THE WOMEN'S Missionary | Society is holding its 28th an- nual School for Leaders at the Ontario Ladies' College, 1.ast- ing a week, its aim is for ladies and girls 16 vears and over to get inspiration. lead- ership training and to develop a deeper devotion to the total COUNCIL DECIDES: mission of the United Church Shown above are several of the past presidents and Deans of the school. Front row (left to right) Mrs. F. W. K. Harris of Peterborough, former dean; Mrs. J. H: McKinney of Brook- lin, past president; Mrs. S. W Stafford of Belleville, former president. Back row (left to K 3. : | | i a a -. i" right) Mrs. E. S. Venyes, Belleville, past registrar; Miss Elsie Hunt RN, Home Mission Missionary; Mrs. W. C., Hag gerty of Cherry Valley, past president; Mrs. B. H. Soper of Smith Falls, former Dean and current president of the Conference | -Oshawa Times Photo Fluoridation Goes To Vote Of People Fluoridation will go to a vote said he had no report to make night of the people at the next munic- ipal election, Whitby Council de- cided Council adopted a report from the Bylaws and Application com- mittee Monday night recommended a plebiscite be at the present on the Dupont easement SET UP COMMITTEE On a recommendatior from their Bylaws and Applica tions committee they The School for Leaders of the WMS of the United Church of Canada, meeting at Ladies' College, Bible Study hour on The Nature morning. Dr. E. E. Long brought . before her audience a growing : concept of { came, with Pentecost | gave words to the faith within the power which as Peter i him. bh 4%1 the world upside down. | The church, the body of Christ, Eight days after the ascension, the followers came together and had an experience that turned is a living organism. Paul said to the Colony of God "The Spirit of God has been poured out on you" Jesus draws a distinction be tween those that follow Him and those who do not. 'Ye shall know them by their fruits." The { fruits of the Spirit, love, peace, joy, self-control, are qualities within. Love is an outpouring to someone clse, and the receiving of love, : BIBLE IRRELEVANT? ! Dr. Long said a vey of the World } Churches found that Christians in Ontario. thought the Bible irrelevant -- not addressed to them You are no longer outsiders if vou belong to the Household of God. "I therefore beseech you that vou walk worthily: that ye | being rooted and grounded in love, that ye might be filled with the zoodness of God." The Literature Secretary, Mrs ( McBride enthusiastically recommended a selection of books from the literature exhibit in the College Library: Safe in Bondage by Robert W. Spike on North America; Split in the Sky by Jessie L. Beattie on the Six Nations Indians; Edge of the Edge by Theodore E. Matson; He Belonged to the West by Isobel McFadden, as well as Facts and Figures, the last issue for WMS Mrs. C, Maxwell Loveys dealt 1 with the Church and Senior Citi- zens in a comprehensive survey recent sur Council of turned The ahurch has taken the lead down a request to build a car- in the care of the elderly port closer to property lines! In 1921-7, 5 per cent of the A co-ordinating utilities com: than js permitted. The request population in Canada was over that mittee has been set up, said from A Town Engineer Hoag Tammerand and Gor Having don Grant was denied on the . 60 years of age In 1951 -- 11.4 per cent (1,592 taken on the fluoridation of the contacted the Consumers' Gas grounds that "the Zoning Bylaw 000) and in 1980 it is estimated water supply. Councillors Coath, Bill Davidson, George Mission, a meeting of the new Brooks and Mayor Stan Martin attended the committee meeting on July 18, Other matiers contained in the Committee report adopted hy Town Council were: committee will be held soon Licences will be rubber: stamped with 'non - trans- ferable". The special committee p, Co. and the Public Utilities Com- does not permit any deviatons" there will be 12.8 per cent A letter from Consumers' Gas (3,400,000) in an estimated popu- Co concerning reduction o rates was filed f' lation of 26,650,000 This development must engage A letter from Harold Godfrey the thought of all citizens and asking permission to sell choco com- | lates was filed, The matter, said . not least, that of the church. It will affect working condi- posed of Mayor Stan Martin, the Commitiee, had been dealt tions and 'the time and method The Town Engineer, Charles Clerk John Frost and Engineer with. Hoag, will obtain a copy of the Charles Hoag will report at the A guns and fireworks bylaw|selective There may be on the of retirement. retirements A resume of the work done in {United Church Homes $385 at their bazaar -and