The Oshawa Times, 10 Aug 1960, p. 5

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CRA DAY CAMP IS AR BUSY PLACE FOR OSHAWA BOYS CRA Camp Has Treats For Children For 80 Oshawa boys, aged eight to 14, the CRA Day Camp is the source of a week's full camping experience while living at home. A $1 registration fee entitles campers to transportation to the camp-site every day this week, milk with their picnic lunches, | and seven hours of play in the| country each day, supervised hy trained leaders. | The camp-site is a wooded stretch along the shore of the Oshawa creek north of the city. Campers are taken there at 9 a.m. each day, and the buses re- CE You they return home for supper and ~ turn for them at 4.45 p.m,, when __ The Oshawa Times PAGE ELEVEN SECOND SECTION OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST '10, 1960 Building In July Shows Decrease * the night. | » The day's activities are ex i tremely well-planned and varied. © Under a Robin Hood theme, the "2 boys are divided into four groups. | each named after a Sherwood "* Forest outlaw. Some of the : games and sports are done by the| : camp as a whole, such as the| * building of a dam in the creek and the construction of secret forts in the surrounding woods. i Others are done in rotation by # one group at a time. ! J A typical afternoon's program 4 includes swimming, log rolling, | tracking in the woods, and a Robin Hood favorite known as| quarter-staffing, in which two fighters stand facing eaeh other on a log across the river and try to knock each other into the water with long poles or quarter-staffs. The campers make the staffs themselves, and find the game to be one requiring much skill and balance and causing a great deal of excitement, although the water below them is only a good, safe waist-deep. WISELY INCLUDED Less competitive games are wisely included in the program. Woodlore and crafts and hikes are just as important as the ball- games, races and water-boiling contests. The campers are also CAMP COUNSELLOR TALKS WITH THE BOYS AT OUTDOOR SITE * ceLeerAaTING | Summer Construction Down a... For Second Year In Row Congratulations and best | wishes to the following resi- pairs, $500; E. J. Harrison, Park road south, addition, $2500; W. dents of Oshawa and district who are celebrating birthdays McQuaid, Pacific avenue, re- pairs, $700. today: Judy Hopkins, RR 1, Non- quon Rd., Oshawa; Gloria A. Bilenski, Howard street, ad- Woodward, RR 3, Oshawa; dition, $5000; K. McMinn, Ritson Lorraine Porter, 368 Welland road north, addition, $500; KE, Ave., Oshawa; Ronald Bishop, Law, Crerar avenue, cellar alter- 76 Royal street, Oshaw a; ations, $500; G. Kopylciw, Gren- Beulah White," RR 3, Bow- fell street, repairs, $900; N. F, Wilton, Simcoe street north, addi- tion and alteration, $8000. manville; Tina Bowerman, 1165 Ravine Rd., Oshawa. | n A e |was issued a $250,000 permit for|$10,500; J. G. Minacs, King Street Permits for miscellaneous pur- | poses follow: The first five persons to in- Jie fitst live perso additions to truck plants 63 and|east, $12,000. E. Woods, Thornton road south, | form The Oshawa Times of |g their birthdays each day will . . Suiisy receive double tickets to The The Oshawa Board of Educa-|$12,000; J Kalyta, Harris Court, | Marijan's Garage, Cordova road Regent Theatre, good for a |tion Sot a $90,000 permit for an|§11.000; L. E. Ripley, Creighton|body shop addition, $5000; W. T. four-week period. The current (addition to Adelaide McLaughlin avenue, $12,000; A. Zinni, Simcoe Wilson, Centre street, duplex re- attraction is *'Rosemary". | school on Stevenson road north. | street north, $10,500. pairs, $800; E. Hill, Somerville Reports on birthdays will A $35,000 permit was issued for| pp; teen permits for- new ge.