The Oshawa Times, 10 Sep 1959, p. 13

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# The Osha ES VOL. 83--No. 211 OSHAWA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1959 B UAW Probe | 'Ends In a Discord WASHINGTON (AP)--The Sen- ate rackets committee Wednes-| cay night ended in bitter partisan] (discord an investigation of the United Auto Workers Union. It| (also may mark the windup of the| committee's nearly three - year) {hint for wrongdoing in labor and| management. PAGE THIRTEEN | Scnator John F. Kennedy] : (Dém.-Mdss.) blasted the UAW, 8 (inquiry as a monumental misuse! of the committee's time. He said] {it had heen used as a vehicle for| | | Republican political warfare] {against the union, which usually | | rts Democrats for public | {office, | Senator Carl Curis (Rep.-Neb.)| and vice - chairman Karl E. Mundt (Re.-S.D.) econiended the] inquiry had wmcovered evidence of wrongduing that would justify a broad scale investigation in Jar 1 . rman John L. McClellan n.-Ark.) said he felt that much of the evidence brought out about the UAW was old, and the] committee should not be con- tinued longer. | NoPeachesIn | ' Restaurants net- nadian talent to turn out the | ST CATHARINES (CP) -- In The first of 39 | work s Ex- | $1,365,000 series. |the Niagara district's famous| begins Wed- | perienc l pro- peach orchards, pickers are har- 28 on the CBC's | ducers are combining with Ca- -CP Fhoto |vecting thousands of baskets of . JH "RCMP" stream near Ot winter | neiwork, French starts Jan ited Stale they filmed episodes in 30- | English below weather half-hour she nesday Oct, THE CAMERA crew of | television Crawley Films of Ottawa has a | Here they use a cool tough time getting the right | in the Gatineau Hills angle to shoot a scene for the | tawa for a stage. Last HOLLYWOOD-SCALE PRODUCTION ~ |the golden luscious fruif. But walk into a garden city | Peak Period [grees 2a = it's dollars to doughnuts the only| . : re Ts We doz All-Canadian TV Ser 16S ForHoney [oe «no nl { ro ing fresh peaches. Eight offered P {canned fruit and six didn't serve) Ioaucuon je aa | | Snokesmen for restaurants that HAILEYBURY, Ont. (CP)--| Klaas Bosch who started bee- keeping as a hobby is the owner the Lake Timisami - Produced By CBC Crews was spe consultant before he was ¢; t is the problem | "It just isn't worth the effort," aid . "You have to get them| n small quantities or they start| to rot before you can use them,| and then there's the problem of| prevaration. You have to slice, peel and Now we just open a can," | its partic pC. ready has a rough the CBC regards C a Cd the charge to the spousor not | helping develop + A Se a 214 ict's second largest apa a ; cover the full cost of purchasing film industry. £aeu oul of réiiremen. in Viarchl Mr. Bosch and: 11 other bee OLD CHELSEA, Que. OP) - Canadian rights, the loss likely IMPORTED ToP TALENT jie become head of the real-life Keepers operate abot 2.000 ool Sapadiag Viewers us ra ; ys Will be more inan made wb for|- Ex " ativ Gre ame aser of H Ir bi onies of bees t produce 200 E y - a har " £1, aleowher: N utive red p Se i Mr fp 0 ma or Introjuced orial Hew of Canalliaf by profits on sles. elsewhere. Crs wiey Film id in an inter-|; he ff I t series | fons of honey and six tons of wax ROMP" 1s a Hollywood-scale| Crawley -- . McConnell ow "We imported the best a pe ; " 39/in_a summer, worth $100,000. roducti idk ral Jacques chances of selling the series to an}, a4 v4 pet filming started. Our episodes Mr. Bosch has 400 colonies. He 2 ie om, o ri 'should rate American network are good, inc wo ienmed & lot from them. | -- --thege eeping in 1951 and two with Paladin and Wyatt Earp/Which case the production would|weij have a core of talent on : [year laicr made # a full time | BAFFLE PLATE among followers of the small De on easy street. Otherwise 1tioi;op $0 build," | Russia joccupation. He has won the Cana-| screen. faith {dian Beekeepers' Council Trophy y Steet A Bids For Nis the story of mode [States and profits nthe not bel, Bernard Girard, originator of| i DISAPPEARS TORONTO (CP)--The un- * s 'Medic' and former direc-| C ¥ Ai R an I other awards | operations of the famed red coats|5¢ good, 3 1% tor of 'You Are There," was pro-| anada Ir oute | The apiarists in this Nort | in the fictiona) Northern Saskat-| The Australian Broadcasting ducer for the first 13 instalments. | OTTAWA (CP)--Igmat Maulza, | Ontario area start new co s| TH } chewan. town of Shamawatta. Company has purchased rights.mpe man wno replaced him.