Planning Bd. Toothless' Lacks Power-- Gifford Says District Board Needed Woman 01 19 CAMERA CLUB PRESENTS ANNUAL PLAQUES were 40 monochrome prints; 300 colored prints were also projected from the screen. Three winners of plaques are shown, back row, left to right; Ted Tozer, winner ' Judo Experts To Vie In Display On Saturday The Club Members of the Oshawa Ca- mera Club presented their annual pictorial exhibition in the McLaughlin Library Theatre this Included in the display Cooper, winner of the A. Miller, winner of the week Duscharm Granted Stay Of Execution CP CRA Judo will play who study judo Club on Saturday, May 5 Judo, will give a Judo classifications are symbol- of judo tactics TORONTO Ontario Court ized by qualifying for various col-| Leo Hansburger, of Appeal one-month stay of execution for cipating in this tournament will het#and the only woman in Robert Bruce Ducsharm, 24, of holders of those belts up LO. P "who holds the Black Belt Hamilton, sentenced to be hanged including the orange byl route to Japan, from London May 15 for the murder of a north- This will be the fit official land, she is presently touring ern Ontario school teacher invitational judo match to be held ada and expected to Chief Justice J w Pickup In vusnawa by tne CKA club. her ability here moved the execution date ahead Following the match, Judo Ka's. tournament starts to June 15 at the request of de-/ the name which applied to those fence counsel Austin Cooper. An application for leave to appeal Ducsharm's conviction to the Su- preme Court of Canada is to be heard May 4 in Ottawa. Ducsharm was fwice convicted of murder in the slaying of Steve Klapouschak. An appeal to get a is strate The p.m Life Story Of Dave Friesen Like Horatio Alger Novel at Tost weok was rejected Third trial Jast week was rejected! ,yyona, Man, (CP)--As a boy. founders by Ontario Court of Appeal W us ie. a h oh ji Dave Friesen dreamed a boy's manager and is still Klapouschak, 21, taught SC oo dreams. He wanted to leave this|op's board of directors. at Dalton, 180 miles northwest of sno) (own in southern Manitoba) ry. his frozem body was|i, seek his. fortune elsewhere, found Dec. 11, 1954: underneath the Typical of a boy's dream, distant tiny schoolhouse in which he lived. fields looked greener. But when Police said they believed he was "0. "19 51 1930 he made the bi shot to death about Dec. 3. decision and from it a home-town --------= hoy made good--at home His father, D. W. Friesen, 'the town's postmaster, wanted to hold his family around him and offered to set Dave up in the stationery business in a small store Wistfully Dave decided to stay and from that small store with its $1,500 worth of stock and less than $10,000 in assets provided by his father, he has built up in 26 vears TORONTO (CP) A veteran a husiness which has a payroll of newspaper man said Thursday $80.000 a and which now night democracy in Canada is worth about $250.000. threatened by apathy, eynicism Of his decision, and cliches like "the talking shop says: "I h not on Parliament Hill." has been a lot of fun Grattan O'Leary, vice-president Today he is president of D and associate of the Ottawa Friesen and Sons Ltd.--the Journal, spoke at a meeting of the is still named after his father--and Dominion Mortgage and Invest- operates a large stationery busi- ments Association ness and printing plant. The plant He said whereas 1ssia and besides turning out two world communism ome an newspapers, has produced a num- ever-increasing threat to the Cana- ber of books with workmanship dian way of, life of his fellow- any publishing citizens tell him '"'they are not in- terested in politics." The now employs 32 He added persons and is second only to the 'Politics $1,000,000 sunflower industry democracy. Politics can make war Of the Co-Op Vegetable Oils Ltd. or pursue peace. In fact, politics as a market here. But Mr. encompass all the things that make Friesen has a shared pride in the life worth living seed industry; he is one of its at printing plant there it newspaper business, fore he took the plunge Finally in 1941 he. yielded to gestions from among the 1,700 residents and founded Altona Echo, which last year merged with: the Morris under Echo The O'Leary Says Apathy Threat To Democracy plant also the ( dian' Mennonite tion for Canada. Mr. Friesen's stationery ness today has four travellers ing