|Sireet, new carport, $800; IDA be received only between the |Construction of the city's BW rages were issued: A. Rotta,| Drufe, Simcoe street north, drug hours of 8 a.m. and 10 am. | Pool in Rotary Park. [Gibb street $500; M. King, sta, store alterations, $1200; General | borne street east, one at $14,000 and one at $16,500; R. Shoo- bridge, Simcoe street north, $12,000; Hartwig Construction, Wychwood street, two at $10,000 first seven) each; S. Kesil, Ritson road south, months of the year are also| $12,500. down. At $4,706,911, this year's| J. Allen Construction. Wilson total ig little more than half last{road north, $10,000; R. Kay, | year's $8,447,414 for the same|Grandview south, $10,000; Model- | period. |aire Homes, Glenwood crescent, General Motors of Canada Ltd. $10,000; J. Courtney, Drew street, | July building reports totalled $787,580, "down: from 1958's $993, 1075 and less 'than half the high $1,891,503 'recorded in July of 11958. Totals for the J. Bolahood has a $30,000 Per-|vonson road north : | Motors of Canada Ltd., two new Stop Red Film, | A new $18,000 warehouse and office will be built by Canadian mit for a six unit apartment] '| guardhouses, at $2500 each. Pa son : Tkaczuk, Harmony road north, | building, to be built on Buena g500. J. Pini King street| W. F. Mercer, Richmond street Robeson Records {Welding Gases Ltd. on Bloor| LONDON, Ont. (CP)--Reacting street west. Vista. east, $700; M. Krawczyk, Myers east, retail store alterations, street, $600; T. Broadbent, Ridge-|$1000; Cedardale Scrap Iron way avenue, $800; J. Varga, Metal, Annis street, new metal Centre street, $500. press building, $1100; Dunn Tay- 2 {lors; King street east, new sign, quickly to a storm of protests) OTHER LISTINGS | $500; Paradise Pool Limited, Riv- encouraged to help with clean-up over Monday night's cancellation| SINGLE DWELLINGS I Westmount street| alda road, Weston, Ontario, swim- before breaking camp each even-| of ing R f an Iron Curtain film and Paul obeson records, the London| ARCHE we Cuban Churche May Be Closed | HAVANA (AP)--Cuba's high- est active Roman Catholic au- thority declared Tuesday he will close all Catholic churches on the island unless the Castro regime averts anti - church demonstra- tions and guarantees freedom of worship. He said the church would operate 'in silence' --as it does in some nlaces behind the Iron Curtain. The warning was issued by Rt. Rev. Msgr. Evelio Diaz, Arch- bishop Coadjutor of Havana. It came shortly after the chaplain of the Cuban Army had inter- vened to stop an impending clash between churchgoers and a gang of jeering youths outside Havana Cathedral. Rev. Eligio Sardinas, the chap- lain, sent most of the church- goers and demonstrators home before the trouble became seri- ous. A church source said Msgr. Diaz told government officials: "If there are no guarantees of safety (for churchgoers), all churches will be closed tomorrow mofning and the church will be declared in silence so that the whole world will know what is happening in Cuba." COMMUNIST ADVANCES The island's Roman Catholic hierazchy warned in a pastoral fetter read in churches last Sun day against "the increasing ad- vance of communism in Cuba." Eyewitnesses caid a mob gath- ered outside the church during RY PLAYS A KEY ROLE ON THE CAMPS BIG PRO ROLLING ON A LOG CAN BE FUN I ] * Permits for new single family | dwellings follow: DePalma Broth-| ers, Wychwood street, one at| $11,000 and one at $10,000; Ben.| lor' Construction, Finchurst drive. Willowdale, $10,000; S. Siweck, Greenwood avenue, $10,000: W. Roth, Switzer drive, $10,000. D. Salmers, Oshawa, $12,000; P. Sitch, Bloor street east, $10,000; J. O'Malley, Cedar Val- ley boulevard, one at $15,000 and one at $11,500; B. Scott, George street, $10,000; S. 