MARSHALL MATHESON -- Daniel Mar-| shall, 38, former resident of Tim-| mins died suddenly in Bingham Memorial Hospital, Matheson. Mr. Marshall was employed by the Canadian Johns-Manville Com- pany. He was a member of the iroquois Falls masonic order. Surviving are his wife, the for- er Verdun Brisbois; his mother, Mrs. Leo J. Marshall of Birch street south; one brother, Lou of Timmins; and two sisters, Mrs. Ann Heavysege of Bowmanville, Mrs. June Williams of Matheson. Funeral services were held Satur- day at 2 p.m. from the First United Church with Rev. A, P. Addison] officiating. Burial took place in Tis- dale cemetery. FUNERAL OF EDWARD RADWAY The memorial service for Ed- ward Radway, who died at the Oshawa General Hospital on Fri- day last, was held at the Arm- OSHAWA AND DISTRICT GOOD SAP RUN It is reported that the run of sap in Ontario County sugar bush- es last week was above average. BRILLIANT DISPLAY Residents of the district, who re- mained up until midnight last Saturday, were treated to a bril- liant display of the aurora borealis. The streamers of light extended from the northern horizon to the zenith, ' LITTLE EROSION Now that snow has disappeared from Ontario county farm lands, | farmers report little sheet or val-) ley erosion, LITTLE DAMAGE The severe frosts of the winter sason did little damage to win-| ter wheat and meadows in Ontario county. SKATER ACCLAIMED "I am delighted to say that the Thomson papers are indeed truly inderendent newspapers. You see in Coaada too many papers that not only have an editorial bias but the reporter hears and sees it.| Hannelore Rosenbloom, 23, Jack Clear cut and independent. I like| Rosenblatt, 52, Leo Craig, 53, and that, Your papers are doing a Jake (The Fake) Goldhar, 48, all great service to Canada and your| charged with conspiring to traffic readers.' drugs. Miss Carol Klapow, 16 of Osh- awa, a member of the Peterbor- ough Figure Skating Club, was/ honored Saturday evening by her| Slubmates for having susossatully ter of Albert Street United sumplited a 2% days salle rool «Church, sonducted he Services. now eligible to try the Gold Test, jutetment was nthe the highest ating available Jo a * 9 ure skater. oug! er me The pallbearers were Alex Simp. club is the Oshawa Figure Skating| son, Karl Wildman, Russell Club Miss Klapow has skated in son, Joseph Holick, William Hild- Peterborough this year to obtain enbrand and Stanley Fudge. instruction from Peterborough's FUNERAL OF LAND professional, Ede Kiraly. MILTON BRUCE YEL The funeral service for Milton WL NEMBER retary Bruce Yelland, 218 Dundas street of the Oshawa Champ west, Whitby, who died at the Osh-| o¢ Commerce, has been made a awa General Hospital on Monday, |jite member of the past presidents April 16, was held at the Bowes juh of the Junior Chamber of Funeral Home, Cobourg, at 2 p.m.| Commerce of Canada. He was first on Wednesday, April 18. president and founder of the Nia- The services were conducted by| gars Falls Club in 1940, Rev A. Luffman of Baltimore. In- terment was in the Cobourg Union BIRTHDAYS TODAY Congratulations and best wishes Cemetery. The pallbearers were John For- are extended to Lois Bradbury, rester, Gordon Hawes, John Heard,|3% Athol street east; Richard and Albert Knibb of Whitby, Char- Powis, 109 Simete feet south} les McConnell of Oshawa and Roy and Hs George Hood. 568 Front Barker of Mormora. _| street, who are celebrating their _ Those from out of town attend birthdays today. ing the funeral were Mr. and Mrs. OGH REPORT strong Funeral Chapel, at 2 p.m.,| on Monday, April 23. Rev. S. C. H. Atkinson, minis- Lew Elgin United Church and was a past president of the Port Elgin Vern Barker of Erindale, Harold Following is the revort of the Barker of Cooksville, Mr. and Mrs. Koy Barker of Marmora, Mr. and| Oshawa General Hospital for the week ending April 21: Admissions 198; births -- male, 22; female, FIRST OF RESCUED MINERS HAPPY AGAIN LaVell Golding holds his grand child for a moment as his daugh- ' | two mine after being trapped for. 40 hours following an explos- teams brought the men back up to the light of day again. Mr. Goulding suffered severe shock i persons| mer member of the independent| Charles McConnell, Mr. and Mrs. sion in th i r Sunnysi climbing again. who have made temporary moves|Order of Odd Fellows. He was an! Andy Mowat and Bert McCallum le mine near Sunnyside, Utah. Only the desperate perse- ter smiles happily. Goulding was the first of three miners to be broke under the pressure and sent!the Red began 22; major surgery, 51; minor i i a . x - H , 81; sur- but raliied quickly when hi more floodwaters swirling out over | J y n S the plains, the normal winter ice level for 24! atives or friends, After standing at 18.8 feet above!and who are being sought by rel-| honorary life member of the Peter-| of Oshawa and Miss Greta Barker | borough Curling Club, the Port gery, 42: eye, ear, nose aad throat, of Whitby, 29; treatments, 32; casts, 20, rescued from the Kaiser aumber | daughter appeared at his bedside verence of the mine-rescue | with the grandchild,

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