pur- |Home. Pine Avenue, Montreal was study Ontario (heard. In St. John's, Newfound: Times, it is hoped that their centred their/land, for 45 guests, who made understanding of the church's WHITBY And DISTRICT Bible Not Irrelevant == WMS Conference Told As a result of the teen-age on Churches for New work will be deepened, and they THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thurdey, August 24, 1961 § : (Grade Lots PARADE piamond Two reports from the special i of the Church on Wednesday | chased a refrigerator for the will be helped to gain a clearer By GERRY BLAIR { parks committee were adopted by Town Council Monday. idea of how a congregation can to. carry out its ministry more ef- gether with other workers, hem. fectively. 'med 1,177 diapers. Dunedan Home, Montreal, a model Beautiful Home many come to see for information, Park Haven, Montreal also, a million dollar home for 100 guests and infirmary for 12. Many homes throughout Ontario and western Canada, from Nee- pawa. Manitoba, where one resi- dent is 98 years old. Moose Jaw -- an Ina Grafton Gage Home for 50 ladies, built in 1951, six units for man and wife in 1956, then six more con- nected with the hospitals in Moose Jaw, Probably largest of the 18 homes is at Fair Haven, Burn- aby, B.C. for long waiting list. They arrange their own recreation, cultural and religious activities Last year 10 were removed to nursing homes, and 11 by death They have a corresponding sec retary who wrote 230 '"'thank- you" letters for them to groups entertaining them. They made $796 at their own bazaars, and $250 at their after- noon teas. The Church is the institution that begins, organizes things then the State keeps them on The Church must keep its hands on things to put in that loving touch, that they may have kind- ness and love in the sunset years. CHANGE WITH TIMES The crowded program of the School again made room for Miss Dorothy Young to assist with problems regarding the new women's organization and to answer again the question -- why a new organization? She warned that the commis: sions of the United Church, after most thorough research, recom- mended this work "It may be," she said, "that in the Space Age we may dis- cover more what it means to live in the Christian faith, love to our brother -- but it may be we face troubled times when the Christian faith has to fight for its very existence, or even 161 guests and a go through seeming defeat. If] we resist change we may wake up some day to find history has passed us by." Among the daily study groups are those for 'leaders of the young groups in the churches of new building code as soon as/next Bylaws and Applications similar to Ajax's will be pre-| basis of health rather than age/the Conference Branch. committee meeting on the Town pared and submitted to Council. ~-- shorter work hours for older possible, The solicitor is currently pre- paring a Part lot control bylaw. | Action has been deferred on a} private bill to separate Whitby ning Board that no action be mended Engineer's request for a clerk- stenographer. The Committee with recommendations of Plan- Council went along with Plan- ning Board and further recom: planning of retirement in terms of cast- that the concurred workers -- work hours paced at a lower rate We must review our concept from the County of Ontario until/taken on the request for rezon- board's letter be filed. The let- ing people on the ash heap at a report is received from Colin/ing at the corner of Bell Drive ter concerned a Wooten appli- 69, to say noting of them be- and Dundas street west. The re- cation. No indication was given ing too old at 40 Campbell A letter from Park Vista com-|zoning application came from as to what the application was plaining about conditions was filed. The matter has been dealt with completely and satisfactor-/to control bee keeping have been from Walter G ily, the committee said. Wooton and Wooton. Petitioners requesting a bylaw told that the Bee Act covers the for An application for red until A bylaw is being drafted by situation. Council has no author- reported on the matter the Town Clerk to prevent the erection of buildings for gasoline outlets Blind Teaching Blind ity to take further action SHARPEN TEETH The Bylaws and Applications committee recommended that no Council sharpened the teeth of action be taken at this time on Rotary Club Speech A blind woman who has been teaching blind, mentally ill pati- ents at the Ontario Hospital for the last two years, outlined her activities to the Roary Club at their luncheon on Tuesday Mrs. Mary Stevens, blind after a car accident 12 years ago, said the hospital at Whitby was the first one in