'Jackson and Sons, Arthur street, $10,000. Kassinger Construction, Senkino, : G. Burk, Simcoe street south, $1000; J. Kulyk, Ortono avenue, $500; A. Bouduns, King |street west; $1000; R. Robinson, | Grandview street south, $1500% Eleven permits were issued for |additions, repairs and alterations |to single family dwellings: A. Pankiw, Nassau street, re- pairs, $500; B. Skurowsky, Dieppe | avenue, repairs, $700; F. Brooks, Cromwell avenue, repairs, $500; {N, Kawalchuk, Crerar avenue, ming pool, $2500; Oshawa Garden, | Taunton road west, swimming | pool, $1600; F. Ferrara, Simcoe |street south, store alterations, $1100. Dairy Queen Stores, Simcoe |street south, new sign, $700; E. | Wellman, Jones avenue, new | patio, $500; Motor City Paving | Co., King street east, fallout shel- ter, $500; McLaughlin Coal and {Supply, King street west, weigh | scale and office, $1000; G. Chow, | King street west, restaurant addi Col-'A. E. Goodall, Huron street, re-ltion, $1200. it his RAM | Ph, By JAMES MARLOW WASHINGTON (AP) Democrats have scaled worst hurdle to party unity and now should be able--thanks to their overwhelming numbers 'in both Houses--to steamroller the Republicans for' the 'rest of this abbreviated session of Congress. As the drama unfolds in these blazing August days on Capitol Hill-with the presidential cam- paign due to start in early. Sept- ember--here are some important figures to keep in mind: In' the Senate the Democrats outnumber the Republicans 66 to 34 and in the House of Repre- sentatives, where there are five vacancies, 280 to 152. Thursday the Democrats showed what they could do to the Republicans when they chose to stick together. The return the| N TH hi. E HR SUMME RTIME was | adjourns. Thursday evening will be par-| Public Library Tuesday resched-| ents' night at the camp. Awards uled the program for next Mon- § will be presented to outstanding day. ! campers and some camp activi: Tre film and music program ties will be demonstrated. A tour was cancelled after "fewer than : . sit reveal the| 2 dozen 4 telephone calls were re-| ERT lig dg en Ei the week, will be followed avoid Communist propaganda. | ing. Lhe > and refreshments Dean Kent, assistant librarian by a Sig-Song a t the at the library and art museum, before breaking camp for | said Tuesday twice as many calls night. 5 ; have been received from persons ar rea toh wher se M0 preted "being dale lo BSpons / ew narrow-min citi- gram. Nora Lee Flegg, Therese A Starr, Adele Planeta, Jim Krae- Mayor J. Allan Johnston said #% mer, and Grant Southwell are a citizens' committee should be with the campers every day all|set up to act as censors of future day to guide them in their play.| programs. patch up skinned knees, pacify| 'Sometimes officials are too the belligerent, draw in the reti-|close to (it fo appreciate the cent, and keep all safe and| propaganda that might be hidden sound. there," said Mayor Johnston. Features of the CRA's summer | program within the mext few| weeks will be the Games and Ac-| Try To En tivities Festival, a Kite Derby, | and a pet show at the Oshawa| . . Fair, all as part of the Parks] H t 1 St k Program being held in 22 city 0s 1 d Il e ; parks and playgrounds. | WINDSOR (CP)--The depart 4 CHEE | ment of labor has called a meet- | ling in Toronto today aimed to ; Car Theft lend a strike by some 25 operat- : ing engineers against three Wind- sor hospitals. Nets Accused | W, L. McGregor, legal spokes- {man for the hospital, said con- | ciliation committees of the hos- Th M th |pitals and Local 944, Interna- ree on S {tional Operating Union of A combination of luck and Operating Ragisers "Le bri ! *0. : aske uesday to meet a : sharp observation on the part of| 5 ny today in Toronto. Alfred Overy, manager of a local| The meeting was called by car-rental agency, sent Reginald Louis Fine, chief conciliation of- McGraw, 34, of Quebec City, to ficer of the department. | jail for three months