Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 7 Jun 1958, p. 2

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DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Scturdey, June 7, 1958 Addressing the graduating class from Oshawa General Hos- pital School of Nursing at their graduation exercises in OCVI Friday night, Dr. M. B. Dymond, Ontario Minister of Transport, stressed the importance of indi- vidual effort in the world today. "This is the first time in many years of public speaking that I have had the privilege of ad- dressing a class of graduating nurses," he said. "During the past three years, 1 imagine you Grads Hear Dr. D vmond At OGH Graduation Dr. Dymond went on to say that he has been closely associa- ted with the nursing profession for years, and has seen many h in the prof "Many |of these changes are very desir- able, but some are not, If the |demands of your profession are | going to enslave you to a desk, then nursing has fallen on bad times." £ "I think we of the older gen- |eration are making the same By JACK GOOD EVENING GEARIN holds for you. Perhaps it is bet-| Reportssindicate that ter you do not know. There are three attitudes toward the future. One group think they have the world by the tail, It will not be long before they find that they have something they cannot swing, and dare not let go. "Another group adopt the attitude 'what's the use' -- and drift along with the crowd. i "The third group see life as al constant challenge. This is the| about. mistake as previous generations group that will succeed." HEADS DELEGATION Prime Minister Diefen- baker is fitting into his new position with ease. An Oshawa man who visited with him for an hour this week on an important mission found him courteous, affable and most willing to oblige in any way possible; he also said that the premier acted with the easy, relaxed manner of a man who knows what he wants and also what his job is all |referee dreams about -- some. George L. Roberts, principal of thing I'll be able to tell my LWAYS CHALLENGE grandchildren about." have had your fill of advice, so have. I think that we malign the| A X | Dr. Dymond said that there The Oshawa Collegiate and Voca- 1 will not offer any. Listening to younger generation in the same by| are two qualities born in every- tional Institute and president of COMPLETES 41 YEARS GM Foreman Bill Osborne, left, | General Motors' Inspection Pe- presents Norman Dunford of | 'partment with a gift upon his |a group of nurses. recently, 1/way as we were maligned ' heard some unfamiliar terms, our parents' "he's al generation is no worse, and pro- which are essential to success | = | 'by giving lengthy advice." "| graduation, and commencement, | fear, though, that SERVICE 4 | retirement after 41 years ser- | vice. --GM. Photo House Sideline Loan Company OTTAWA (CP) -- The Com-| works spending estimates. mons has sidelined a private SIMILAR BILLS CGF bill designed to curb what! Mr. Argue, member for Assini- its sponsor called "fantastie' in-'boia who has sponsored similar terest rates charged by some bills before, laced into what he %0an companies and credit-finan- called fabulously-high interest cing firms. rates. An annual rate of 20 per House Leader Hazen Argue of cent a year was '"'quite common" the CCF called the rates a "'blot|and some fixed by retail stores on democracy' in introducing his|ran as high as 54 per cent, he measure Thursday to day-long ®aid. debate. | His measure excluded bank The bill proposed a 12-per-cent rates and finance company loans interest ceiling on all loans not up to $1,500, already covered by specifically controlled by present federal law. laws. Debate was adjourned in-| Speakers for the Progressive definitely after drawing Progres- | Conservatives gene rally ques- sive Conservative reaction rang-|tioned whether the biil as worded ing from outright opposition to would achieve its purpose, and sympathy for the motive behind expressed misgivings about the it. | possibility of tampering with a The two Liberal speakers sug- source of consumer funds at a gested it go to a parliamentary | time when any slackening in pur- itteé, a step proposed by|chases might increase unemploy- MY, Argue in the event the Com-|ment. mops did not wish to adopt the Gordon Chown (PC--Winnipeg measure now. South) saw it as an