Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 4 Jun 1956, p. 3

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Sna g Seen In Way of i ER MEMBERS OF THE GRADE 8 graduating class of Westmount Public School pose for an formal group picture as the school year swings into its final month, The group includes Jack [EEN TALK Youth Meeting Scores Big Hit The recent East Central Zone Youth Conference is part of the big news around Oshawa. The first of its kind in this area, it proved that teens have the ability of plan- ping and conducting a meeting of this kind and in so doing, are mak- Ing themselves heard by the adult population. The conference committee, headed by Al Dodds, deserve a round of applause for a job well done. AR The midnight oil is either now being burned or soén will be as| June 12 draws closer. June 12? The beginning of the high school final| examinations. Trust that all are| taking advantage of spare time to study and not leaving it to the last winute. OCVI students are getting ready to welcome another edition of ACTA LUDI, due to 'hit the #tands" next week Gil Taylor, editor-in-chief of the school mag, is expecting boom pales. Advance sales are high and p yearbook is a perfect keepsake Jo it's wise to get two. in- | Subdivision Must Consider City First On Services, Gifford Says Sewer and probably water serv- ices for 'a proposed new subdivision north of Oshawa city limits in East Whitby Township may be contingent upon all Osh- awa citizens getting these public services first or at the same time, Alderman Lyman A. Gifford, chairman of the city Board of Works told the Times-Gazette. The proposed subdivision is to be centred on 438-acre Elmcroft Farm, situated between Port] Perry and Oshawa, and opposite] the National Stud Farm of E. P. Taylor. Brentwood Acres, a Toronto syn- dicate, have a one-year option to buy Elmecroft, which is owned by George McLaughlin. Brentwood have control over 600 acres alto- gether in the area. They expect to begin work this year, their Toronto spokesman said. Alderman Gifford said that there ticularly in the north and north- | east sections, which must receive; public utilities if the new subdivi- sion does. 'There are no sewers| at sli north of Robert street," he] said. Alderman Gifford also said that the city would need a lot of money from another source, either from East Whitby Township or from the subdivision promoters to enlarge the present sewage disposal plant and extend services to both Osh- va citizens and the new subdivi- sion. "I would be the last man in the| world to build a wall around Osh-| awa," Alderman Gifford said. "I| want to see this subdivision come) in. We should be able to work something out to get sewers to them, and to Oshawa citizens." Elmer Powell, chairman of the| East Whitby Planning Board, said Harold Linden, of the Toronto firm Linden and Gordon told the | Times-Gazette that 'there would be a healthy percentage of indus- try in the new subdivision." Lin-_ den and Gordon are managing and promoting the venture for Brent- wood Acres. Linden also said 'this project will be second to none in Canada." It will cost from eight to ten mil: lion dollars and the latest arehi- tectural and landscaping advances' will be incorporated into it." " Owner of Elmcroft Farm; George McLaughlin, said he would" be happy to have Linden and Gore. don pick up the option on the Lo erty. "1 can't farm intelligently. build houses on the land I am try- ing to build up," he said. "Housing alone will not provide enough assessment for East Whit- by to carry the new development ; a lot of industry would have to belthrough property taxation," Mr, are outlying areas in Oshawa, par-|located in the new subdivision. Powell said. 4 Cyclist On World Tour Lauds Russ Hospitality + i by \ Wotten, Gayle Morey, Powlenziuk Carol Regina | Behn, Jeanne Winter, Fay Broad, and Shirley Knox. | --Times-Gazette Photos | Strawbridge, Bob Northey, Larry | Peters, Wayne Davidson, John Drygala, Peter Chase, Mike | Chase, Mike Pollard, George