Ontario to have a special department for the blind. Until the program was started, many blind persons were re stricted to their beds for every day of the vear, she said Al large number are in the senior age group Authorities had reservations at first over the proposed blind therapy. Few of the mentally ill blind had taken part in hos-| pital activities before The program was kicked off with one social afternoon a week, Later, when Mrs. Stevens was appointed fo the staff, the social afternoons were increased to two per week Thirty blind persons take part in the weekly sessions, Mrs Stevens zuides 10 or 12 in her classes SOMETHING TO DO "It's something for them to do . something to do after years of doing nothing," said Mrs. Stevens, a registered nurse She told the Rotarians of alself the art of weaving. Several 8 man she tock to Oshawa. It was the first time, she said, that the man had bcen away from the hospital in 20 years. It was also the first time he had been out at night for as long as he could remember, she said Some of the blind patients never have a visitor. Mrs Stevens lauded another service club in Whitby for its efforts at remotivating chronic wards. Although many mentally ill people participate in activities around the town, few blind ones are able to Because of this, said Mrs. Stevens "we try t make their lives a little hap- pier." She showed Rotarians several articles that had been crafted by the blind during their weekly sessions. Some of the blind come to the classes in their wheel chairs, she said. The articles: included leather and weaving work. Wastepaper baskets and reed-covered vases were also shown, One man who had been in the hospital since he was three-years-old is fond of making doormats, she said He can finish one of excellent quality in a single afternoon Mrs. Stevens showed samples of a new project that she has planned. Before she can start it she said she had to teach her- Whithf THE BIG ONE FOR rid) of a man, we GLENN FORD - MARU SOREL - ANNE BROCK EVENING SHOWS at 6:55 & 9:20 Feature Starts at 6:55 & 9:30 The unforgettable story M-G+M presents EDNA FERBER'S . SATURDAY MATINEE AT 1:30 EVERYONE! a land, a love! v BAXTER - ARTHUR (CONNELL about 11 year ornate towels with colored bor ders were shown. These are problems for indus try and politics. ; TeZOniNg cHURCH AIDS NEEDY Yuil was defer- Planning Board has The church moves in at the point of social, psychological and spiritual need. Many are lonely and lost. Funds are small, maybe only a pension. Some garrets, cheap tenements "third floor back." Increased urban living will ac- the drift to this type of The local congregation may help them by visiting, daytime | groups, a hot meal in the church each week, or end of month when pension is about due, or a program of "meals on wheels." There must be more low-cost That of the CGIT leaders has met under direction of Mrs. D. J. Scoates and Mrs. Harold Gif- |fin, who state that the new pro- gram for teen-agers presents a challenge to look at the '"'new times' which are making such changing and insistent demands on the church. The changeover in the last 10 years from a rural society to an urban industrial nation brings drastic repercussions for them in ways of life and education Unless the church speaks in the name of Christ with power And that it wiii arouse in| youth a deeper sense of belong-| ing to the church and sharing its responsibility. To this end the week is de- voted to methods of carrying out this program, interviews with missionaries," scholarship stu- dents, films, and developing challenging projects. NOSTALGIC SKIT This being the final year of WMS work before it enters the] new field, a rather nostalgic skit in the costumes of the] "roaring twenties" was given] by some longtime members of| WMS in a tender, humorous, | thoughtful vein which delighted the audience. Their memories of co-workers who all had '"'loved long since and lost awhile'; of projects| which had taken the long plan-| ning and self-sacrificing giving of many members, The reminis- cences of the now poised Dean of School for Leaders when she| was the shy young woman, foo] self-effacing to be seen straight- ening the flower arrangement. The ever-young Mrs. H. Gil- mour, 80 years old, and leading the study for Baby Band lead- ers this year, who, as so often before, delighted all with her "elocution' of old time favor- ites The skit was concluded with a clever poem written for the occasion by Miss Netta Brown- lee The highlight of each year's School is the Vesper Service planned and executed by Miss Netta Browniee and her group of young girls Wednesday night's was no ex- ception as the lovely chapel of