attempt to Today, the Commons moved on destroy a "healthy enterprise" to Saunch Its study of public|filling a Canadian need. More| s CCF Bill than 500 finance company branches across the country pro- vided employment and a source of consumer spending. He said he doubted that in- terest rates generally were too high, taking into account operat- ing costs and risk involved Mr. Argue interrupted to ask whether Mr. Chown was aware 'hat finance company losses in| 1956 amounted to about one- quarter of one per cent. There was no risk, he said. LIBERALS COMMENT Both Chesley W. Carter (L-- Burin-Burgeo) and William M. Benidickson (L -- Kenora-Rainy River) suggested the matter be referred toa committee. Murdo Martin (CCF -- mins) asked why there are speed controls on our financiai highways?' He cited what he said were two cases of exorbitant | loan interest rates brought to his| attention recently. Both had been | straightened out when wide- spread publicity was threatened. m- "no | one of which was square'--I gather that this is not a complimentary term, so I do not want to leave you w impression that I am a 'square' "The dictionarv tells me ing. I prefer commencement, The word graduation has an air of finality, while commencement conveys the impression of start- ing on a new life, which is what you are doing." generation. Your) | | bably better, than the previous! generation, You are living in un-| ith the usual times, in a rapidly chang-| he said, "I said-I would give you ing world, with emphasis on ex-|/no advice, but I urge you to creased federal aid for educa-|n. i perimentation. Progressive edu- that cation is the order of the day. 1jthe current, You will progressive { 'have practically the same mean- education tends to produce pro- | gressive laziness." Dr. Dymond said: is shrinking, but the greater than ever, in fact they are almost limitless, You may lask yourseives what the future "The world horizons are | the Canadian Teachers' Federa- tion, headed a nine-man delega- to visit the one--discontent and curiosity -- {tion from the CTF | premier. | The delegation requested in-| in today's world, "Do not lose these qualities," leave the crowd, swim against tion, but Mr. Diefenbaker was not be greatly concerned by constitu ilonely, as you will be in the com- tional problems in the way of the pany of the greatest men and) aid, | women in the world, when you refuse to drift with the crowd! |As you leave here tonight, gol {with this determination -- that| life will always be a challenge, | {never a truce." War Memento Brings Fine Illegal possession of a war- time, Mauser automatic revolver brought a fine to an Oshawa man in police court here Friday. ! The gun was confiscated. Ted Jurikiw, 33, of 289 Conan{ street, was fined $10 and costs or 10 days in jail. Jurikiw pleaded {guilty to a charge of possessing the revolver unregistered in his house Sergeant of Detectives W. Jor- dan testified that he had received information leading to the ques- tioning of Jurikiw. The accused produced the revolver at his home. He admitted that the auto- matic was not registered. Jurikiw stated that he had pur- chased the gun in 1956 for $50. He had last fired it two months ago. Crown Attorney Alex C. Hall, QC, called the gun a *'War-time memento." "Fourteen years ago on this day, June 6," he said, "a lot of these were in use." CELEBRATING BIRTHDAYS Congratulations and best wishes to the following resi- dents of Oshawa and district who are celebrating their birthdays today. Those celebrating their birthdays today are: Beverley Cherry, 360 Verdun road; Na- talie Blasko, 116 Barrie ave- nue; Mrs. Anthony Setchison, 45 Division street; Gail Pen- haie, Town Line road S.; Mrs. Dorothy Conlin, 287 Drew street; Clarke Hubbell, 18 Cadillac S.; E. A. Small, 453 Louisa street, Those who will celebrate on Sunday, June 8, are: Mrs, W. Fi A a i R. S. DISNEY ROY STANLEY DISNEY Roy Stanley Disney, prominent Oshawa realtor who has resided in the city for the past 40 years, died at his residence, 17 Sunset avenue early today. He had been (in indifferent health for some {time. He is survived by his wife, {the former Mabel Buchanan and two children, Mrs. F. Blake | Branton and Russell, both of 'Will Revive Teen Dances The CRA Teen Town Club and| its regular Friday dances will be revived before the end of the month, /reports CRA advisor Bill Howard. The! club foled up last August through lack of participation by interested teenagers. Since then weekly dances have been held for teenagers under the patronage of the CRA. rt they Jack ihe Suiusiatm $i of a club," said Mr. Howard. The present dances are held in the GEORGE L. ROBERTS CRA bulding from 8 to 11.30 p.m.