Twine, Lowell Gatchell, Alan Coolidge, Bryan Gilliland, John Ernie Mascke, Pete Mewitt, Marie | Bruce Winning, Jack Knox, Mr. H. Pascoe, principal, Mr. S. Ha- bib, teacher, L. Newell, Sharon teacher, Leyone Newell, Sharon Lang, Carol Ann Collier, Ona ] Zedic, Don McElroy, Wayne Fox, Don Roughling, Gary Hen- | ry, Gerald Peara, Edward Nagy, Donald Smallwood, Larry Jacula, Andy Horvath, | Donny Peters, Doug Pearce, | Martin, Dorothy Brash, May- rene Branton, Barbara Jean Burnett, Maryann Jezegon, Shar- | on Stickwood, Barbara McClim- ond, Ruth Romanuk, Evelyn | Ethier, Brenda Bracey, Marion | | | Cancel But March Held Here and | Samac Parade [Legion Men "| Attend Meet Fifty members of Branch 43 of d the Canadian Legion attended the annual district "F" convention of the Canadian Legion held yester- day at Fenelon Falls at which| Premier Leslie Frost was guest] Despite an unrelenting rainfall |the King, Guide Me O thou great|Jean Armstrong Donal | 1341 Boy Scouts and Girl Guides,|Jehovah, and Jesus Lover of My Houlden. Brownies, Wolf Cubs, Sea Scouts,{Soul. Following the benediction The Salvation Army Band play-| | Rangers and Rover Scouts of Osh-|the gathering sang O Canada, and/ed the music for the hymns in| |vear they hope to go all out and awa paraded following a church|then the color party picked up the|the church service and led the speaker | make it the biggest dance of its service in Simcoe Street United|colors and filed out. parade from the church to the" = kind Church yesterday afternoon. The| From Simcoe Street United park. Other bands in the parade On behalf of the Oshawa branch, WEINER ROAST _|service was changed from Camp| Church the parade wound around were the General Motors Veter-| President Herb Chesebrough made The Teen Town committee, Fri- Sumac yesterday afternoon when to Centre Street, East on Athol|ans pipe band, the First Oshawa|a successful appeal to have the day, decided that their annual the parade leaders saw the rain! Street, to Simcoe Street, South on|Scout Trumpet Band, Sons of Ul-|1857 convention held in Oshawa weiner roast would be held ati wasn't going to stop. Simcoe Street to McLaughlin Park ster Whitby Brass Band. {winning out against bids made by Geneva Park, north-east of Osh-| jeq phy the Salvation Army band| where the parade dispersed. The parade took approximately| Picton, Hastings and Haliburton. awa. The committee, headed by the scouts stepped off with a color| CONDUCTS SERVICE three-quarters of an hour in form-| Other Oshawa Legionnaires who Don Hercia, have decided that at-| arty followed by cubs, guides; The Rev. E. J. Lawlor conduct-|ing up after the church service|took a prominent part in the busi- tendance would be governed by hrownies, etc., and several bands. ed the service for 120 Roman Ca-|and passing the salutting base, and ness of the convention were Frank advance ticket sale only. | Simcoe United Church was filled |tholic Scouts and Guides in St.|it was estimated by Scout leaders Grant, district treasurer and Ben Transportation has become ait; the doors with the youngsters|Gregory's Church. as being the largest church par-|Jacklin, chairman of the resolu- problem. It was decided also that| ang the walls were lined with] As the parade marched past|ade the Oshawa and District| tions committee. there would be no private cars| ,ronts and spectators. The Kev. the old Oshawa library Scout and| Scouts and Guides have ever held.| Despite the wet weather more going to the park. Buses would be| George Telford, D.D. of St. An- guide leaders took the salute.|More than 230 Guide and Scout|than 400 Legionnaires attended the used instead. The number who willl 3rew's' United Church led the ser-| Among those present at the cere-|leaders were on hand to dove By the pr which was highlighted attend the event which is to belyjce and was assisted by the Rev.