Monday for| Meanwhile, small squads of] car theft. He was also given a|engineers are still picketin g similar sentence to run concur-| Metropolitan General, Grace and| rently for forgery | Hotel Dieu Hospitals. Mr. Me- Evidence revealed that Mc- | Gregor said no attempt has been| Graw, on suspended sentence for| made to halt picketing. la breaking and entering charge in| Truck drivers earlier Tuesday Moncton, N.B., gave a forged refused to crocs the lines and cheque as a deposit on a rented | make deliveries. However, hos- ar and then didn't pital spokesmen said working em- car | ployees crossed the lines and un- Thin. os SBE ais loaded the trucks. Most were de- ay chenie Was ued With 3/rivertes of food and intravenous |animal clinic, McGraw said he|soiution. A shipment of coal to a for $76 to get Hotel Dieu was not delivéred. | had sold a dog for | -The union and the hospitals] the Saegue. Wai biasing en had been negotiating since March Mr. Overy was Or 8 "lon a new contract. other car to Oshawa via New| 2 2 TRA, -------- ; - |York State when he recognized | McGraw driving the stolen car Qf 1 G | near Massena, N.Y., in the oppo-| 0 en uns S BURKETON | oy 0 e |site direction and had McGraw 9 | arrested. F C b | | PERSONALS By Gas Fumes 'p . po; | OF budans? | y 3 Fi ed NORTH BAY (CP)--Army offi-| y ¥ a | alr n cials said Tuesday there is a BURKETON -- Recent visitors pour STANLEY gh; ke | possibility that Cuban gunrunners i "rVic rw, here were Mr. and Mrs. Thomas "8 fumes escaping from a 300- 1 were responsible for the theft of the service Tuesday while about 3 30 oot stood i smoking Hodge and boys and Mrs. Ira Ar-|pound tank of chlorine gas at the| tea u aps | Hore Jaan $2,000 in ig ammu. and talking. gue were Thursday evening guests water purification plant here sent : : {aon hi ot a Mein The eyewitnesses said the of Mr. Russell Spinks, Oshawa. a 16-year-old boy to hospital Tues-, Harold Dickson, 19, 381 Elm-| Lieut. Col: W. G. Fawcett, prin. demonstrators outside -- shouting] Mr. Alden Hubbard called on|day night and forced three other grove avenue, and Reginald| . 9 finpr § : : cipal staff officer for Central On- "'down with the Pope" and "down|Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Hubbard|families to evacuate their homes. | Storms, 129 Annis street. were) C0 Paleo" Central Command with Dviests "struck Severs] of and also visited Mr. a. d Mrs. Ian| Donald Kirk was near his home fined $2 ohh Non) ay for. ses). said in Oakville that army head- Me Sh goe s y Wert Clements and family in Oshawa|about one mile from the plant'P8 severa. 'iu mi ond a! quarters issued orders for "maxi. TH 2 reh. source said fours Thursday evening. when he suddenly started chok-|™irrors from parked cars. | TOWN! um security around its stores Webi Saux Sau 6 oe Mrs. Cyrus Ashton has return-|ing, his father said {Attorney Alex Hall said it No when word of supposed Banana De oa | 8. 4 eli ch im-| Ee , ! st frequently commit i i lice before they appeared on the of hoi again feeling much im ; The boy was rushed to Dr. CjWe_ most Teduently Committe) BeDuglic, Subrigers were: in the scene. . : y A. Bell, who sent him to hospital| 1. ih Ti ; | » : The demonstration the, Mr. and Mrs: Robert Bell and jn" o ven tent by ambulance. |St2Ple _ Herber t Flintoff added] Stolen from composite stores at latest in a series (Bobby, Mrs, Ethel Wilson, Osh-|p,cnie" officials said Kirk was| 'hat these articles are stolen al-|Chippawa Barracks were two ie : _jawa, were Saturday evening, fairly good condition, "| most. every right. nk | Bren guns, 12 browning pistols, . (guests of Mr. and Mrs, George Dri Bell ako treet Leslie) two prismatic binoculars, 1,000 |Allison and family i r. Bell also trea .eslie rounds of .303-calibre ammuni- So Tranquil ors, Thomas Smith is in Me. | Thorne, an employee of the Pub- Child 2 Has morial Hospital, Bowmanville, . [lic Utilities Commission who was iy. lg She Killed Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Turnbull Working on the leaking gas cylin- and family were weekend guests 97 Cl E PASADENA, Calif, (AP)--An of Mr. and Mrs. Eric Simpson| Howard Berry, PUC superin- ose scape attractive brunette was acquitted and family, Willowdale. tendent, said the leak was spotted OMAN'S. SAGAS. Was. bo of a murder charge WMondsy be-| Mrs. Ethel Bryan returned when employees attempted to| A woman's screams was cred- cause she had taken a large dose home again on Friday from Port|switch tanks for the chlorinator (ited With Saving He lite ot we. of tranquilizer pills the evening|Perry Hospital, feeling much ~~ aE mre JESL ONY DoNSIY Signin Pb ud she fatally beat her sleeping hus-/improved. spending -an extended visit with|ip", Banting St. driveway. i band with a hammer, Mrs. Beatrice Taylor and Stan- her son and family. Donald was: struck by. a car . pe one of the most fortunate Joy Snvemied' a Snowe: on Frigay Mxs. W. Greenwood, Mr. Ralph backing into the driveway to turn DE in the world." sdid Mrs Mos Ald Ta Fan or MI Greenwood and Mr. Norman around but escaped with minor j Se un Tal, > Barton Md Mo LR Argo and| Sproule, Kendal, were Sunday|injuries and shock. : Superior" Judg urtong Auf. api J oe HEE 4 guests of Mrs, Ethel Bryan. A passerby, Mrs, Lloyd Hinze, Noble said the slaying of missile family attended a picnic in Lind- Mr. and Mrs. Stanley McCul. S8W the boy and. screamed in firm executive William Howard say on Sunday, s MIS. 3 ey Melul. |, to allow t $d ny Taft, 38, last April was not "al Mr. and Mrs. George Wolfe l0ug8h and family were Sunday Hime io allow as, dstver J io conscious act on her part." left by plane for a two week visit rg of ee 2) Mrs. Ren Knapp stop his car before Donald. was Toxicologist Dr. Thomas Haley With relatives in Ireland. and tamily, Bowmanville. run over : had reported that an overdose of, Martha Broesma, Oshawa, i Miss Betty Anne Marchand, To; Mr. Crandall told police officers the tranquillizer could have spending a week's vacation with ronto, spent the weekend with Mr investigating the accident, the caused Mrs. Taft to act in a Margaret Argue and Mrs. Eric chand and boy was not in the driveway maniacal manner. | Murs. J, Hagerverst, Holland, is|family. ~ 'when he started to turn, v | tion, 500 rounds of 9 mm ammu- nition, 23 army pocket knives and a quantity of gray army blankets. Officials said none of the weap- | ons could be used. Key parts had| been stored elsewhere. | Thieves broke a window in the | building to gain entry and forced | their way into the stock room| ! with a fire axe. A filing cabinet| : s jimmied but. not opened, | i w ATLAS SHOT SUCCESSFUL | CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. AP)--The U.S. Air Force Tues-| day fired an Atlas missile more than 7,000 miles to a target area of South. Africa. An announce- | ment 90 minutes after the launch | reported the big intercontinental range rocket successfully flew its prescribed course, covering the distance in about 40 min- | utes. They closed ranks with a bang --northern Democrats and south- ern Democrats together--to block a Republican attempt to force action at this limited session of Congress on some civil rights bills. WAS EISENHOWER CALL Although earlier 'this year the Dereocratic-run Congress passed the second civil rights bill in the 20th century the first was passed in 1957--President Eisen- hower called for certain addi- tional civil rights legislation. in his message to Congress Mon- day. If the Democrats had permitted a Senate wrangle over civil rights, that would have ended any hope for real accomplish- ment in this Congress before it The fact that Demo- crats from north and south--with four