The Oshawa Times, 15 Jul 1960, p. 4

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

» @ THE OSHAWA TIMES, Friday, July 1%. 1960 | a EXC EI EARPPRAN REE RTR LTT TOP PICTURE shows a class 'taking a pre-swim exercise for handicapped children sharing in the water therapy classes at the Sun Valley pool provided FOR HANDICAPPED KIDS HANDICAPPED LEARN TO SWIM ui by a Pickering - Ajax - Whitby group of women. The children stretch out in the sun and go throligh the motions of swim- ming. Lower photo shows chil- limbs to achieve movements not possible in any other way. --Photos by John Mills D.LL. Holds dren in the pool. In the water each child has its own attend- ant who pays special attention to the child's disability and helps wasted and - crippled Ajax District Swim Therapy Class Starts AJAX (Staff) -- The commu- nity summer swimming program| for handicapped children has| begun its sixth year. Children from Pickering, Whitby, Ux-| bridge and Ajax share in the program which has grown in the Reunion Here AJAX (Special) -- Former De- fence Industries Ltd. personnel fro Uxbridge, Port Perry, Blackwater, Pickering, Mark- ham, Orillia, Toronto, Bowman- | ville, Oshawa and Ajax were | present Sunday for the second {annual reunion picnic in Osh- |awa's Lakeview Park. Seasonal expense, taxis, pool|ize and serve during the summer| The various departments, in- and lifeguard hire, insurance, months, cluding maintenance, transporta- and sundries approximates $900.) It is an ambition tion, administration and the lines Aithough no formal ign/to ev lly obtal were well represented. has ever been held, each year | funds to finance construction of a| Both adults and children parti- all bills are met through the heated pool to provide an around|cipated in a sports program and generosity of grants and dona-'the year program. Such a pool|races following a short business of the group Pi Vo UXBRIDGE (Special) -- With most farmers busy with crops and general farm business, most outside activities have been cut to a minimum. However, there are still quite a few items on the farm calendar for Ontario county for the balance of July and the early part of August. 1 Principal dates are listed be- ow: Friday, July 15, 8.30 p.m., Ux- bridge -- Dept. of Agriculture Of-| fice meeting of North On- tario Plowmen's Association. Saturday, July 16, 9.00 a.m., Ontario County Farm Calendar Peterborough Memorial Centre -- District Junior Farmer Field Day. | Monday, July 18, 8.00 p.m. Port Perry High School -- July| mcsting for Port Perry Lions' 4-H Grain Club. Tuesday, July 19 -- Wentworth County farmers' bus tour visiting the farms of Roy Ormiston, Brooklin, and George McLaugh- iin, Beaverton. 800 pm Uxbridge High School --Scott 4-H Grain and Po-| tato Club meeting for July. | 830 p.m. Wick Ontario County Holstein Club directors' meeting at the farm of C. Had- den. Wednesday, July 20, 7.00 p.m., Brookdale Farms, Owner N. D. Hogg, Uxbridge -- Annual Short- horn Club Twilight Meeting. Speaker W P. Watson, Live- stock Commissioner. Also meet- ing for Scott and Brougham 4-H Beef calf clubs. 8.30 p.m., Uxbridge, Dept. of Agriculture Office Ontario County Hog Producers' Direc- tors' Meeting. Tuesday, July 26, 7.00 p.m., Vict By Found On Shore NORTH BAY (CP--The body f two drowning victims July 13 boating accident, was| found Thursday on the shore of Lake Nipissing. After the tragedy Mrs. Tina cized provincial police for wait-| ing nearly five hours before sending a boat to the scene. She described' the inquest into the death. of the other victim, "a complete farce." Leo Troy, Liberal member of the Ontario legislature for Nipis- sing, said he would press for al separate inquest into the drown- ing of Mr. Duff. However, Eric Silk, assistant deputy attorney - general, said after the inquest a second in- quiry did not seem to be justi- fied. At the inquest the coroner's jury recommended that provin- cial police review procedural or- ers for assisting in an emer- gency. |chose JP-4 fuel after "'the most] ment that some airlines use ker-| for Edward Hyland of Sudbury, as|_ Bulk Carrier Sold After Collision WINDSOR "CP)--The Standard carrier rammed and sunk last/here for repairs month in Lake Huron, has been|collision =, lV. : pany