| mony were Mrs. E. A. Collins of the parade and about a dozen|by the presentation of a Past Pro- held 1a uy has been estimated to| grce Miles who gave the EXoups | Oshawa, divisional commissioner Scouts from Bowmanvile showed] vincial Vice - Presidents medal to |" While on. the subject of Teen a talk on "It's up to you." |and her district commissioners of up, the only Scouts showing from | his worship, Comrade John Bur- t'Yown. Cv Merlin. chairman of the The colors were placed on the | the Girl Guides, Dr. W. D. Warren, the Oshawa District. nett, DCM, Mayor of Cobourg. Teen Town Board of Directors drums at the front of the church|district commissioner of the Boy| S. A. Richardson, executive 'The convention voted to send temporarily tendered his resigna- after being received by Mr. Tel- Scouts 8. A. Richardson, execu- Oshawa estimated the number of District Commander Scotty tion at the meeting. Friday night. ford and Mr. Miles. tive Commissioner and the Rev.|groups thus: 19 Scout troops, 27| Broughton and Deputy District The committee " present voted Following the national anthem, |H. D. Cleverdon, president of the|Cub Packs, 6 Rover Crews, 16| Commander Len Baker to the that the resignation be considered Dr. Telford read psalm 100 and|Boy Scouts Association of Oshawa Guide Companies, 17 Brownie Dominion Command convention at invalid and that Cy continde his the gathering sang, '"'O Worship Parade Marshall's were Mis s/ Packs, 1 Sea Ranger Crew. | Vancouver next week. Oshawa {office until the end of the term i v [delegates to the Dominion con- | ficial leather and those with rub.| vention were Ben Jacklin, business Al "Whitey" Dodds we hear Is going to be guest speaker at the ber or soft soles. | Manager if Franch 4 shi Len It is a standing joke in the| western world that Russians make claims that they have the best in| everything, This may not be true, but they seem to have no superior when it comes to laying out the wel- come mat for an Indian cyclist travelling around the world on a good-will mission, | Shri Misrilal Jayaswal, who| spent the 1,518th and 1,519th days t of his tour in Oshawa Friday and| Saturday, said he received a riotous welcome in Russia. | "In Moscow, Leningrad and all the big cities, the people wel-| comed me with flowers, parades, ! brass bands, bicycle escorts and civic receptions," Jayaswal said in his broken English. 'People lined the streets. In Moscow, there were 100 male and female cyclists Leaf Badge as a souvenir of Can- ada. | This Ottawa visit was one of] and over 8,400 by sea in the four | years he has been on the road.| He started from his home in Chas, Bahir State, India, April 4,| 1952. His trip took him to India's| capital New Delhi, through the Seychelles to Zanzibar, From here he went to Tanganyika, | Kenya, Uganda, Su day and Egypt. | He went by sea to Lebanon in the Middle East. From Lebanon he cycléd through Syria, Turkey, Greece, Bulgaria, Yugoslavia,! Hungary, Austria, Czechoslovakia to Poland. From the Polish capi- tal, Warsaw, he cycled through Russia to Moscow. Then he went north to the Scan- Mexico he will go to New Zealand, Australia, the East Indian Is- lands, Japan, China and Ceylon [thousands that Jayaswal made as/and back to India. He expects to {he covered 60,000 miles by land|complete his trip by December, 1957. Jayaswal said that 'the hospi- tality of human beings has he- ver failed me in my long but hopeful, difficulty but pleasant mission." Oshawa hospitality did not fail this world traveller either. Jayas- wal was a guest at the home of Rev. John K. Moffat, minister of Simcoe Street United Church, for his two-day stay. Jayaswal said he "embarked on this voyage round the globe to wi- den my vision and in my humble way to convey the most needful message of peace, truth, non-vio- lence and co-existence." the tour for an escort." Jayaswal said he dinavian countries. From Finland, is unsponsored. received an equally good recep- tion in Russian-dominated West| Germany. CANADA VISIT _ Canada went Russia one better in this regard. In Ottawa recent-| y, Jayaswal was received by| he crossed the Baltic sea, and| rode through Sweden, Denmark| East Germany, West Germany, Switzerland, France and then to England. He crossed the Atlantic to come to Canada. Jayaswal left for Toronto Satur- Jayaswal said he expects to re- ceive a fine welcome in the United States. He has already been of- fered places to stay in several cities and towns by people anxious to welcome him. Perhaps the U.S. will prove to Prime Minister Louis St. Laurent|day morning. From there he willl Jayaswal that the Russians are and Labor Minister Milton F.