exceptions--joined together to smash the Rebublican pro- posal, would indicate they're pre- pared to do the same to any further attempt in this field. To Senator John Kennedy, Democratic presidential candi- date, and his running mate, Sen- their| Democrat Unity Kills Rights Bills ator Lyndon Johnson, the north- er: 'Negro vote next November will 'Be important. So will the white southern vote. But both 'ook a stand against the Republi- can move on civil rights. PRIORITY ITEMS Four measures which Kennedy considers of primary importance are' federal aid to education, housing, medical care for the aged, and raising of the mini- mum wage. These are the key to what the Democrats can be ex- pected to ram through at this session of Congress, although Eisenhower proposed 22 items Monday. The Democrats have the num- | bers to pass the measures since in both Houses only a majority vote is necessary to pass a bill. But they face the possibility of one hitch: a veto by Eisenhower, since. Congress can repass a measure over a presidential veto only by a two-thirds vote in both | Houses, and in both Houses the Democrats lack a full two-thirds of the membership. But there is one thing working in their favor in this, too: In this highly steamed-up elec- tion Eisenhower and his advisers will have to think twice before vetoing a measure, passed by a Democratic run Congress, which has broad popular appeal, such as the four measures listed by | Kennedy. | Again, there is an opposite side {to this coin: If, with their huge majorities, the Democrats do not | pass the kind of legislation urged { by Kennedy, the Republicans can | tell the voters: | Why give control of Congress |to 'the Democrats again in No- vember if when they' outnumber the opposition so one sidedly as they do now--with the greatest majorities since 1934--they still| can't agree long enough among] themselves to do something? Fascination And Terror 'For Riders By EDNA BLAKELY Canadian Press Staff Writer BANFF. Alta. (CP)--The spe- cial fascination that an aerial ride up the side of a mountain [holds for most people has made a gondola lift opened here a year |ago an immediate success. More than 90,000 people, most of them -towrists visiting tds Rocky Mountain resort, have taken the eight-minute ride in a four-passenger, glass - enclosed tram up Sulphur Mountain, which rises to a height of 7,486 feet above sea level, Most -- but not all -- have en- joyed 'the breath - taking panor- amic view from the gondola as it made its way 2,292 feet up on a rope track suspended from three towers. Otto J. Steiner, who manages the project, admits there were some who didn't enjoy the trip. His employees have on occasion opened the doors of what they thought were empty cars only fo find people huddled on the floor in terror, TO BUILD TEAHOUSE But those with acrophobia not- withstanding, the enterprise has proved a singular success and in September work will begin on a revolving tea house on the top of the mountain. Cost of the whole project, * including the lift and teahouse, will be about $700,000. Mr. Siciner is perhaps well- fitted for his job by reason of his birthplace. A native of Swit- zerland, © he grew up in the shadow of the Alps and is right at home in the Rockies. He found the Canadian moun- tains larger though not as high 'nor accessible as the Swiss Alps. Robert|in Atlantic waters off the coast| NG COOL TORONTO -- The weather | evening, in the Lake Ontario re- office says cloudy skies should begin clearing this afternoon in | southwestern Ontario, and: by Showers are expected today in southern Ontario and | | southern Quebec. Thursday | gion. promises to be sunny but eool with variable cloudiness is Northern Ontario and in the Laurentian and Baie Comeau regions of Quebec.

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