merchandise in 1] Canada and the while the school busines amounts to thousands year. In the fall fou prints of Mennonites vear is Mr, Friesen been sorry. It w firm railway r imported The printing plant produce publication French and German job work | 5 per cent revenue i a firm town a it does a phenomenal In Search of Utopia history of Mennonites around ous craftsmanship. Another sen publication, the Women's Institute Cook Book more than 2,000 copies a vear equippe in F R a mo ada, business in are the life-blood of seed or ol tion shown above. It is being constructed on the north side of the former Central Receiving production here is the new addi- | Depot en Ritson road north, MARK MA]JO changes rer CHANG The addition, 340 40 feet wide, will way siding 'and | head crane for feet long house a a 15-ton unloading One of the Hajor i in GM's orth plan planned ir r h plant or of the senior colored trophy; senior black and white trophy and Fred junior color trophy: front row, Gregory A : instructor Thursday granted a ored belts or sashes. Those parti- the CRA club, hopes to have Canada served seven years as ils on the co- Mr. Friesen founded a small job in 1933 and from was, only a step into the although was actually eight years more be- town's Herald the name Red River Valley 'ana a weekly publica throughout busi United States, alone of dollars a lots of school scribblers have to be glish, depends ym the larger centres business a 300-page Altona, is- a book of labori Frie- Altona ES IN GM PLANT PR and rail- raw i Kane, Harry Law and Bernard Goleski. Mr. Law is club presi- dent. Pictures were judged by a group of outstanding photograph- ers from Toronto Times-Gazett E e Photo holding the kiack host to Toronto's Hatashita Judo Belt, one of the highest ranks in demonstration displaying some of the finer point: b ) of on On Eng Can demon 8.0 | REV. 8. C. H. ATKINSON Heads Oshawa Presbytery New officers were appointed for the coming year by the Oshawa Presbytery of the United Church which met at Courtice on Wednes day. The chairman, Rev. C. W. Hutton, presided The new officers Chairman, Rev son, minister of United Church, retary, Rev. M. C castle, re-appointed; treasurer, D J. Reid, replacing Dr. ( w Slemon of Bowmanville, who signed because of ill health Robert G. Brawn of Raglan, one of this year's candidates for the ministry, was licensed to preach in a simple but impressive cere- mony conducted by the chairman and Dr, S. L. Osborne of Ontario Ladies College, Whitby. Mr. Brawn has studied in United Church Col- leges in Toronto and Montreal dur- ing the past six years. He will be ordained to the Ministry by the Bay of Quinte Conference which will meet in Brockville in June. Approval was given to a call is sued by the new Scugog charge in favor of Rev. J, K. m of Gananoque; and to i: iven Re N. T. Holmes of eton Place who will come to Harmony United Church, Oshawa, at the end sells of June. Approval was also given to the it Sug- the follows Atkin- are as S.C. H Albert Street Oshawa; sec- Fisher of New- re | 1- of se. cal d to on and a 7 goss 0DU enable building manufactur- the entire and about | stock. It will 59 to be used for Ing purposes and radiator department er TINN 1iViv City Youths Win Awards At Festival Two Oshawa students received the highest awards at the opening night of the 20th annual Victoria County Festival of Music recently| in Lindsay. Donald Parkes, Class 117 For 6 Member Municipalities The Regional Planning Associa: tion, formed last night at City | Hall, was described as "toothless' by Alderman Lyman A. Gifford, |who claimed a district board com- bining the six member municipal- ities was needed, with powers un- der the Planning Act. Formed outside the Act, the Viola solo under 21 and George NeW association has no powers. f Mensel, Class 111 Violin solo Members include mayors, reeves, | under 19, hoth received 88 marks|and planning board chairman from | each from adjudicator, David Oshawa, Bowmanville, Whitby, | Ouchterlony, organist of Timothy East Whitby, Darlington Township Eaton Memorial Church, Toronto, |20d the Township of Whitby. ; Grant Tunnicliffe, ably accom-| Hon. W. G. Manning, Minister panied by Anthony Meagher, re- of Planning and Development for ceived 84 marks in Class 188 (cello| Ontario, suggested formation of a solo open), the only cello entry in| co-operative planning group