| Mr. Roberts was disappointed with aniadmission charge of 50 with the results of the meeting cents. {but he was impressed by the Mr. Haward hopes to have a|p.m.'s compiete grasp of the [neuting of we Rew Shivt SXSCT- situation, and by his sincerity. ve Friddy, June 13. "We know| «rhe jssues were crystallized u " nested teenagers Jom early in the conference," said Hast years: cud who - ould! nr "Roberts, 'but the prime min- | make good officers," he sald. lgier never rushed us, even after LR Ce a Re {1s + ./he had given us his reply. The (It is expected td be a large scale impression 1 got was that he de- {affair with much extra entertain-ijherately extended our time out j ment, Sovard ts. tat Ai laf courtesy to a visiting delega- | Mr. Howard reports tha s tion." | is mot the first time that the Teen| No doubt the reassuring in- {Town Dance Club) has folded upigyence of hi= overpowering Par- and been revived. It closed down liamentary majority also has Denholm never advanced be- yond the juvenile class as a soc- cer player in Scotland but he fol- lowed the Hearts at Tynecastle Park in Edinburgh and he knows most of the present roster by ame. Asked what he will receive for tonight's chore, Denholm re- plied: "It doesn't matter much be- cause I'd do it for free if they asked me; but I think they'll pay me about $10." He works at Duplate (Canada) Oshawa Riding Liberals appear to have acted with wisdom in lecting a new candiate for the ext provincial election. George K. Drynan, 47-year-old shawa lawyer, has never before 'tossed his hat into such an im- portant political arena, but here's much to be said in his vor, Certainly he should provide "drive and initiative to the sadly- gging Oshawa Riding Liberal Association, He should also sup- ply the kind of background the Liberals urgently need -- both at # Queen's Park and Ottawa--if they re to emerge reasonably soon from what some of the party call "The Valley of Drynan is a man of direct ac- tion and strong loyalties -- "I'm a Liberal of the stamp of Mac- kenzie King and I'm also a John Wintermeyer Liberal" -- who [first tested his political wings [last November when he sought a seat on the board of education. The fact that he ran third, with 4918 votes, out of a total of 12 candidates, shows his political ambitions were not exactly mis- placed. The board of education record reveals him as a trustee with | strong principles who will not sac- rifice those principles in the face of pressure, He has ruffled a few {furs in Oshawa's education world |by his aggressive manner and in- |sistence on speaking the truth as |game. James Denholm, of 251 Simece, |street south, will be on hand as Brooklin. in 1954 with a new teen-age execu- . ; 2 : X . |tal observers have noticed a as anything but a fence-sitter. His brother Lew, with whom tive. {"new" Mr. Diefenbaker in the] He was wounded in combat awa and Port Perry, predeceased, WEATHER led, officially speaking, tonight in|months in Germany and north him. Toronto at the big soccer game west Europe as captain-investiga- a director of the Mill Valley Lum-| iio 'weather office at 5 a.m.| Terence V. Kell I .m. . y, Oshawa| Another interesting feature of ber Co. but had confined himself | py. lawyer, will be on hand as a Drynan's candidature fs the fact He was ors » Greenwood, |, eg screen temperatures to drop candidate in Brandon, Manitoba, Ont, son of the late John andy, 4ne 15 30s in inland regions, for the provincial legislature. He Oshawa, and a brother Fred of in 1953 only to bé started again go ohing to do with it, but capi- he knows it, and he is regarded he was 8 pariver 18 8 Supmiore days since the election. with the Irish Regiment of Can- and understaking business in Osh. | | Oshawa will be well represent-|ada in 1944, He later served nine The late Stan Distey was sls TORONTO (CP)~-Official fore-'between Heart of Midlothian and |tor with the Canadian war crimes at one time general manager and casts jgsued by the Dominion Manchester