The boat was raised and towed|disc] Portland Cement, a 444-foot bulk Blackwater -- Ontario County Holstein Club Twilight Meeting. Farm of C. Hadden and Son. Speaker -- E. A. Innes, Brant- ford, President of Holstein-Fries- ian Ass'n of Canada. Also Dairy Princess competition. Sunday, August 7, 7.00 p.m. -- Junior Farmer annual picnic and vesper service, . Wednesday, August 10 -- ior Day, Peterborough Fair. TCA Denies Jun-| DANCE to the CLYDE DON TRIO GENEVA PARK Sat., July 16 Volatile Fuel Hazard MONTREAL (CP)--Trans-Can- ada Air Lines Thursday denied | that the use of JP-4 fuel on its urbine-powered aircraft is haz ardous. f TCA President Gordon Mec-| Gregor, replying to a charge] made in London by Lord Brab- azon of Tara, said the airline| rigorous technical study" and did | Jo in the interests of operational safety though told by oil com panies that the 'fuel would be more expensive than kerosene. Lord Brabazon, chairman of the air registration board, told a board luncheon Thursday thal some American, Canadian and Belgian airlines are indulging in| "disgraceful practices" by using JP - 4 as fuel for jet aircraft rather than kerosene, which he said was safer but more expen- sive. Mr. McGregor said in a state- AVE RE, COUNTRY MUSIC NIGHT DANCE FRIDAY The story of the Hunnicutts ... last of their kind! from the ROBERT MITCHOM - HLEANOR PARKER GEORGE PEPPARD - GEORGE HAMILTON « EVERETT SLOANE LUANA PATTEN * CINEMASCOPE and METROCOLOR 100 - 3:35 « 6:15 - 9:00 FEATURE DAILY AT. , , we aren Chuck Fortune AND HIS BAND FEATURING Jimmy and Johnny Admission $1. RED BARN "EER osene but others prefer JP - 4 "well established technical reasons. "While it is true that kerosene | is less inflammable than JP-4 un- of Gordon Duff of North Bay, one ger some conditions," he : In aluihe reverse is also true and JP-4 has very real safety advan- | tages under certain in-flight con-| ditions 'when static electricity and other factors become in- Duff, wife of the dead man, criti-|volved. "There has never been a fatal- ity in passenger-carrying turbine | aircraft using JP-4, at least in | the Western world." DANCE PARTY DON PIERRE carefully! I [ I | Or Beiter Still CALL . , . UNITED TAXI | RA 5-3541 | 143 KING ST. E. -- 24 HRS. A DAY Prop: N. RICHARDS . AL nz SELF-SERyE' REFRESHME CENTRE] Box-Office Open at 8:00--Show Starts at Dusk End yine AND ADDED ACTION ! The hilarious comedy of a homeymoon in a house-on-wheels %e¥ LUCILLE BALL DESI ARNAZ. "THE LONG, LONG TRAILER JOIN OUR BUMPER CLUB AND SAVE! Membership admits Car and Driver free every Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday (with the ion of holidays). A $40.00 value for only $1.00. SALE ENDS JULY 23rd OR EARLIER IF OUR SUPPLY IS EXHAUSTED ! and His Orchestre (Jubilee 3 & e.! PAVILION 5 4 OSHAWA § Sr unusus no v, % THE NEVER TO BE FORGOTTEN MUSIC OF "THE SENTIMENTAL GENTLEMEN" T T EY COLE MCTURES sosases Dine at the RESTAURANT 14Y2 King St. East (Upstairs) OSHAWA, ONTARIO past five years from an initial tions from public and private would not necessarily be a large group of four to a 1960 registra- sources. Each year has seen a|pool but of tion of 50. {small surplus accommodate 20 children, sufficient size to {meeting of the Reunion Associa- ticn, It was decided to hold next year's picnic at the same place. S8OUrBO? The children are aged between| two and 16 years. Cases include polio, cerebral palsy, multiple sclerosis, muscular dystrophy | and leg perthes. The project accepts children) where it finds them, If satisfac- tory transportation is not avail- able, it is contracted for. That the effort has won a firm place in the respe and goodwill of the community is evident from a re- view of progress. Each year a greater number of children have been assisted. Although therapeutic results are discounted, it is reported that seven sets of crutches have been discarded, For the child, each day's outing is an exciting ad- venture. For the many volunteer workers, there is the satisfaction Current contributions will be used to meet the expenses of the 1960 classes which are held Tues- day and Thursday mornings at the Sun Valley pool on Valley Farm road, Pickering. INDIVIDUAL TUITION Children are taken into the water individually