for the Festival Mr Ouchterlony the area at a recent meeting in complimented him on his tone and Toronto. said how pleased he was to hear TWO MAIN PURPOSES the cello at the Festival. The association was organized STRING QUARTET for two main interlocking pur- A string quartet with Rolf Weh-| poses, as outlined in its constitu- nert first violin, Maureen Lowe, ton. second violin, 'Donald Parkes,| 1. To investigate and survey the viola and Grant Tunnicliffe, cello, physical, social and economic con- p 4 received high praise and 85 marks ditions relative to development of Mr. McGibbon, saying that a mon- 'They have gained nothing in Tor-| for their interpretation of Andante the planning area | power group eliminates fear that | onto that couldn't be gained by Abel. This group who attend! 2. To make recommendations to! any one large municipality "might | through co-operation of the munic- the Oshawa Collegiate and Voca-| local planning boards regarding run the show." |ipalities, such as we are proposing [tional Institute, have been invited|drainage, land uses, communica-| "And no large municipal mem- tonight to take part in the Stars of the tions and services ber can claim that they are being Huge lax burdens are already Festival Concert on May 15th. SEND COPIES milked by the smaller members," |Putting people out of business, if Grant Tunnicliffe, who is the Copies of the constitution will Mr. Millman noted. "If a regional|this group is devoted to planning only cello student in Oshawa, is be sent' to Mr. Manning, and to planning board is found necessary|development on a voluntary basis, presently studying under the direc- the various city and township in future, this can always be ar-/We will solve our problems without tion of Klemi Hambourg. All the councils involved for approval ranged." resort to big-stick tactics. students from Oshawa who took A special committee report,| Mr. Gifford said he was "dis-| "In the horse and buggy days, if part in the contest are from the read by C. C. MecGibbon, chair-|appointed'" that the investigating|our pony went without the whip, studio of Mr, Hambourg, with the. man of the Oshawa planning committee set up by the nici-| we didn't use it." exception of Timothy Peel, a stu- board, described the new associa- palities had not seen fit to recom-| Mayor W. John Naylor, of Osh- dent of Donald Parkes. tion. as a 'voluntary advisory mend a regonal planning board.|awa said: "I hope we never see The following are the students group." [SWALLOW PRIDE the same type of government here from Oshawa who took part in the| Mr. McGibbon said that a reg-| "We must swallow a little pride/as they have in metropolitan Tor- festival, and their rating ional planning board, as suggest-' and forfeit some of our autonomy onto." | Class 106 violin solo under ed by Mr. Gifford, would deprive| for the best interests of all con-] "We have learned a lot from| 3 onto will enjoy tax privileges not accorded other municipalities," Mr. Gifford claimed. SAY NO The land-use plan proposed by the Regional Planning Association would be useless, Mr, Gifford said, unless local boards had enough © "intestinal fortitude" to say no to subdividers, ""Too many planning boards can say yes, and not enough can say " Mr. Gifford charged. Mr, Gifford, only outspoken crit- c at the meeting, said he support- ed formation of the Regional| Planning Assotiation "with reser-| ations." { Mayor Harry Jermyn, of Whit- by, said that some people may ad- mire the metropolitan Toronto set- up, but "governments on top of governments," each with the power to tax, left the tax-payers sweating beneath the burden. "God forbid that we introduce any more ways to impose more | taxes," Mr. Jermyn remarked. ALDERMAN GIFFORD Postmaster NEWTON: Ont. (CP) -- Joan Wadell can probably lay claim to being the youngest postmaster in Canada. She is only 19. Her appointmen' as acting post. master in this small Perth county town, 20 miles west of Kitchener, continues operation of the post of- fice by the family which has run it for 27 years. She took over after her father and mother died. Suggested price INVINCIBLES GUARANTEED QUALITY AND FRESHNESS Lions 'International PUBLIC SPEAKING Was Buried | CONTEST 73 Years Ago GRAND FINALS DRESD (CP)--Seventy-three years ago Saturday, the body of Uncle 'Tom, a literary symbol of the brutality of slavery, was low- ered into a