|go to the United States to Cuba|not t Gregg. Gregg presented the round-|and the West Indies and then to the-world cyclist with a Maple!South America. Jumping off from he only people who can lay out the welcome mat for an inter- national good-will visitor. 1 | | | Speaking of Gil Taylor, we hear fSketton, first vice president. the Continentals, the song group of which he is a third, displayed their Port Perry Lions Club dinner meeting tonight. We hear too, that Bill Howard is going along to pro- ROUGHEN SOLES If the soles are smooth, I sug- talents at Colbourg High School's last dance of the year, Friday night. Once again, with the coming of summer and the closing of school, the Get Together Club has closed up shop for . another year. Bob Smart of the "Get" said that next NAMES PLAYERS LONDON (AP)--England Sun day named 13 men for the first cricket te match against Aus- tralia opening at Trent Bridge Thursday. The 11 to play will be pnnounced just before the start They are: Peter May (captain Bob Appleyard, revor Baile) Colin > Godfrey Evans, Fom Graveney, Jim Laker, Tony Lock, n Moss, Peter Richard- son, Brian Statham, Johnny Wardle and Willie Watson. {thea Gibson of New York Saturday | y 7 a E| 17th victory of an Asian-European tour. 4 ODD NEST Offically "home" to the parakeet, owned by Robin Sue Ditzian of the Bronx, N.Y., is the confining barriers of his cage. But whenever he gets an opportunity to "break loose," he makes for his favorite haunt which is the soup ladle that hangs between the spatula and egg beater on the kitchen wall The feathered flyboy would ra- ther asieep th than in his cage and returns home when thirsty or hungry ~--Central Press Canadian Spike, only ,| signed gest you roughen them with a est you Jit", THEY EXPLORED FOR BETTER HEALTH Shop With Caution | SL oh at, Bom a eres © oo FLOOR OF SER - I needed for this column, Any help] For Children S Shoes shoes, Just remember that correc- son Jacques made a descent into " i leas | would be i Je gse drop By HE !N. IN 7 , tive shoes should be ordered by| the Tyrrh i S : E: all | Mariash, care By HERMAN N. BUNDESEN, MD upon the youngster trying on in- 1 ® of Pon an ea near He x and of Ponza on Sept. 30, 1953. of Oshawa Times-Gazette So you think it's a tough job to numerable pairs of shoes prescripon and only after a doc. -- - go shopping for shoes for your, Just HT that your tots for Se Iai oper diagnosis of| The reported bathyscaphe de- youngsters? It might be a lot hard-|shoes should be one thumb-width|'¢ 100% CO on. scent was 10,168 feet. er physicaly on the child longer than his foot and one finger-| Otherwise, some appliances or marine equipment of all Excessive use of those fluoro- width wider. {built into so-called orthopedic types, Classified Ads are your scopes found in some retail shoe OXFORD STYLE [shoes might only damage the Tarket place. stores these days can be danger- Generally, shoes which lace! child's feet. { ial RA 3-3492 for the assist. ous to any tot's foot. across the tongue are best for QUESTION A ance of am 24 wiisr who'll help Now I'm not saying that testing youngsters. An oxford style usual- AK.: What you get fast results. the fit of the shoe a few times with ly is preferred for a child of two Wain uh # these machines will harm him. or more since high shoes offer no | SKIN DAMAGE additional support. This might give| Answer: It is a rare disease, 1ONDON (Reuters)--Roger Ban- But uncontrolled length of ex- better protection against the Most often found in women, and Is|pister first man in the world to posure and repeated exposures as|weather, but that's about