City. investigation unit, to his real estate business for the gonopsis: Clear skies and light [director of The Ontario Football|that Robert E. Clement, a past few years. winds in Southern Ontario all-| Association, sponsors of the brother - in - law, is the Liberal Sarah Disney. He was. also edu- |. iio ating extensive frost at the |also is testing his wings for the cated there. He was a member : [first time as a Liberal candidate. Howe, 5 Bloor street E.; W. |ground level. Central and North-|one of two officiating linesmen. JAMES DENHOLM = ed Ja Spm ® gr at city h aor There was considerable alk about the property of Mr. he Mrs, William Birkett of 355 awa boulevard north. Rats werd reported to be running rampant there -- the Birketts killed seven in a few hours -- and the creek was reported polluted and a health menace. Then Alderman John Dyer got into the act and it did lives: things up a bit. Alderman Dyer said the city. was "embarrassed" by the Bir- kett property and he wanted to know why council couldn't put some teeth into the law so that people could be protected from buying such properties whic were known to the city to have certain "defects." What irked him was that the previous owners had also com- plained about the rat., about the polluted creek, about the "abom- inable" stench, and that the pres- ent owners were allowed to move in without being warned. The Birketts, in a letter to council co-signed by 10 neighbors, ask that a tile culvert be placed in the creek, a costly proposition which is to be considered by the board of works. Alderman Thomas referred to the Birkett property as a 'defi- /nite health problem." Alderman Dyer's concern for prospective property buyers Ts commendable. Many will argue, and rightly so, that the onus is not on the: city to warn prospective property" buyers of such "defects," but it does seem that much time could have been saved (including the council's) and discomfort avold- ed if the word had been passed along to the Birketts. HERE AND R A recent Oshawa visitor was Henry F. Anderson of Pontiac, Mich., who worked here with the Ontario Malleable Iron Co. Ltd. from 1912 to 1915. He was a close friend of the late Sgt. David Jones, former president of the Sergeants' Mess at the Armories and one of the original members of "The Old Contemptibles." . . « July 19 next will be a big date for O:hawa Terence V. Keliy, He will be married on that day to Miss Jacqueline Michaud of Fredericton, N.B., who is the daughter of Hon. J. E. Michaud, QC, PC. Chief Justice of the Queen's Bench Division, the Su. preme Court of New Brunswick. Cedar street; Mrs. Al Tyson, of Northminster United Church. ern Ontario had patches of cloud| So it will be an extra - special | COUNCIL NOTES { ++» When a class of 68 was con- He is now resting at the Arm-| strong Funeral Home, but friends |are requested not to call before That was a quiet session of council this week, with little ho was an ardent excitement and less news. E.; Thomas Chapman , 1367 Charlton, 438 Richmond street 335 Mary street, but the steady breeze in those event for Denholm, 38-year-old areas did much more to prevent Ontario County Soccer Associa- | city firmed recently by Rt. Rev. F, V, referee, Ww! Allen, "auxiliary bishop of Toron- The first five persons to in- form The Times of their birthdays each day will re- {at Northminster United Chur {frost by holding temperatures 1a, well up in the 40s. Regiona! forecasts valid until idnight Sunday: Sunday. Funeral services will be hel {tion [supporter of the Hearts when he lived in Trenent near Edinburgh {before moving to Canada in 1953. | Acting Mayor Hayward Mur- doch presided in the absence of [Mayor Gifford and was his usual efficient self; but it to, at St. Gertrude's Church on King street east, two of the offi. ciating priests were brothers -- Rev. F. Mahoney, church pastor, | Tuesday at 2 p.m. Interment will| | follow at Mount Lawn Cemetery. | t hid "This is a great honor," said|decorous and ceive double tickets to the ara, Lake Ontario, Windsor, Lon- Denholm today "to be a lines-|was a dull session, nevertheless, Regent Theatre, good for a Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Niag-| and Rev. Edward Mahoney, pas- four-week period. Current at- traction is "A Farewel: to Arms", but if the recipients preier to attend another movie during the next four weeks they may do so. 'don, Toronto, Hamilton; Mainly man for such an important|and much of the business was tor of St. Joseph's Church in To- ronto. |sunny today and Sunday, Sivad- game. It's something a soccer referred to special committees, a ui SE CITY AND DISTRICT Winds southwest 15 today, light MAN JAILED tonight, south 15 Sunday. | One man was locked up by the Lawyer Gets No 'Satisfaction today. Mainly cloudy tonight and Georglan Bay, Haliburton, Sud- | bury, Kirkland Lake, North Bay: Clear with a few cloudy periods ROTARY SPEAKER | George McLaughlin, of Beaver- THREE OGH GRADUATES These three nurses from Osh- | their three-year training Fri- | awa General Hospital graduat- | ray. Mary Atkinson, left, of ing class have a happy smile { Barrie, Joan Burgin, centre, of for the camera at the end of | Claremont, and Maryanne before the graduation cises, which were ing. Mayer, right, of Oshawa, pose exer- held in OCVI auditorium Friday even- | Tet Planes Will t Provide Cheap . Transportation | VANCOUVER (CP) {omies of new jet planes are fantastic, Grant Mec- Conaehie, president of Canadian|he lodged the complaint after be- Pacific Airlines, sald in an ad-|ing assessed $18 when a constable dress. |lantic cheaper, than they can be {fed on the Queen Mary. | "Many people in this room will THE LIBRARY WORLD Paint Brush And Bottle Life Of Maurice Utrillo 'The following reviews were Yikten by a member of the cLaughlin Public Library staff. Other reviews will be published from time to time. P of as "one of us", BRUSH AND A BOTTLE felf, was in great anxipty over friend iLife of Utrillo Man from ler son sand took hi away A RING HAS NO END Econ-|vincial police at Kaladar, Ont., passenger last April, He predicted that jets will be|told him a radar device showed |able to fly people across the At-'he had been speeding. From Complain |Sunday. Warmer. Winds west 15 WINNIPEG (CP) -- Winnipeg | 1 a lawyer Aubrey J. Halter said Lda). and tonight, southwest 20 Friday he got little satisfaction | Sarre nb. 5 i from the Ontario attorney-gener- | dius Raps asing, Mainly als depastment oh complaint | showers tonight and Sunday over a speeding fine he paid pro- : : & p p |Warmer today, turning cooler Sunday. Winds west 20 today, Mr. Halter said in an interview |!1ght tonight and Sunday. Forecast Temperatures Lows tonight Highs Sunday Windsor 80 St. Thomas . London ... Wingham . Toronto .. stopped him on the highway and Mr. Halter said he was not speeding and the radar speed trap was not marked as required ton, formerly of Oshawa, will be the speaker at the meeting of the Rotary Club of Oshawa at Hotel Genosha on Monday. AWARDED $1304 Peter Strychalski, an employe in the west plant, has been awarded $1304 for a suggestion filed with the General Motors Suggestion Plan. He suggested a way in which obsolete T shafts, used in clearview windows, could be utilized for this year's produc- tion. RETIREMENTS AT GM 'Oshawa Police Department dur- ing the night, He was charged with having liquor illegally, GRASS FIRE One grass fire near the Harbor !road caused a fire alarm for the Oshawa Fire Department at 8:30 p.m. Friday. The department also received two ambulance calls during the last 24 hours. TWO-CAR CRASH Two automobiles crashed on Simcoe street south near the Bruce street service station of | | [then a well recognized artist of left with a feeling not of 3 i repulse " whom Lautrec and Degas spoke at Utrillo's way of life, hh of of destruction, Maurice had sadness and pity for a great man aever touched a brush. Suzanne who broke his own Fk trying Valdon, as she now called her-|to find a true and understandin live to see the day when 'out ofjby law. He had paid the fine in this world' is a destination, not|order to continue his trip between a figure of speech," he said. Toronto and Ottawa. Kaladar is "Though increased efficiency of 40 miles northwest of Kingston. aircraft permitted continuing] The lawyer said he received a lower fares over the last 10 years, |letter from the department say- the trend will probably level off.|ing the radar devices had never "There is not the same impetus|/been known to be wrong. It added for plane development as in the|that since Mr. Halter is a lawyer past nor money behind the plane he should have known he could |as an instrument of goodwill asinot be arrested on the speeding there was behind it as a weapon charge and did not have to post | bond. Canada Woefully Behind 8 | 6, 1958. John Wesley husband of Stella Richards, Trenton ... St. Catharines Hami!ton Muskoka . Killaloe . Earlton ... Sudbury .... North Bay . Kapuskasing White River . Don Robinson at 11:05 p.m. Fri- day. Damage was an estimated $170. The cars were driven by John A. Wilson, 34, of 82 Simcoe street south, and by Walter Smith, 23, of Stevenson .road rorth, RR 1, Oshawa, General Motors of Canada, Limited, has announced the re- tirement of five of its veteran Oshawa employes. The men now enjoying the fruits of their years' of toll are Edward W. Batten, | OPEN DOOR A car door flying open may have beer a factor in causing a traffic accident at King street and Park road at 11:35 p.m, Fri. day. Three cars were involved in the accident. Damage was esti- mated at $380, The drivers were Dmitro Tarasiuk, 32, of 697 King street east; Raymond E. Em- morey, 22, of Lot 14, RR 1, Ponty- pool; and Robert A. McHugh, 22, of 268 Haig street. : $225 DAMAGE An estimated damage of $228 was caused in a traffic accident at the intersection of Glendale avenue and Glengrove street at 11:45 p.m. Friday. The cars in- volved in the collision were driv- en by Clarence P. Foster, 60, of 146 Alma street; and by Robert Lewis Green, 39, street east. of 1328 King- LARGEST ISLAND Rhodes, the largest island ia the Dodecanese, has an area of 542 square miles. receptionist, with 30 years' serv-| ice; Harry H. Brown, stamping] plant, with 30 years' service; Al-| K558zzz8R0Y Moosonee LATE DEATH | BALSON - Entered into rest In Bowmanville Hospital on Friday, June Balson, beloved in his |years' service; Arthur 8. Gaynor, | with 31 years' service. bert Hale, inspection, with 24' truck body. with 31 years' service and John W. Wood, truck body, | A rear-end collision between | | two automobiles occurred at 154 CITY OF REAR-END COLLISION OSHAWA UNLICENSED PEDDLERS All persons peddling goods or merchandise from door to door, or who go from door to door receiving orders for goods or merchandise to be delivered at a later date, are required to first obtain a peddler's licence, as provided for by By-Law Number 2725, as amended. There have been a number of con- victions lately for contravention of the by-law. LICENSING IS FOR THE PROTECTION OF THE Mill street at 3:15 p.m. Friday. | The drivers were Grant Harold | O'Reilly, 22, of 341 Phiilip Mur- ray avenue, and Knud Due, 32, of 154 Mill street. Damage was estimated at $175. 80th year. Resting at the Armstrong Funeral Home, Oshawa. With memor- fal service in the chapel Monday, e,/June 9, 2:00 p.m. Interment Zion . y. (Friends are asked ndt to the Funeral Home before Sat: 132a In Prison Reforms -- MP By ARCH MacKENZIE discip y C Canadian Press Staff Writer [He said it had been shown con-|can at 0 Montmartre by Stephen and "OT the asylum, in order to; by Thomas Armstrong Fghel Longstreet |care for him herself. They lived| A story of one of the great Marie Clementine Valadon i the country and all was well houses of Russia, its powers and never disclosed the name of pig awhile, but very soon Mau- disasters. This novel takes place Utrillo's father, but everyone as- rice had returned to his favorite at the critical point In Russia's sumed it was Renoir. A Iricnq | Pastime of drinking in the viliage history -- the Revolution. TTAWA. (CP) -- A govern: |clusively that the deterrent value urday. gave Maurice the eof Go inns. Driven to despair Suzanne A SUMMER PLACE ment supporter versed in the sub was nil but a half-way step was| Be was brought up by his locked him in his room with only by Sloan Wilson |ject says Canada is "woefully be: better than nothing, I canvas, paints, and brushes to, The author of "The Man in the hind in prison reform." | Prisoners became even more | TENDER FOR WATER MAINS Sealed tenders properly marked "Tender for Water Mein Contract W58-3" will be received by the undersigned up to gapdiaties kee! . ! | p him occupied. G 8 " " He frit (PCB - ie Clementine: started her| Pp ray Flannel Suit," has written ward Grafftey (PC--Brome- antagonistic through the degrad-| $5 p.m. Wednesdoy, June 18th, 1958. a prison This was the beginning of Mau- a new novel about a fashionable Missisquoi), a new Commons|ation of the lash and strap. carder not only as a desirable|ice Utrillo's career. The years island in Maine and the people Member and a director of the HAD BEEN RECOMMENDED i, but as a promising paint. that followed were a mixture of 'who vacation there. John Howard Society of Mont-| Their abolition from prison er elf and had very little drunkenness and hazy moments'LOVE IS LIKE THAT real, expressed his view Friday sentences had been recommended | fo devote to her small son.