grave a few miles west of this southwestern Ontario community, | To many who read Harriet 7 P. ondary School public sp A cordial invitatior. is e Miss Rickey Male, vocali George Norrish, pianist, intermission, HOLY 1, CROSS HALL, 8 p.m. Five $40 FRI- jackpots ous | SAM PAYNE, (Pres. Oshawa Lions Club) BILL DICK, TULIP TEA, ST. MATTHEW'S ANG can Church, Women's Guild, Saturday, day 5. from 2.30 4.30. Wilson Road and Hoskin Avenue 104b OSHAWA COLLEGIATE AND VOCATIONAL INSTITUTE SATURDAY, MAY 5th, 1956 These contestants are Grand Finalists of See- two provinces of over 5000 entries. of Oshawa and district to attend this functien to hear outstanding young orators in action, There is no admission charge. (Chairman, Oshawa Lions Public Speaking) M. eaking contests of the xtende dto the citizens st, of Toronto, and Mr. will entertain during CECIL NAISH, (Chairman District A-3) call came from Labor Minister Gregg for a meeting Tuesday. 12 King St. E. 108 -- violin solo under 13, Ronald, "Each municipality, regardless smoothly if it could get rid ofthe a is developin" f i, class 110--violin solo under 17,/ N. C. Millman, advisor to the tan areas within a short time, Reeve Walter Beath, of East and Kenneth Starr, 82; Margaret of holding the whip-hand," he said.! LONDON, Ont, (CP) Death Yo Parkes, Grant Tunnicliffe, 85; 0 1n urg don railway commission voted 3-to- P0ards. | violo solo under 15, Grant Fry, 83; quency conversion program which nie . 84 y and discussed plans fer oper- i council could override the decis his studio. St. Petersburg Independent in on music for three years in Oshawa, Palch in Edinburgh an arrangement with the Indepen- commission on broadcasting that be resumed when I return to Lon- Teachers' Federation way affair. Canada must import N bt ' telegre refers to ] y Mr. Cairns' telegram s {Beecher Stowe's best-selling novel certain school broadcasts. : : = a or-- al 1ISpu é | To the people of this town, 15 ways and unions representing 150,-| Mrs. Stowe; who visited Uncle | Tuesday aimed at ironing out the two|vong that of Uncle Tom in traits The unions already have ac- 18-per-cent boost and a contribu- report, saying the board had failed able goods industry as a standard talks could be re-opened only for T= 1 [= a Meat Specials ! SATURDAY ONLY! Phone RA 3-3633 nine, Timothy Peel, 82; class 107! local boards of their autonomy as cerned," Mr. Gifford declared their mistakes." Mayor Naylor| Starr, 82; Wilfred Dawe, 75; Rob- of size will have equal represent-| those members who are afraid to we want y develop-| ert Lofthouse, 85; class 109 -- vio-| ation," Mr. McGibbon explained. |lose their autonomy." ment. We do not want to be in! lin solo under 15, Norma Gower,| 'Expenses will be shared equally,! Mr. Gifford predicted that the|the same position as Toronto, lock- Carolyn Mann, 83; Eleanor Ariss Oshawa planning board, backed! *Next year, I helieve that Tor- Whitby, pleaded for harmony (Ajax), class 111--violin solo under ee CS te oi ---- among members of the Regional : ¢ Mansel by) 88; ss TERR = i " Planning Aceociation, Roy Thomson (ondon's Railway i "I . Also present at the meeting were Smith and Barbara Cleveland, 74: A en 2 We class 114--string quartet open, Rolf Mzyor N. E. Osborne, of Bowman- knell for passenger servic Whitby Township, Morley Wyman, = . iis or passenger Service on the representing Reeve Roy Nichols of class 115 -- piano trio (violin, cello city-owned London and Port Stan- Darlington Townshi and chair- and piano), Maureen Lowe, violin, ley railway may have been i SD, a | Grant Tunnicliffe, cello and Phyl 2 against buying a $40,000 rectifier |class 117 -- viola solo under 21,/ VANCOUVER -- Roy H. Thom- for the St. Thomas sub-station. Donald Parkes, 88; class 118 --| Son, owner of a Canadian news- 2 . | da C ' . will leave the electric road without The Oshawa students who study ating the first independent tele- a St. Thomas source of power undér Mr, Hambourg, take lessons Vision station in Edinburgh. within a year. | either at school, where he is a Mr. Thomson owns 18 Cana- hes and order a rectifier installation. Mr. Hambourg graduated from Florida. Overseas, he owns the -------- hel -- the Royal Conservatory of Music Canada Review in London and m am very keen about our Scot- : : sh television station," he said Radio Station Says during an interview. "I'm very . Teachers Mistaken dent Television Authority OTTAWA (CP)--Calgary radio "Negotiations have been pro proof can be furnisned of the in- don." ; . accuracy of a statement on school He said increased Canadian The telegram, from A. M. Cairns more from Britain to give her says the station also has wired the means to buy in return the federation to make a correc- - - a news report of a survey under- Ottawa To Tr y Uncle Tom' . 