the college was at dusk filled with silent worshippers. The mellow music of the organ played by Dr. Osborne, and the quiet voice of Miss Brownlee as from the rear of the chapel she gave her Call to Worship "Not for the eyes of men May this day's work be done; But unto Thee, O God, That, with the setting sun My heart may know the matchless prize Of sure approval in Thine eyes." TELLS TWO STORIES The "girls participated in the Bible reading and the audience in singing. Two stories, The Tithe, and The Stuff She Was Made Of, were told by Miss Brownlee Visual Aids concluded the eve ning when, with the kind assisi- ance of Dr. Osborne, films per- tinent to this year's study were shown City Story, 45 min. The new minister of a downtown church has plans for serving the area more effectively but all the board members do not agree. | Outside the Walls, 13 min. Has | the church responsibility for a! | live in small rooms, upstairs and directness to their needs, minority group living in sub- it will fail and be left behind. standard conditions? Fix Tracks CPR Asked from a meeting of Protection to Persons and A report the The crafts made by the blind housing for both married and Property Committee was adopt- are sold fo the Occupational Therapy department and are sold at the Hospital Gift Shop NEED RECORDS One thing needed at classes, also the she told Rotarians, are single people The church's aim is first to keep senior citizens in their own homes or in suitable quarters where they live an independent life and are related to their local church, as long as possible Second, to give every support records, The department for thé| (4 1ocal low-cost, low rent hous- blind now has a record player but is short of suitable records The talking book records now ing for them Third, when possible, take our share in providing inexpensive on the markets are not adequate residential care. Though able to o she said. since the patients are gorve only unable to keep the thread of the po require it, story from week to week. a fraction of those our Church Homes should be as model as Few blind patients can read/we can make them. Braille. Therefore, they liked to be read to, she said. Rotarians said they would try to forward some records to fhe Blind Department Marina Defies All Opposition KINGSTON (CP) A mar- ina has begun operation at the western border . of Kingston Township despite opposition from lakefront residents and overnment bodies Five boats were tied up Wed- nesday at temporary slips and more were in a hoathouse near the shore Residents have formed the Collins Bay Water Protective Association to fight the mar ina's establishment, contending it is the start of a commercial development which will en- croach on water in front of their lakefront properties The Ontario Water Resources Commission has warned of pos- sible pollution for 106 families whose water supply comes from the area and Kingston Township council Is considering bylaw amendments to ban such mar. ina construction YEAR'S SUPPLY A mature rubber pounds of latex yields each free SR. CITIZENS' HOMES There -are now 18 residential homes for senior citizens under the United Church. They stretch from the Atlantic to the Pacific and are diverse in size and function. At least three more are in immediate prospect. {In the 18 homes, 650 senior citi zens, all over 70 vears of age, are accommodated. Many have little income beyond the Old Age Pension Many projects are undertaken by individual churches. | Carleton Street Church had a program where they served a hot meal for 15c. and were amazed at the numbers who came -- for the meal at least! Miss Elsie Hunt, one of our missionaries. who assisted the deaconess at Woodgreen Church, Toronto, spoke briefly during the morning, telling of visiting the ill and crippled who could not come to church At the church, two rooms and a kitchenette were set apart for the elderly, one room for TV, handcrafts Two church women served a | cup of tea and cookies each day. The WA helped at Valentine or Talent parties Rooms were open from 1-4, but they came and stayed on! Forty women there formed a Mizpah group -- 80 to 90 vears old ed by Whithy Monday night. A letter from the Department of Agriculture asking that Whit- by appoint a weed inspector was answered by the clerk stat- ing that bylaw 2028 appointing a weed inspector was still in ef- fect, The Knights of Columbus were authorized to erect banners across the street by the com- mittee who had power to act in the matter. The Town Clerk has sent a letter to the CPR asking when the repairs to the tracks are to be commenced. A letter will be sent to the Whitby Police Department, ask- ing that immediate