| y --emat Vall2ad: every spring with bees imported| likliest disappearance of the Most of the filming, however, is and sales arc being negotiated |. qomy Award winner Harry deputy chief of Soviet civil avia-\ from United "We only | year has been revealed in being done in this western Que- With French oi Swedish TV Or Horner of Hollywood, is 'the only ition, in effect made & bid Wed- maintain a res ed number of| suburban Seachoroush. : § t ganizations. Inquiries also he p il i 50-ma acid : : i i i ahiafly I{ k bec area, 14 miles north of Ot- ganizations. | Bair 8 aso The POT still in he 5 ial spec ial nesday for a Canada-Russia air colonies in winter, chiefly as al rove AN, Canibel Ja wa. ' Todi, EW XQ or 0 *mber of reser force for new bees arriv. sday th a TART OCT. 28 Netherlands, Luxembourg, i West ON agreement providing for ih Agee Bly ins vom 2 ht large baffle plate weighing The first of 39 half-hour epi- Germany ond South America. Corporal Gagnier is played Montreal-Moscow flights, said. : J ' hundreds of pounds from a sodes flashes or to the Canadian] The CBC emphasizes that this award-winning Quebec actor Told a press conference that| Eighty per cent of Tim sewer 15 feet underground les Pelletier. John Pe was not noticed until resi- ; : . 5 dents began complaining that | sewage was backing up. Sponsor A By DON ATTFIELD Canadian Press Staff Writer ri clal said that if there demand; the extended another ser says| tes. 3 0 anal. he: "Radisson" the ¢ : ming Broadeasting Corporation's Eng not anothe: "R on, -{Russia hopes fo conclude an air honey comes from clover nectar; - by 3 or senerall lish network Wednesday, Oct. 2, al) & OBC erie? Ecuetally ve of Bostun and star of Broad-|agreement with Canada in the/the remainder from nectars. of at 8 p.m. The French-netu ore I ers : : / sho A Constable future, but added no discussions fireweed, goldenrod, thistle, blue tz) Series oe a lang 1age S. 'rank Sei ( been held, Iburr, wild aster and blueberry. ubbed in, begins Jan. 1 \ oR out % Bid The CBC, making its first ven Cosy Er YOR? yr ad ' % 1 ie 52-film account of the ad ture into the major serial drama ventures of pioneer Canadian ex 1957 and often actor- have Francks rounds RCMP detachment ne An Dou the three-me {tice, his wife, Grace, and their " the blacksmith's | the site of 's shop used to | store, was on THIS PICTURE shows a | tion where the ' present IGA view of Ct ce from the east shop and ec On the left is the service s a . be. A cheese factory Pioneer Days In Courtice And Darlington By FRANK PICKFORD worthy, Devonshire. In 1835, blacksmith \ A TICE--On ot, humid|When Robert was 26, he, his|iory. hy Te 1 oo h Suni fe, their two children and his| The cheese factory was re schooner on its way from Little other and father, emigrated toiplaced by a general store and York (Toronto) to Kingston,/Canada seeking opportunity inipost office, G. W. Lent, post hove to off the shores of Darling-|the new land. {master. On his death in 1908, ton township. Reaching Smith's Creek (Port{John Walter Dacksnite wu Slvbnil an of 37 with Hope), May 24, they loaded their|appoinied postmaste A heavily-built man of 37 with BH : or ey 2S wagon and, Dost 'office moved to its present strong, determined features, said bi 5 Was jocation to the captain: "Put us offj Made their way westward as far location. ; Bt {as Darlington township. Finding| There were other pioneer men here. |other Courtices liere before|2nd women beside the Courtices That is how Christopher Cour- them, they decided to settle and|/Who seitled in the area: the : d John bought a tract of land atiRundles, who emigrated from ifive children, accompanied by Ebenezer, a mile south of the Cornwall in 1834, the Osbornes, Christopher's brother, James, cong village of Courtice. (Fuseys, Harris's, Trulls, Wor- and his family, came to settle dens, Okes, Gimblets and others, in Darlington township. | WAGON SHOP but few, if any, arrived before Christopher had been a success-| As soon as the land had been/Thomas Courtice and his bro- ful blacksmith at Putford Bridge, sufficiently cleared, Robert and thers, Christopher and James. Devonshire, England. He could/his father set up a wagon shop Today, as if turning thelr see no future for hig children in|and carried on their trade as{backs on the past, a row of mod- the Old Country, so