and special at- tention is paid to the particular disability. Atrophied muscles are gently exercised. With new chil. dren the first task is to overcome fear of water. This is usually ac- complished in a short time. Children who are helpless on land, learn to float and swim. This year two muscular dys- trophy cases are taken into the pool on stretchers. Once afloat, the stretchers are lowered away and the patient is waterborne. AT BROOKLIN 150 Attend Church Picnic By MRS. ARTHUR ELLIOTT BROOKLIN Conservation park, Greenwood was the venue for the annual congregational and Sunday School picnic of Brooklin United Church Tuesday. The junior pupils competed in races, with results as follows: Race (pre-schoolers) -- Debbie Moreau, Sharon Fairservice, Len- Jackson, Susan Eckel and John McCoy (tie). Penny Scramble Ormiston, Marylyn Hamer, Susai: Eckel. Race -- Steven Ashley, Phyllis Banks, William Vipond. Three-legged Race -- Nancy land Mary Lou Mitchell; Willie |Vipond, Steven Ashley; Phyllis of serving. 150 VOLUNTEERS Over the five yeai. ... wave been about 150 volunteers, some with transportation, some in the water, others on land, others to dress the children, and give them general attention, others to serve cookies and cocoa. Banks, Susan Eckel. Race Maryanne Milner, Nancy Mitchell, Debbie Gerrow. Clothes Pin Race Marcia Hurst, Carol Crawford, Elaine Alderson. Race ~ Linda Pilkey, Alan Arksey. PERSONALS Mr. and Mrs, Douglas Wallace, Pickering firemen learned of the difficulty in getting these [dea into the water and do- nie Fairservice. Ronald nated the stretcher. Race -- Pat Gibson, | Mrs. T. J. Wheeler, convener) | Ji 5 wean cover Parliament Unfair Trade Law Under Scrutiny By JAMES NELSON Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP)--Frying pans, oranges and lemons, electric floor| to make this section effective," polishers and razors got mixed up| Mr. Fulton said with the law against unfair trade practices in a Commons commit- tee room Thursday night. | As a result of it all, Justice Minister Fulton agreed to take another hard look at the bill he proposes to strengthen the illegal trade practices section of Can- ada's anti-combines law. The attack was led by 35-year- old labor leader Frank Howard (CCF--Skeena), with the assist- ance of burly Douglas Fisher (CCF--Port Arthur), a teacher and librarian, against a law which lawyers Fulton and T. D. MacDonald, director of anti-com- bine investigation, said was virtu- ally inoperable. It was rarely tried and never successful in the! eourts, the lawyers said. The law is intended to make price discrimination illegal when practised by manufacturers and dealers for the benefit of favored retailers and to outlaw price cut- ting intended to lessen competi- tio~ and put a competitor put of business. | * At-B-Glance | with a group of dedicated women !who turn up each year to organ- By THE CANADIAN PRESS Thursday, July 14, 1960 External Affairs Minister Green stressed the need for closer relations between Canada and Latin America, saying Can lada would be wise to develop i mor: of a Western Hemisphere "You virtually had lo produce | outlook. |@ corpse in court, or the body of! : y {a person driven out of business, Pin 3a 4 Ra an) |optimistic about world affairs 3 ai and suggested there are incom- » anti-discrimination section|gistencies in the government's weld apply, if the bill passes, foreign policy only to dealers selling to retailers| Lucien Cardin (L -- Richelieu in "like quality and quantity." i Vercheres) suggested that all the Mr. Howard said this gave an world's nations except the U.S. out" to dealers who would and Russia be invited to an Ot- simplv modify the quantity of the tawa conference to discuss set- scale in order to grant a bigting up an "effective counter- price reduction to a favored re-| balance" to the two major pow- tailer. | ers. \ He proposed adoption of al H. W. Herridge (CCF -- Koot- United States law which permits|enay West) called for interna- pric- discrimination only in cases| tionalization of the DEW radar where the size of the order is/line and Canada's withdrawal big enough to permit a real sav-\from North American Air De- ing in cost of production, | fence Command. | L STUDY IT Prime Minister