|of consciousness when Maurice olnt Senate. the time Maurice was ten, [put onto his canvas his great he erred wine to miik, and love of the streets of Paris, The ie hy life of an adult in a paintings sold, so of course there hold which could hardly be was more money for brandy called home. The short moments wine and absinthe i wha his mother was with him| The painter's brush and the were the only sunny spots in an bottle were the only things in oth§rwise dull life. Utrillo's life which mattered to Young Maurice never enjoyed him. His devotion to both was re 1 and would rather join deemed only by his love for his s for drinks at the corner mother, whose gay life he could caf§ than listen to dull lectures. not share. When she hecame He ¢ wandered alone, seldom dangerousiy ill, all that was left sobfr, and at the age of 18 his to him was his creative drive and was in such a poor state his bottle of brandy that he required treatment at an| This is a factual a | Longstreets lived in his mother was Ww The and novel Paris knew Utrillo's mother. One Is] by Cecil Roberts Charming, tragic, but reminis- cences of several people who have retreated to a small place on the Italian Riviera. LIBRARY BRIEFS The Little People's Film Hour is being discontinued for the summer! The last showing took place this afternoon Col. Leonard Brockington, rec- tor of Queen's University and Henry Campbell, chief. librarian, Toronto Public Libraries, visited the library on their way to the Ontario Library Association in Kingston last week. We were pleased to have Col. R. S. Mc. Laughlin svcompany them, a {in debate on a private CCF bill unanimously by a } to abolish corporal punishment in prison sentences. The measure proposed by Har- | old Winch: (CCF -- Vancouver Fast) drew support in principle from all three Conservative speakers including a former RCMP officer. But it was talked out, dropping to the bottom of the pile of private members' bills. | The "brutality and physical de- gradation" of corporal punish- ment--applied in Canada by the strap and lash--was at odds with recent progress in penal reform, Mr. Winch said Mr. Winch's bill favorite snhjects on one of his would have re. Istricted corporal punishment to'crime in most cases. Commons committee studying] penal reform a few years ago. | Support came from F. J. Bigg (PC Athabaska), a former | member of the RCMP, and law- yer Gerald W. Baldwin (PC---- Peace River) who said corporal punishment is "useless and obsol- ete" in Canada's Criminal Code. | Mr. Bigg said that in 23 years as. a police officer he had found most violent crimes were com- mitted by victims of broken homes. No use of the "engines of torture' involved in corporal pun- ishment could offset the lack of love and affection wrich he be- lieved to be the root cause of This contract is for the foying of approximately 4892 ft, of 6" water mains in the City of Oshawa es outlined by plans ond specifications, as well as for any future 6" water main installations thet may be required throughout the City of Oshawa during the balance of 1958, Plans and specifications may be obtained at the office of the undersigned upon the deposit of a certified cheque in the amount of $15.00. no Lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted. H. F. BALDWIN, G. F. SHREVE, Chairman, General Manager. The Public Utilities Commission of the City of Oshawa 100 Simcoe Street South, Oshawa, Ontario CITIZENS and it is sugges buying from a peddler, ins licence you should co-oper such illegal selling by calli the City Clerk's office. All licences carry the crest of the City of Oshawa and the signature of the City Clerk. If you have reason to believe a person is peddling without a ted that persons, before ist on seeing his licence. ate in putting a stop to ng the Police Station or L. R. BARRAND, City Clerk. |

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