their|Similar to. Buerger's disease that| yy; 4 mile in four minutes, has you travel from store to store with only advantage. occurs in men, accepted an invitatidn to speak at him, can affect his foot. It might] The shoes should be made off It is a_ disease in which the|the annual dinner of the Montreal cause skin damage or even bone solid leather and have thick, In- nands bed®me cold and blue and| Amateur Athletic Association June! distortion ; flexible soles. rhe circulation gradually becomes|20. The dinner, and a broadcast Maybe the ordinary method of, I think you'll find this type of less and less. Gangrene can de-| which Bannister will make during measurement and observation shoe will be better for your child velop if this disease is allowed to|his short visit, are sin aid of the still is best, at least if you insist than booties, shoes made of arti-! progress. Canadian Olympic Fund. vide some support . Sugges-| tions, questions, complaints, bits of NEUMANN SIGNS HAMILTON (CP) -- Pete Neu- mann all-star eastern Canada de- fensive end, signed his 1956 con- tract with Hamilton Tiger-Cats of the Big Four Football Union Satur- day TiCats also said a local high school line- man, Ed Cummings, for a tryout this year. Cummings is a 19-year- old guard from Hamilton Cathedral high school. Club president said he noticed nouncement Saturday that Quincy Armstrong, a former TiCat who went to the United States National Football League two years ago, has been signed by Ottawa Rough Ri- ders for the 1956 season. Armstrong; left Hamilton two years ago to re- join Chicago Bears. Gaudaur said Armstrong is still Hamilton property. He cited a Big Four ruling which says a player who leaves Canada to return to U.S. football remains the property of his Canadian team in the event he comes back to this country. "But, I'm not sure if we'll do anything about it," Gaudaur added AMERICAN WINS , i A : SURBITON, England (AP)--Al- a : ww 4 ! ND ANSWER is Raynaud's dis-| they have ey VE BANNISTER ACCEPTS Jake Gaudaur an Ottawa an- ERTIST USES HER BACK FOR CANVAS Top Parisian artist Rik Cursat, who can draw as well with eith- er hand, is pictured here prac- tising his art on the back of Miss Paris 1956, Genevieve Janet. What artist wouldn't be inspired with such a "canvas" as this? defeated Anne Shilcock of Britain 6-3, 13-11 to win the Surrey tennis tournament women's singles, her TOUR FINALLY ENDS LA JOLLA, Calif. (AP)--The professional tennis tour of Tony Trabert and Pancho Gonzales ended Sunday with Trabert trim ming his arch-rival 1-6, 6-2, 11-9. Gonzales is the tour champ, | however, by a wide margin of 74 games to Trabert's 27. COMING EVENTS RUMMAGE basement June 5 SALE KNOX Brock and Simcoe, at 1.30 CHURCH Tuesday, 130a BINGO day, AT STORIE June 6, 2 p.m. PARK, WEDNES 130b al MOVIE PROJECTOR PRESENTED GM EMPLOYE 20 games retired | tendent of Inspection. Others in | Graham. The veteran employee the picture, left 'to right, are | had 28 years of service with | Don MacMillan. Norm Hannan, | GM. He is leaving Oshawa on who lives at 224 Johnston Ave Bill Harris, Bill Willoughby, Ken | July 18 to take a frip to Aus- being congratulated by ve REGULAR CP bert Street Hall, 5 $40. jackpots AND T. BINGO, Monday, who from Generzl Motors of Canada at the end of Mav. Mr. Graham Shown holding the movie pro- | ger Chassis Plant, jector which he received from follng works ac a re tirement gift is Jack Graham foreman the Receiving and BINGO Street AT West, THE Tuesday, KING 8 pm 1202 AVALON, June 5 hic BINGO. MONDAY JUNE 4 8 PM 219 Dlive Avenue, 20 games, $5., $6. Four of Buehler's] Meat Specials! Tuesday and Wednesday ! Phone A 3-3633 ECONOMY STEAKS 2 = 79° LEAN we STEW BEEF sorte SAUSAGE MEATY PORK HOCKS VEAL STEW 3} 1.00 LOIN PORK CHOPS Economy Package ib. IN) LEAN Ds nue, is Williams and Lawrence Crowe, | tralia. | --GM Photo | $40. Jackpots. 130a' Inspection Department, Passen- | Roy Stephens, General Superin- | all of whom trained under Mr.| a huck STEAK

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