4 taken by the CTF into school } Tels Tom's Cabiv, or, the Life adeasts og a 0 he Lowley, ncle Tom was roadeasts » federat said 2 broadcasts. The federation saic only a symbol of the author's Pickering United Church to con- Th i : miles north of Chatham, the body {struct g Christian education! MONTREAL (CP)--The govern- lowered into the ground was. that centre, and to Audley United Ment has stepped in to attempt a of Rev. Josiah Henson, an honored 000 non-operating employees. Tom here several times after the Spokesmen for the CNR, CPR!book was published in 1852, once and the 16 unions agreed Thurs- said |differences between the groups. Observers here saw the of heroic manhood.' acceptance as a sign that the COMING EVENTS cepted reluctantly a conciliation -- board report calling for an 11-per- BINGO cent increase in salary, to be tion of eight cents an hour by the companies to a health and welfare plan. to recognize their inability to pay the increases, which they es. | timated would cost more than $80,- of comparison in wages The railways said they were ready to re-open talks with the the purpose of putting the concilia- tion board recommendations into effect violin solo under 11, Kenneth they became subsidiaries to the "The metropolitan government said. "The question of co-operative | Starr, 80; Edward Clark, 84; class major group of Toronto would work much more! planning is most important, since| 81; Gary Duncan, 78; Michael| and a land - use plan for the entire Provincial Government would ing the door after the horse has Kirkton, 79; Carolyn Mann, 84;!/area will be prepared." grant tax recognition to metropoli-| escaped from the barn." {Whitby 88; violin luet open, Ronald | '""We want no-one to be accused Seen Nearing End . a een Nearing Ln feor N. E. Osborne, of B Wehnert, Maureen Lowe. Donald 0 ive 1 eo e, Norman Ancerson, Reeve of sounded Thursday when the Lon. Men of the corresponding planning {lis Kratz, piano, 84; class 116 r A rectifier is needed in a fre- cello, solo open ---- Grant Tun | Bober chain, arrived here yester- | : | An LRC spokesman said city] stringed instrument teacher, or at dian daily newspapers and the b in Toronto and has been teaching the Scotsman and Evening Dis- 'Uncle To ' hopeful that we can enter into station CFAC has wired the royal ceeding for some time and will broadcasts made by the Canadian trade with Britain must be a two tion Chatham and Calgary radio sta- To Settle evangelical hatred of slavery ntti ctanllv: Tole BF angelical he slavery in tions consistently refuse to carry the southern United States Church to build a new church to! Settlement of the contract dispute resident who had been immortal- replace the present, one. between the country's major rail-|ized in Mrs. Stowe's book. |day to a meeting in Ottawa next "The real history of Josiah Hen- son, in some points, goes even be- |danger of a crippling rail strike | has lessened. day, May granted in stages over the next 14 months. They had sought an UNABLE TO PAY The railways objected to the 000,000 annually. They also ob- jected to the board using the dur unions but Frank Hall, spokesman for the unions, said Wednesday | EMPLOYEES "VICTIMIZED"" | * _.. The proposals leading up RIB VEAL CHOPS VEAL FLANKS LEAN, PEAMEALED COTTAGE ROLLS to the present situation were sub- mitted to the railways Nov. 2, 1 y five months ago." he said in a let- ter to the labor department. "Time and time again the emplovees have been frustrated and victimized by inwarranted vrolonged proceed ings of the character present in this case, concerning is profound dissatisfaction." (Oven Read pe at which there iY Vii also asked that 1h their position r ing the board recommend: ns plant facilities will be moved Company and union officials into it from buildings 62 and 56. [held separate talks most of Wed --Times-Gazette Photo 'nesday on the dispute before the ways clarify Whole Half 43 per cent of the. stamping With Dressing ve QO. 29- 33 ib. y) or 1b.