action be taken in regard to buses park- ing at the Whitby Dairy Bar Previous letters to the bus own- ers have had no effect ORDER NEW LIGHT The Public Utilities Commis- sion will be requested to re place the light at the corner of Arthur and Brock streets with a 500 watt mercury vapor light The Public Utilities Commis- sion will be advised that the lights which were installed for the Industrial and Agricultural Fair at the Arena be left as a permanent installation The barricade around the parking area at the site of the old Town Hall will be continued, leaving space for an entrance and an exif The Public Utilities Commis- sion will be advised that it is now imperative that the full travelled portion of all streets be used for the movement of traffic and that immediate con- sideration be given to the mov- ing of hydro poles back, so that they are adjacent to the side- walks. Following are the locations of where the hydro poles are to be moved back: On the west side of| Town Council The church ladies gave a des-/Green street between Colborne sert luncheon at 12.30 ladies were the original WMS| I members at Woodgreen Church. [tw zen Brock and Byron streets: T he s ejand Dundas street; on the south sice of Colborne street west be- | on the south side of Colborne street east between Brock and Green streets; on Mary street, south side, between Brock and Perry streets. ONE-WAY SIGNS One-way signs will be erected | at the following locations: At the corner of Brock and Elm| With their series tied 2-2, Brampton Ramblers and | Four lots on the corner of Brooklin Hillcrests are now faced with a best-of-three Bowman avenue and Johnson situation starting tonight in Brampton. In simple fact, [frost wll ve Jraded make for Brooklin to survive this best-of-seven series, they ball diamond. A backstop will have to win one in Brampton plus their home game, ibe erected at a cost not to which is Saturday night. Game time for the sixth = exceed $100, meeting at the Brooklin Community arena is 8:45 p.m. | Deputy Reeve Warren Mowat The Hillcrests appeared to run ont of steam midway Was authorized to approach through Tuesday's fourth game, and as a result, the MEMORABLE DATE The first passenger train fo |reach Moose Jaw, Sask. ar. irived Dec, 10, 1882, two years before the community was in three acres of land surrounding into the third game last Saturday in Brampton and | | The High School Board was now realize that a duplicate performance is necessary |property and that the proposed necessary, it is slated for Brampton because of their A committee meeting held on i ; b regarding the acquisition of a their six meetings during the regular campaign, it {grounds for the town. The com. The season's largest turn-out witnessed Tuesday's ing, July 27. No report from individual with the Ramblers, has decided to call it jcouncil. == ran into a serious back injury last season while a mem- doubtful whether he would get in' the year with the |corporated. {Katz and associates regarding tat ithe purchase of a minimum of Ramblers took over from a 5-3 deficit, and wound up with a 10-7 victory. The Hillcrests put every effort Ithe pump house on the west |side of Annes street. were adequately rewarded with a 10-4 decision, good oe Biz i a : We { : advise at Council cannot af- enough for the lead in the series at that/ time. They ford to pci High Seto] tonight or they will be faced with a dubious task of [lease arrangement is not satis- needing two straight victories. If a seventh game is |factory. Go : Ajai i HAW o : July 24 reported that a con- second place finish in the OLA Senior A" standings, |Siderebie discussion' took place compared with Brooklin's ending in fourth. Based on parcel of land, east of the would indicate there is little to choose from between Palmerston Street School . lubs w h during the 1961 schedule. h r them. Both clubs won three during the sc er A ie Com 8 ; {meet again on Thursday morn. fourth tilt in Brooklin, and an even greater attendance is anticipated for Saturday. Barry Ashbee, hard-rock [that meeting was presented to {council. quits in lacrosse for this year, and concentrate on mak- ing the Kingston Frontenac EPHL hockey club. Barry ber of the Brampton Excelsiors during their play-off series with the Whitby Red Wings. At that time it was Frontenacs. Apparently he wants to avoid a similar incident this fall. WHITE NEWSPRINT 4Y-1b. pkg. approximately 630 sheets for -- $1.00 Also Available in 9-1b. pkgs. IDEAL FOR TYPING, PADS, CARBON COPIES Whitby Abner's Essos came to the .end of the trail on Tuesday night in Oshawa when they dropped a heart-breaker to Heffering's Imperials. Errors, which plagued Abners for