Diefenbaker In Mine Union Vote Mr. Fulton said he was doubt. indicated Canada must have a| SUDBURY (CP) -- Don Me- ful, but would study the Howard|Veto over use of American nu-(Nabb, vice-president of Local 508 amendment. | clear warheads on Canadian soillof the International Union of During the two-hour debate, | Deroe it will accept them in wine, Mill and Smelter Workers committeemen leafed through muy: (ud), sald Thursday he las A es g The Conservatives defeated by statements from members of Lo- dealers' price lists of electric|a vote of 142 to 43 a CCF move-- cal 902 confirming "irregulari- appliances, including frying pans, | supported by the Liberals--to' re-|ties" in the local's June 1 voting floor polishers and razors, com-|duce to 18 from 21 the voting age for' Eastern Canada Mine - Mill paring them with prices adver-|for federal elections. executive offices. tised by an Ottawa discount] The Senate approved the prin-| He said the statements will be and children, of Natal, Brazil, visited Mr. and Mrs. Michael Woods, at their summer cottage at Kashabog Lake, and their home here, Mr. and Mrs. M. Butter of Montreal, are visiting their son, Rev. A, M. Butter, Winchester | road. Mr, and Mrs. Mervyn Bird,| Neal and Janis, spent the week-| end at Algonquin Park. | Mr. and Mrs. George Boake, June and Ralph, visited friends | at Beaverton at the weekend. Lois Young spent a week at the Girl Guide camp at Marmora. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Bradley at-| tended Newcastle United Church and later - visited relatives at Bowmanville. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Spencer, To-, ronto, called on. Mr. and Mrs. | Sydney Spencer Sunday. | Fred Elliott, Toronto, and Fred White called on Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Elliott, Wednesday. Irregularities Seen R08 0 J NA KRSHF + BRIAN DONLEWY NOW PLAYING! 1 STARRING Pamela] WARREN COVINGTON THURS. AUG. 4 | $3.00 PER PERSON PACKED with THRILLS and ADVENTURE "WESTWARD THE WOMEN" with ROBERT TAYLOR DENISE DARCEL SITET T-YX3 STARTS TOMORROW LAST 'Beginning of the End', 'The Unearthly' FIRST| DAY: RUN | GRAND FAMILY ATTRACTION "STARS IN MY CROWN" with JOEL McCREA FULEN DREW LIMITED TICKET SALE ADVANCED RESERVATIONS ADVISED I (it REELS ra hile (Sablon NOW SHOWING " "BEST GIRL" Mom, wife or favorite date, she'll enjoy every minute, savor every delicious mouthful, when you bring her here to dine. A charming atmosphere and choice menu makes an evening out a gala occasion! 10% OFF TAKE OUT ORDERS specialize in Chinese Food. DIAL RA 8-4666 for take-out orders x * : +« x * WILSON & LEE LIMITED Sidey JANES « rn BARKER Komath COIR « Charles WANTREY Konnth WILLS = Losi PHILIPS 34 o X ¥ ¥ XX ¥ X ¥% ¥ X ¥ Register Now For 4 ANNOUNCING NEW AIR CONDITIONING INSTALLATION IC STUDIOS Lessons On These Popular Instruments © CLARINET ® HAWAIIAN GUITAR © TROMBONE ® VIOLA eo CELLO ACCORDION SAXOPHONE VIOLIN ; SPANISH GUITAR POPULAR PIANO TRUMPET Our 6-week beginner's course on the accordion at $1.50 weekly includes the FREE use of an accordion during that period which is taken home for practice. -- AT THE -- SPRUCE VILLA HOTEL ON & LEE LTD. house. They found no clear cases! cipl~ of the government bill to WOVLD STRENGTHEN of price-cutting. establish a new department of forwarded to the union's national headuarters in Toronto in sup. IN DINING AND BEVERAGE ROOMS MUSIC STORE Mr. Fulton proposed strength- ening the law by making it neces- At one point, Rodger Mitchell| forestfy. [port of protests lodged by two (L -- Sudbury) described the| Friday, July 15 unsuccessful candidates who are sary only to prove that a price- cutting practice has a tendency to drive a competitor out of busi- ess. practise of price-cutting for re-| The Commons meets at 11 a.m. members of Local 598. The tw tailers as a proposition of "losing ED™ to continue debate on ex-/are Bill Stewart, district presi on the oranges what he makes ternal affairs. The Senate is dential candidate, and Alex Mac- on the bananas. |adjourned until 8 p.m. Tuesday, donald, who ran for secretary. Catering to Wedding Receptions and Ban- quets in our beautiful cool Banquet Room 87 SIMCOE ST. NORTH RA 5-4706

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy