The Oshawa Times, 6 Feb 1961, p. 4

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ager and andling of hay and pasty with some discussion of the r sults of erimpers, crushers an a brief talk on zero grazing W. T. Ewin, Assistant Profes- to the usq alAfértilizers, Feb, 21 Feb: 28, Dr, Darrel Plaunt, nomic Dept, will outline farm managment with special emph asis on various phases of that police! The annual Sunday School meeting for Burns Church was held on Jan, 20 in the Sunday School room, Mr, Walter Kerr was chair man, The financial report for 1060 New York's Broadway the- | Workmen add to the pile left | snowfall, heaviest of the win. | would be the curbline across sire, the Winter Garden, is | by snowplows as the city digs | ter season, That parking | Broadway from the theatre, Nab Trio |Agricultural Agriculture Agricultural C After Chase | t | Night Classes e e | roup ee 8 BOWMANVILLE ~ The Dur- BLACKSTOCK ~ The annual president, Earl Dorrell; secre- School classes will start Feb, 14 ours meeting of Cartwright Agricul: tary treasurer, Bruce Mountjoy, and continue through to the 26 [tura! Society was held in Black-| There were seven tables of Township police arrested three|members present, Some were by LOBA Tuesday night, Prize and start promptly at § p.m, men after a sevenhour chase(there from Port Perry, Brook- winners were: high lady, Mrs Saturday {lin and Oshawa, The financial Norman Rohrer; high gent, farm attempted break-in of a service ble, $1727 was paid out in prize John McKee, low gent, Mrs, A station on Highway No, 2 and{money for Blackstock Fair this bert Wright, Lucky Draw, Mrs Rouge Mount Drive in Picker: year, Report showed a balance Hector Shortrige; travelling Daniel Huntington, 26, Ajax, |venr WA, of the United Church met Davis Williamson, LR Pick Reports were received from in AM Christian Education room ering Village; and Leif Hofsten, delegates to district meetings, Yhesday afternoon with 26 ladies All three men were charged| d L 4 "C1 the admission charge to all fairs the opening exercises, the new with iamited breaing 2 set at 75 cents, The meeting president, Mrs, John Carnaghan anter'ns, atiem n |voted in favor of keeping the read the aims and responsibil: Huntington was charged with : the ian of an BE er) A committee of Messrs, Niel! Several thank you notes were ed firearm, Hoffman was charg.|Malcolm, Neil Werry and Mer- read including one from Simcoe II Van Camp was set up to try Hall, Oshawa, expressing thanks entry and Williamson was/and get worth while farm enterprise, charged with possession of a/show for Blackstock Fair this! Mrs, ¥, Butt gave the devo-| " sawed-off rifle, |yenr, It was felt that this would tional, taking as her subject, trate's Court in Whitby onfair, that some times we think we! ASHBURN Mrs, Alfred Tuesday, | The following executive and have no choice In our doings, Pisher was hostess to the aux Sgt, Richard Bodley of town directors were elected; but find God has another way. iliary of the WMS on Wednes- men attempting to break into|Nestleton, Ont; 1st vice-presi-| report of 1060, | Deeming Bill's Wsso Service station onident, Roy McLaughlin, Nestle: Highway No, 2 about 3.50 a.m. |ton, Ont; 2nd vice-president, | shelves for the parsonage study, Cross the Crowded Ways cruiser patrol duty Ont: directors, Ernie Swain, supper in Easter holidays and| Mrs, R, Batten led in prayer He sald two of the men ran purketon, Ont; Neil Werry, no turkey supper this March, | Mrs, R, Richardson read the south to Highway 401, but that Nestieton, Ont.; Gilbert Marlow,| Mrs, Harold McLaughlin and| scripture half-ton truck Nestleton, Ont; Bruce Ashton, kitchen committee and Mrs, [tation on the scripture lesson, Police sald they tracked Hun-|Burketon, Ont; John Car: Percy Van Camp and Mrs, W.| Mrs, R, Paynter had charge tington and Hofsten thr ou g hinaghan, Blackstock, Ont; Mur-| Archer visiting committee, New| of the program, the topic being miles west to Pickering Village, Cochrane, Nestleton, Ont; Os-| fees will be taken, | Human Need', They sald Huntington was ar-\mond Wright, Blackstock, Ont, | Mrs, H, Kyte who represent-| Mrs, Paynter gave the ac rested at work at 7 am, byl The annual meeting of the ed the WA at the official hoard count of the ministry to the and Hofsten at his home by Board was held Jan. 30 in port, homeless people still refugees 14 Sgts, Bodley and Pugh, {Blackstock United Church with ~ yours after World War Two, A search of the pick-up truck|geven present, HEADED GROLIER Mrs, Richardson spoke on the and, revolyeg/ holster, tion Day be held again and that Maw, 60, president of the Grol-|dent groups in Latin America, amid, Bruce Mayntjoy and Earl Dor: jer Society of Canada Limited,| The meeting closed with the Police claimed also that &|yell arrange service and that! died Wednesday in Ottawa while hymn "0 Master, Let Me Walk and residences revealed 600) a ing prayer by Mrs, Deeming rounds of .22 ammunition and|"*"V¢f : Newmarket, Ont 1 ME. Maw pad Mrs. Fisher served lunch after five revolvers of all shapes and Election of officers resulted in been wi he society for which the business session was = President, Cecll Wilson; vice. years . : | Mrs, Death gave the report . $ of the annual meeting held in 46 Tr k To U S West Lindsay, which was attended by 1g e . S. : The minutes of the last meet ing were read and adopted, Vi . 11 i | ] Mrs, Deeming thanked Mrs, ividl Y Reca e n Boo mittee and others who helped U.S. historians won't soon for:| from a historical point of view, Choctaw law was a curious com- great Western migration is con {lation of a remarkable odessy(tom and Anglo-American legal corned. It was a momentous|that will interest the general|practice, Choctaw churches and one, [renders as well ag the historian, [schools were copied almost All classes will be held at the On Feb, 14, J. A. Dalrymple, Fxtention| from the Kemptville| re, a1 sor Soils Dept,, 0.A.C, will speak on soils and infopmiation relative lying up to Ws name tollay. | out from yesterday's 17-inch | meter marks what normally | near West 50th street, {ham Dept. of Agriculture Night PICKERING TOWNSHIP stock Jan, 28, There were 22 euchre at the party sponsored Parish Hall, Temperance street, Held and charged with the report for the year was favor. George Crozier; low lady, Mrs, § ing Township, are: of $346 for carry-over to next prize, George Crozier 18, of Pickering Township There is a move on foot So have find six children present. After and wilful damage, {present charge of §0 cents ities of the WA Aig BARR a Rp a. regional livestock for the bale sent them They will appear in Magis- be a good drawing card for our| "Another Way", She remarked ASHBURN ship police said he found three| President, Ralph Larmer, Treasurer gave the financlal|day * afternoon, Feb, 1, Mrs Saturday, when he Was ON Harvey Graham, Nestleton,| Decided to have a pot luck Life" was sung he arrested Willlamson In 8 piackstock, Ont; Joe Bradburn, Mrs, 12d Harris were appointed| Mrs, Deeming gave the medi. footprints in the snow for five ray Byers, Burketon, Ont Ivan plans were adopted whereby no "Together We Minister to Constables Daniels and Holmes| Cartwright Union Cemetery meeting, gave an interesting re-| refugees who are the 2,000,000 revealed a quantity of 22 shells It was decided that Decora: TORONTO (CP)--Harold B, work being domo among the stu further senzch-of the men's cars| collection be taken at that'on a business trip, A native of| With Thee', heing sung and sizes, conducted, 11 members from Ashburn, Fisher, also the program com- got the year 1546 as far as the|but also a fresh and intimate re-| bination of ancient tribal cus It was during this year that|It is translated here from the| wholly from the white man's so the great Western frontier of the United States was expanded fur ther thag it had ever heen be fore = the far-reaching and tenacious American dream of new lands of opportunity be eame a reality These were men "of eourage and vision" who made the big trek west in this year of deci sion. They were also well en dowed with a spirit of determin ation, These statements ire, shAILY emphasized in a new book on the. subject "FROM ST. LOUIS T0 SUTTER'S FORT, 1840 (Burns and MacFachern Ld) wy Heinrich Lienhard (a Swiss emigrant who wrote the story in the form of a diary in 1846) and translated and edited by Frwin G. and Elizabeth K Gudde This book, written on, the Jong western trek represents a most important contribution to the literature of the western movement, It is fully as inter: esting as the classic accounts by Ryran and Thornton of the trek to California and Oregon, and surpassing them in literary value, Lienhard joined a ® ( fellow emigrants in St Louis who became known Aas The Five German Boys". He kept a diary in German which in later years he re-worked into one of the most extensive and detailed accounts hy any traveller who crossed the plains before gold rus roup of original manuscript In the Ban croft Library at the University |s of California, The hazards of climate and {terrain, meetings with bands of | Indians, gieiens and buffalo hunts are<vidly described by Lienhard, Tt Is a book well worth reading, STORY OF CHOCTAW A hook originally published in 1934 in "The Civilization of the American Indian Series" has been re-published because of a new demand for information of the American Indian, 5 FALL OF THE CHOCTAW RE. PUPLIC" (Burns and MacEach the recording of Indian history and the history of Oklahoma She is the author of mary books on these subjects, "Phis book 1s the story of the Choetaws, a proud and gifted tribe among the Five Civilized Tribes of Indians, Tt is the re cord of a separate people whose forced migration from their ancestral homes in the South to what is now Oklahoma, and whose subsequent efforts from {the Civil War to the close of the century to maintain an an tonomous government and insti tutions form a distinctive and arresting chapter in the history of the West, While the political, social and {economic customs of the Choe h. The portion of thoNaw Indians were as closely cir "the|cumscribed as those of any of | elety, and Choctaw economic in titutions represented an attempt to adjust the primitive customs of tribal control of property, te the European system of indivi. vidual ownership, An interpretation of Choctaw history, therefore, is an analysis of the local events in the life of the tribe as set off against the background of general Ameri | ean historical knowledge, This 18 a valuable shook that it -graphically provides ac. curate assessment of the Choe Its title is "THE RISE AND ern) by Angle Debo, who has| made notable contributions tof {taw people and thelr times, £5 Rotarians See Film BOWMANVILLE (Staff) - More than 45 Bowmanville Ro. tavians and guests attended armchair World Travellogue, at their regular meeting Friday, Bob Hambly, of Oshawa, pre sented a 43-minute film that covered 932 countries and six continents, Dr. Keith Slemon reminded | the club that preparations for the March Easter Seal Cam. paign will start Feb, 28, at the Lions Centre, with the "Stuff. ing Envelope Party" to which all members and their wives were invited POLITICAL SCIENTIST Harold Laski, former chair was given by Nell Johnstone showing a prosperous year, The allocation for mission was raised, also other donations for worthy causes. * LONDON (Reuters) = A new national newspaper, The Sun day Telegraph, has made its de but in Britain, The new paper, the first na: tional Sunday newspaper launched in Britain since Lord Beaverbrook started The Sun. day Express in 1918, is pub lished by the 1,100,000-circula- tion London Dally Telegraph, The new paper sells for 5d (about six cents) and, like The Dailv Telegraph, supports Prime Minister Macmillan's Conservative party The Sunday Telegraph en tered a Sunday field that has experienced two "deaths" in less than four months, The cas ualties were The Empire News and The Sur Graphie, Macmillan currently is under pressure hy the opposition La bor and Liberal parties to set up an official inquiry into al leged monopolistic trends in the The following officers were/the music, New British Sunday Paper CHATHAM (CP) ~ Canadian agriculture must find more (world markets for is surpluses, (William G. Tilden, president of Ontario Federation of Agri day culture, said Speaking at the annual dinner meeting of the Kent County Ved leration of Agriculture, Mr, TH impst be international, he said. "We will never eat our way out lof surpluses" He said North land Central America could pro- duce enough food to feed the world, but two - thirds of the (world's people go to bed hungry, Contracts i Show Gain TORONTO (CP)~Residential contracts, which last' year de clined 30. per cent, have started off this year with a gain ! A compilation by Hugh cl --. MacLean bulidings report shows| |January residential contracts at) |844,964,200, up $7,508,600 from) {January last year, Business con-| [tracts totalled $52,117,600, down| $50,344,300; industrial $17.9, 000, up $9,997,500; and eng ing $77,003,900, up $10,160,500, Mt. Was | b- i WASHINGTON Mount Washington in winter more th ves up to its nickname, "Mi very Hil" The combination of wind and cold on the Ney Hampshire peak creates somk of the world's worst weather, the Nx tional Geographic Sociéty snvd. Furious storms are spawned by mémber of the Agricultural Fco-lg = iach between bitter Arctic! feath lair and warmer, moister cur- rents from the temperate zone Hundred - mile - an - hour subject that combine to make & winds often are accompanied by been In year temperatures dropping to 20 be-| low zero, Tiny Ice pellets whiz {through the air with the force of ibirdshot, and snow piles up into 30-foot drifts in ravines, STRONGEST GUST | "Winter" on the 6288-foot-high| imountain begins in September | opened the meeting) pi o There was some discussion re| with a poem, The hymn, "Where and extends through June, Dur ling this period, winds of hurri- cane force regularly rake the summit two out of every three |days, ( | The strongest gust of wind {ever measured on the earth's surface blasted Mount Washing. Two Typewriters Stolen At Ajax AJAX... (Staff) ~~ While on night patrol, area of Ajax, discovered akin\nto the offjce blpck of" the Packaging and Partigon '0 pany, The officers, Constables Don. nld Robson and Eric Place, of the Ajax Police Department, discovered the lock of the front door had heen smashed, Upon investigating they discovered that entry had been gained into the inner office, ; Stolen was an electric type. writer and a manual typewriter in addition to $8 In cash Assigned to Investigate the case are Sgt, Thomas Chambors and Constable Bob Joel, ce officers elected for 1061: Superintendent, Mr, KE, Heron; assistant, Mr, D, Ashton; secre- tary, Mr, Ross Batten; treasur- er, Mr, Neil Johnstone; music director, Mrs, KE, Heron, There was a good attendance at the morning service on Sun day, Jan, 20. Mr, Perry, BA, occupied the pulpit The adult choir had charge of nearly 150 periodicals and mag- arines, Odhams announced Jan, 25 a plan to merge with the British organization of Cana- dian newspaper magnate Roy Thomson but the Daily Mirror group' countered with a ( over hid for all of Odhamw stock, TWO MERGED * Last fall the Liberal London News Chronicle and its afters noon companion, The Star, were merged with the Conservative London Daily Mail and The Evening News, Some people of Fleet Street ~London's newspaper IO. We thought the Sunday_Pelgraphs main challeng®vould be to the two established "quality" Sup: day papers the Thomson. owned Sunday Times and The Observer. Both cost 6d (about seven cents) The right-wing Sunday Times "Misery Hill" "ed at the Memorial Hospital for t tells the story of acy Gorman Boys"! from St, {the famous small republies of Sutter's Creek Fort|the past, the threat of Choctaw : Cahien comprises the book) is|history is at all times, closely in who died in 1950, was a lecturer not onl interesting [terwoven with the larger fabric (In history at McGill University} ost | and ont pot of the journal|of American history as a whole, (from 1814 to 1016. man of the British Labor party newspaper industry These demands have been sparked by a struggle for con Avol of Odhams Press, which publishes two newspapers and {has a circulation of more than {1,000,000 while the independent, {Liberal + minded Observer has Bok " : v " RE A 3 . THE MORNING AFTER answerin The stone lon in front of | up a cold compress on the un- | pyilding is located on Fifth . New York's public library had | feeling brow, the after effect Avenue st 42nd Street, in the | - his hungover look today after | of yesterday's blizzard which [W~tough weekend, Snow piled | paralyzed traffic. The library heart of Manhattan, {one of the