he and his| wheelwrights and carpenters. Atlern bungalows are under cone brother, James, decided to join|the same time, they worked the|struction south of Courtice Me- another brother, Thomas, who|sSmall farm, keeping a few cows|/morial Park. From their kitchen had emigrated to Darlington two|and other stock, but their chief|windows, a modern housewife, years before. {occupation was as wheelwrights while using her automatic digh- Directions for finding him were|and carpenters, washer, will be able to look out brief and not too explicit. "I be| William Courtice was a hospi-|at the rolling farmland wrestled four miles west of Béwmanville table man. After he and Robert|from the forest more than a hun- and two and a half miles north|were established, they kept open|dred years ago. The log cabin of the lake," Thomas had writ- house for friends of earlier years|that was home to the Courtices ~Oshawa Times Photo and the ch fac- D "bi M5" INTERPRETING THE NEWS | start of filming, who 1 "22 Many U.S. Negroes Barred From Polls in Bridge on the River was section props man By HAROLD MORRISON Canadian Press Staff Writer "Many Americans even today \g ~ . a] 3 h streel scenes, and a hotel are denied the franchise because Que., Ottawa's twin city, of race.' Be son plo ore ect Racism sho At th ie : 1 +. | separately 26 each in English and|F ) series. I purchased Canadian 2par Blely 25 OE h * gli 8 and owlie, he British Broadcasting $20,000 2 film. Only $130,000 has itish Broadcasting h aod IQ a " poration also pul up 20 per cent| cen recovered in US. and UK of the cost and bought United Kingdom rights The 60-per-cent balance of stock is held bv Crawley nell Limited, sp« set up for the purpose. Toc ether the three par ticipants ealled on Crawley Films of Ottawa to produce the series PROFIT EXPECTED The CBC, which lost almost spared w $1,000,000 on the serial '"'Radi parti 5 " ull son," stands to make money | ng on|will be seca as the hangout of a With th was learned the corporation al- At the same time,!dope peddler fed 5 - - his Be. Timid Sate : : fo diets mem [pints a United States has ommendation is an indication of|our traditional concepts of fair handec ussia a power new ihe tremendous battle the south- play. It is a partial repudiation tne yropaganda pa to aim at the! ... a i { A : propaganda ye: pon k9 22 thelcrn representatives and senators|of our faith in the democratic unecomimilie ne ms In Southeast would put up. system." L] Asia and elsewhere. ons of dollars in ious efforts | to convince Asiastics and others| that the W rn way of life, the sencsis Alan Jarvis Quits wiz = === Art Gallery Job can offer able basic right BASIC RIGHT Bul the und : By DON ATTFIELD of democracy ie the Hight to vote. | Canadian Press Staff Writer And yet in the US. the most! GTTAWA (CP) -- Alan Jarvisiis useful 'srork to be done." powerful Western country, vast has resigned as ditect f the WM Fai > " numbers of Negroes in the south-| Rion Balle SO er ye Mrs. Fairclough's statement TR a Foss In Lie the | National Gallery "for a job that|said that during his tenure as polls through various tricks im. will key him in a position to en- director "the gallery has grown nosed by the whites, | courage art appreciation in Can-|in activity and prestige and your With dama conviction, the |34a. : iname will long be associated Soviet propaga machine might | He was 'elected chairman of (with that growth." well repeat: How much friend-|the Soc for Art Publications| The handsome Brantford - born ship could the whites in the south-| Wednesday, only minutes after|dirzotor, 44, leaves as the gallery ern states have for Aslatics if they| Word of his resignation leaked|is moving from cramped quar- reat their own Negro citizens out {ters in the Victory Memorial with such evident contempt and| An announcement by tne so- Museum to the new seven-siorey hatred? ciety after the meeting said a na-|Lorne Building in downtown Ot- Of a total population of someitional campaign headed by Mr.|tawa. The gallery, was closed 77,000,000 persons, the U.S. has|Jarvis wil open Oct 1 to en-{Tuesday and the move is to be| about 19,000,000 Negros. Over the (large membership and co-ordin-|completed by Jan, 1. cars, progress has been made ate and finance new and exisiin | The resignation is effective . integratior schemes, | efforts in the field of art pub Sept, 30, nine months hefore his resistance against in-itions and repre 'lions. It said five-year contract expires. | still prevails in is a growing demand to| In taking over, he stepped up Cor USE 40-ACRFE PLOT Crawley Films has bought spe- cial equipment and has set up a building to house sets on a 40- in this peaceful Gatin- eau Hills community. "RCMP" ha pace of a top U.S. production Total cost of the series will be $1,365,000, or $35,000 a film On iocation, 2 child's wagon is used to cart cameras from place 0 place and bamboo fishing rods erve as microphone extensions But effort and expense are not e tl all the gloss and The slow-moving town of Ayl- mer, Que., 10 miles west, has sented Shama ta for (much opportvaity to acquire an| Yet the commission's majority education and would fail in such report says such an amendment test is cssential to eliminate "a strik- The chance of such a constitu-|ing gap between our principles | tional c¢ being approved is ami our everydav practices," ., .,.|remote bickering "that has| 'This is a moral gap. It spills| se words, enunciated by | aire ly broken out in Congres {over into and Rs po pr the . iss] fui nm Cor y 2 Lhe commission on civil|Lecause of the commission s rec-/of our society. It runs counter to } | REGARDING The Catholic Church and Its Teachings WHEN: --Every Monday and Wednesday Evenings TIME:--8 P.M. on other areas in Canadian art where 1 feel there! BEGINNING: Monday, September 14th, 1959 at 8 P.M. | WHERE: --St. Gregory's Auditorium, Room 1, 194 Simcoe St. North, Oshawa the [there : : © meet the gallery's extension program, ry's split on the prob-| citizenship Minister Fairclough initiated by predecessor Dr. H. an the mn Sion announced latex she had received|C. McCurry, and launched on al {eral offic wg oe and accepted the resignation of|series of s eaking engagements| i to take dra 2G ag {Mr. Jarvis, whose outspoken and|and a 'publicity campaign that het Re ie Neuro voter is being determined ways had on occasion |focused new attention on the gal- Shere io Fir aon sp it brought him to logg ds with |lers's collections. blocked b be cor 8s it A} Lah % on the stronger proposed constitu-| the government, | He doubled the gallery staff to tional amendment to ensure all|f URCHASES VETOED {65 and the annual budget to eh the right to vote| He is reported to have offered|$700,000. He introduced extensive sroviding only fhat they meet age his resignation in the spring of|tours of gallery art across the and resident 11958 after the cabinet vetoed|country and spoke frequently, gallery plans to purchase two incisively and bluntly at public] REMOTE CHANCE gatheri What "FOR: --ANYONE CATHOLIC OR NON-CATHOLIC who wishes to learn more about the Catholic Church. m is evid itself. Th~ s ommended ie INSTRUCTOR--Rev. L. McGough--Phone RA 5-8444 The lectures are arranged. for those who wish to learn more about the History of the Catholic Church and its Doctrines, Beliefs and Ceremonies. Questions and discussions are encouraged, and Both Catholic and Non-Catho- ics are invited to discuss any Religious question freely. There is no charge or obligation. have requirements paintings for $440,000 | many 0 thern| Mr. Jarvis itford, he moved to Toronto at the| fates now demand is a that for some time as wanted (with his mother test, presumahly be se many of to be relieved of administratizz! age of ithe southern Negroes haven't had|burdens'" in order to concentrate|optomet literacy the field of|,, owned by Courtices, had arrived in wee after his father, an Robert, were prosperous wheel-| shop. hat g ied, * |vigights and carpenters in Brad-lway of the wag shop, ten, {who subsequently came from, t Jong 250 15 no more. Now : y | Devonshire to settle at Ebene-|there is a fine red brick house Fei ries ute em ss By ep Y + families in the he a WE enneth Courtice, who shade of an elm tree, surrounded Among = them was George gel is : by trunks of clothing and house- Short and his family; Richard £CIVates oe' lod of bis ances hold effects, the two brothers, Osborne and his bride who came carrying muskets and powder|OVer on the same ship; Robin ; homs, set off through the forest Skinner Who was related to Bob-| 2 oo fd Heir rote ert's mother; Robert Everson, a| 0 (+) 1 ts After an hour's anxious travel. |°OUsin, and many others. they came upon a clearing of SHORT'S CORNERS | . about three acres and a log ca-| George Short wa ok-1 : reg acres: ; | George Sho as a black-| bin. Bete ey or avelcomed, | smith with whom Robert had n IC 1C wi BO ions: gre: oe ana orked in their shop at Brad- wo small children Thomas lost wordhy, Devoiishire, George set| f no time in yoking up his oxen.