most of the season, unfortunately spelled elimination for them when Reg Hickey got a life on a missed throw at first and took off for third base. Stubbings' relay to third baseman Gord Schmid- ke was wide and Hickey scored with the winning run in the eighth inning. Both pitchers, Wally Saman- ski for Whitby and Ted Jones, orthodox lefty for Heffering's, pitched brilliantly, allowing only nine INNER OFFICE hits between them, while striking out 27 batters. It MEMOS, ETC, was a pleasure for us to have been associated with On. Sais of manager Fred Hatch, playing-coach Marty Jordan and the players of Whitby Abner's this summer. One consolation for Abner's was that they lost to a solid ball club who should pose a problem for future com=- petitors in the OASA Senior "B"" playdowns. TOWN AND COUNTRY . .. Boston Bruin brass, Lynn Patrick, Milt Schmidt, and Wren Blair are hold- | ing a special hockey camp for one week starting next | Monday in Niagara Falls. They are taking the top | minor hockey players from their sponsored organiza- tions--Kingston, Oshawa etc., to have a look at them; in all probability the best of the crop will be sent to the Niagara Falls Flyers camp, under Hap Emms, which opens in a few weeks. Five Oshawa youths have been invited: Roddy McDonald, Jim Hinkson, Stan "Butch" Dowe, Ken Bradley and Terry Peters . » The Bruins open their National Hockey league training camp on September 11, also in Niagara Falls, Ths is the first year in quite some time that Boston has not been the site of their fall sessions . . . To= night at the Brooklin Community Park, Mount Zion Brooklin Concretes host Markham Aces in the second game of their best-of-five South Ontario County league finals. Game time is 8:15 p.m. Markham leads 1-0 after their shut-out victory Tuesday at home. . . . WHITBY OFFICE & CIRCULATION DEPT. Oshawa Times move a number of parking] meters The Town fngineer reported, that two mefi had been assign- ed fo this work commencing Wednesday, July 19 The Town Engineer also stated that the stop signs and] street name signs would be in place by the end of August. SHARPENED - REPAIRED All Makes and Models portsman' Corner $ 103.5 Byron 5S. MO 8.4511 by popular demand MORE DISNEYKINS to complete your set TE, L--ee»a ADDITIONAL WHITBY NEWS ON PAGE ¢ MANY STOPS The Canadian National Rail. | ways serves 5,000 railway sta-|§ tions throughout Canada. streets; at the exit from the] Professional Building on Kent | street, | The streets committee will be asked fo give consideration to the cutting back of the curb: at} the south-east 'corner of Mary] and Brock street. The Town Clerk was instruct-| ed to obtain a copy of the De-| partment of Highways regula-| tions regarding entrances and] exits to service stations. i The committee chairman ask-| ed the Town Engineer when) Eric Clark would get some help | from the Works Department to owneo sv CANADIANS OPERATED BY CANADIANS CANADIAN OIL com®eAnNIE s LI MITED Special Holiday Weekend THE CANADIAN PUPPET THEATRE No. 7 Hwy., 3.2 miles west of Brooklin Thurs. = Fri. - Sat. Mon. TREASURER'S SALE OF LAND FOR TAXES Sat. and Mon. Matinee at 2:30 p.m. CHILDREN 50¢ ADULTS 1.00 A Wonderful Show For the Whole Family WHITE ROSE GASOLINES*MOTOR OILS 5-2 Town of Whithy, Ontario. | To Wit: By virtue of a warrant issued by the Mayor of the Town of | Whitby bearing date of the 2nd day of June, 1961, a sale of lands.<in arrears for texes in | the Town of Whitby, will be held in the Council Chamber ot the hour of ten o'clock in the forenoon on Wednesday, the 11th day of October, 1961, unless the taxes and costs are sooner paid. Notice is hereby given that the list of lands for sale for arrears of taxes is being pub- | lished in The Ontario Gazette on the Ist day of July, 1961, and that copies of said list may be had at my office. Treasurer's Office this 20th day of June, 1961. JOHN R. FROST, ONTARIO (County) CO-OPERATIVE MEDICAL SERVICES R.R. No. 1, LOCUST HILL, ONTARIO Surgical, In-Hospital Medical, Major Medical Insurance FAMILY YEARLY PREMIUM $52.00-SINGLE $26.00 CO-OP is Collector, Ontario Hospital Insurance CONTACT: Mrs. |. L, McLean, Sec.-Treas., R.R. No. 1, Locust Hill J. C. Thompson, R.R. 1, Brooklin Mr. J. E. Sandison, Ashburn Clarence Hallett, 911 Centre St. N., Mrs. E. Elliott, 127 Pine St., Whitby Whitby Mrs. J, Teefy, R.R.2, Pickering Mrs. A. C. McKenzie, Columbus Mrs. D. Jackson, R.R. 1, Brooklin Mrs, Don Mitchell, Brooklin Mr. E, Lick, R. R. 3, Oshawa ' Mrs. George Squire, R.R. 1, Pickering Mr. E. R. James, R.R. 1, Pickering ; Mrs. Mr, Treasurer, Town of Whithy, 1 Mrs. A, Downey, R.R. 1, Oshawa Mr. Clarence F.Werry, Vice-Pres., R.R. No. 2, Oshawa a -------- 1 C--O