party noted in his(airplane surfaces and jet en- diary gines on the frosty summit ( late * ington | Though the expedition mem- From. winter through SQ bers collected valuable weather spring, thousands of skiers tes data, the press jeered at them, (their skill on Tuckerman > One newspaper mocked the Ravine, where the downhill| "fossilized scientific maniacs' |grade tilts at a dizzying 50 der} who discovered "a new and grees, ~e hitherto unknown species of ~| Mount Washington also is pop- snowflake!" lular jin we Sh. when many| { ors ride the picturesque cog WEATHER LABORATORY \railway to the top or drive up| Technicians of the private ob- Carriage Road | For Information call servatory atop Mount Washing Winter or summer, the moun-| OWN telephone answered, o lowcost ,® 24 hrs, dally « mobile Z-way radie » wake-up service « Metropolitan medical exchanges pe ® | ton st 231 miles an hour on April 12, 1934 The coldest temperature ever recorded there was 46.5 degrees below zero, The mercury never has climbed ahove 45 degrees in the winter or 71 in the summer Freezing fog surrounds a chus-| ter of buildings atop the moun- tain, often coating them with a ery white frosting six feet thick, One of the buildings is a weather observation station, bolted to solid rock, which has round operation! ton still study snowflakes : end} ain weather is capricious, One hack regular weather repbrti |summer afternoon, a woman matter how turbulent the atmos wearing a light dress stepped phere, and carry on me- from the cog railway coach at teorological research, {ny summit. A sudden wind The United States Armed 'caught her dress, whirled it over Forces Arctic Laboratory takes her head, and sent it sailing, advantage of the foul weather Most kettledrums used in to test cold-weather gear and re- uodern orchestras may actions of men to cold, The Air be tuned to any note in a full Force and Navy study icing of octave, peak, Their mission: "To con-| %' tribute something to the solution] of the great question of whether |science can forecast the weath| "" since 1932 ; The first winter obsarvations were made on Mount Washing- ton in 1870.71, when five adven- turous men spent months on the| I | | The men endured a rugged {season In a small wooden hut, Their refuge was bombarded {with chunks of ice hurled by 9h] {mile-an-hour winds, The walls {rocked with "a vibratory mo- |tion not altogether pleasant," Injures Head In*Accident BOWMANVILLE (Staff)=Mrs, Ira McCorriston, 330 South Vidal street, Sarnia, is feported in good condition after'being treat. FEBRUARY 6th, 7th & 8th, 1961 Centre Loin LAMB CHOPS ~~ Ib 3 Sy A J ; ~ il HALIBUT STEAK cuttin Ed. heat ries received in a car 115, north of Kirby, 11:30 p.m, Mr, McCorriston and his four year-old son were not injured, nor was the owner of the car, driven by Hutehn, Estimated damage to both ve. hicles was reported at $300, $125 DAMAGE Approximately $125 damage was reported to a car driven by Daniel Leveque, Waverly street, Bowmanville, whe! the car came into collision wth a Smith Transport' driven by Cornneh. luis Driehuis, Richmond Hill, The incident occured at the corners of Plckell road and No, 401 highway at 1:00 a.m, Sat. urday, Damage estimated at $150 was reported done to a vehicle driven by Robert. MacDougall, RR no, 1, Hampton, The incident occurred at the corner of Solina road and No, 2 Highway at 6:20 a.m, Saturday, Slippery roads was reported the, cause of Mr, MacDougall losing control, BOOK N > * 3 Ll Save 10% on round-trip until April 14th © Flawless British service © Cuisine to delight all tastes © Dancing, parties, movies © Duty-iree shopping © Stabilizers for smooth sailing © 275 Ibs, free baggage allowance © All included in your Cunard ticket Pay Later Plan Available SEE YOUR LOCAL AGENT, No one can serve you better, Corner Bay\& Wellington Sts, Toronto, Ont Tel: EMpire 2-2911 Cooked and Breaded per Markets AP MEANS DEPENDABIL ¥ FAST, FREQUENT SAILINGS FROM NEW YORK TO ENGLISH, SCOTTISH, IRISH & FRENCH PORTS QUEEN MARY Fob, 17, Mor, 4, 22, Wor. sn "CARINTHIA Feb. 10, Mar. 10, Apr, 7 QUEEN ELIZABETH Mor. 15, 29, Apr, 1 2% ®IVERNIA Feb. 16, Mar. Wi... 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