| PD 2 Mlackemite's shop a She alld a With his brothers he drove the| pg -- os iF ght Foie] yagon oe ore, loaded UD now stands, on the south side| GRATE OH ne family possessions, and a lof the highway west of the cross| n ress Stal riter returned through the forest to! roads. Later there was a second! OTTAWA (CP) -- Determining 99 lormesiaad. RR | blacksmith shop owned by John the orhit of a satellite in outer wee families living in a 108 wajer who succeeded W. C, SPace is child's olay compared house put a severe strain on the Lent as postmaster with predicting the path of the accommodation. As s he| "ll 's {North Magneti i -- os it por Bu For a time, before the village dian Ao ® Pale a the Cans bought land adjoining that of his|2cduired its present name of} i st ily With om nyt ox ii Courtice, it was known as Short's |, Three leit the Domin. be cleared a place to build his| Corners. red phi A ee 4 own log house. In this house he| With the steady influx of set-|oylat # inn culate the pole at the beginning and his family lived contented|tlers, more and more land wasiof 1960 will be at, about 74.8 de- and happy years, clearing five cleared and cultivated." The grees north and about 99.6 de- to ten acres of forest every|trails through the woods were|grees west 0s in Vicon " T C |Erees west, a p nin ount year, until eventually he had a|widened into roads. Bridges were| Melville Sound just south of larger house, a productive farm built across the creeks, and. it|Bathurst Island in the Arctie and eight children, three girls| was not Jong before large brick| Archipalago. and five boys. | houses began to replace the log| Dr. Kenneth Whitham, E. 1 His brother, James, did not|and frame dwellings of the early Loomer and Edward Dawson remain in Darlington but moved|settlers. |estimate that the pole is drifting 15 miles west to Pickering town-| For a number of years Robert|north and slightly east at a rate ship Here he took up land on the| worked at his trade of wheel- of about five miles a year. banks of Duffin's Creek, now wright, but later engaged others| At the magnetic pole, an area Pickering village, and died there to take his place in the shop, in-|rather than a precise point. the in 1849, {teresting himself in the volun-|earth's magnetic field is vertical Five years after Christopher's|teer yeomanry which eventually and the dipping needle of a com- arrival, his sister-in-law, Mrs, [kept him fully. occupied. Hisipass points toward the centre of Thomas Couitice, died, leaving|sons, William and Robert, after|the earth. This makes the needle her husband and two children. th grandfather's death, con-|useless' as a horizontal direction Three years later, Thomas mar-{tinued to work on the farm, indicator, ried Mary Annis, cold his farm|while his second son, Jame ,/ R. Glenn Madill, chief of the to Christopher, and moved to/worked in the shop, geomagnetic division of the Do- Pickering = township where he! Young J: the Observatory, the died in 1860 and wheel and the a win-ome lass, Celena Van- position re. | stone, lately ved from Devon. deformations in the grew to r ed in 1862 and/MA! field caused by solap added 1to(had five children. In 1874, James act in the earth's upper at- until four moved, his family to Short's Cor.|™ ere. comfortable rediners where he built a vagon| . : am -Leomer-Dawson the area w €re shop. Today, an aute body re-|team estimates that the present } t } » shop stands on the 'si {nord ard mation of the vole is In the meantime, new settlers| james' wagon shop at the north- fo: persist for another 100 the township, least corner of the cross roads. they describe this among them another family of Courtices, CHEESE FACTORY | Today's descendants say these| In addition to the wagon shop second Courtices wehe unrelated]: blacksmiths' shops, a) built where! LONDON to Christopher, Thomas or Jame stands, West rick Renison. has been the same glish shop, the to succeed Si Evelyn William Courtice rated a coopers governor of Kenya. has gone thelis at present governor of Bri the! Guiana. carpenter Minion HOLDINGS EXTENDED As Christopher' manhood, field was field, farm to farm, of the most brick homes in song , alt County, and his son, |( Times a hs

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