The Oshawa Times, 23 Sep 1961, p. 9

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UNDER THE DIRECTION | pupils of the primary schools of members of the Oshawa | across streets on their way to Police Department senior citi- | and from school. This year sens and well-trained senior | the safety patrol members pupils have for a number of | are under the direction of years been acting as cross- | Constable William Tane. In ing guards and assisting | the upper picture Walter Ash- See Call-Back Church Bazaars Building At Least Sales Tax Exempt 'tle decision to exempt from A Week Away | the 3 per cent provincial sales tax items sold at church A spokesman for General] bazaars, which have been Motors of Canada Ttd., "here| donated, has been announced said Friday afternoon that he| hy the government. expects it will be at least a Until the move to drop the week before a call-back-of-| yoy on all donated bazaar laid-off employees at the GM goods, only food served at Oshawa plant starts. nn church events was not taxable Word was received Friday Bec t 1ack or wird morning that McKinnon Indus- ecause 0. ack. Or records ton, who has been a guard fior three years, holds up his sign as pupils cross Simcoe street, at John street, on their way to E. A. Lovell Public Schdol. In the lower picture Gregory Bodnaryk, 12, a member of MONTREAL (CP) -- Psamot- |ers representing financial inter- ests in Canada and several European countries Friday an- nounced plans to build the world's "largest office - com- plex" in Montreal. When fully completed, the |""office complex' will be three tries IAd., a St. Catharines Gen:| On total annual revenues of |pyjdings in one. Its design con- eral Motors subsidiary plant,| church bazaars in Ontario, sists of three identical 5-storey will call 2,200 employees back provincial officials don't know {owers resting on the same jel The presidential plane made a rough landing after the flight Washington, bounced touched down and to work Monday morning in the| how much tax will be lost by three - storey base and joined wake of a settlement between | the exemption at the top. the General Motors Corporation Work on the first tower of the in the United States and the $90,000,000 project is scheduled United Automobile Workers of I Fi d $30 F mc America. S me or . The company spokesman R h L | g here said the Oshawa plants I d t Act oug and n are just getting into the lay-off n ecen . due to stock shortages caused F P d 7 t by the U.S. strike Charged in magistrate's court or resi en Both the St. Catharines and here Friday with having com- HYANNIS PORT. Mass. (AP) Oshawa plants were forced to mitted an indecent act, Harry | gd i p close down due to shortages of| Beauchamps, 45, RR 1, Ennis. President Kennedy's plane was imported parts caused by the|killen, was fined $50 and costs forced to circle Otis Air Force GM strike in the United States.|or 10 days in jail by magistrate Base for about 20 minutes Fri- According to the spokesman, |f'. §, Fbbs day before the pilot forsnd a hole 'McKinnon Industries was forc-| In another case, Timothy John in the fog cover to land the big ed to close down before the GM|ng 1 21ohiin. 35 of 489 Emerald plant here. He said the com-] = 5" 0 0. pany's production and supply| 2'enue, was remanded in cus people are "looking into the| tody until Monday for sentence situation very carefully'. and|©n a charge of attempted carnal there is a slight possibility call | knowledge. It was testified he from It backs may begin earlier than!attempted- sexual intercourse once as expected with a girl under the age of 14.irolled algng the strip. it % { On Probation the safety patrol at St. Hed- School, Olive the wig's Separate patrols the corner and LaSalle avenues children leave school --Oshawa Times Photo Large of as Office Complex to begin Nov, 15, it was an- nounced at a press conference. The promoters, the Place Vic- toria - St. Jacques Company, said "the project is being fi- nanced by Canadian and Euro- pean capital representing a wide cross - section of banking, commercial, industrial, public utilities, manufacturing and real estate experience." | The building will occupy an entire city block on the west side of Victoria Square in Mont- real's financial district. Cost of the land $4,000,000 and the cost of the towers is estimated at $28,000,000 apiece 18 Dr. Stan Young Is Speaker UXBRIDGE The impor- tance of having a well balanced farm management p ogram was stressed by Dr. Stan Young, PAC ed a Pasture Improvement Meeting held on the farm of Mr. Murray Holtby, Port Perry, RR 4. on Thursday evening, Sept. 21 Dr. Young also pointed out the importance of establishing and maintaining high producing hay and pasture fields, by the use of good seed mixtures, proper seeding methods, and fertility level for maximum pro- duction. Guelph, when he address-| Retail Sales | Up 146 PC Ford Says "SECOND SECTION OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1961 dhe Oshavon Sines ' PAGE NINE OAKVILLE, Ont. -- With pub- lic introduction of the 1962) models scheduled to start next week, retail sales of Canadian-| made passenger cars by Cana-| dian dealers of Ford Motor Com-| pany of Canada, Limited so far this year are 14.6 per cent above the same period last year. Ford of Canada general sales manager Jack S. Kemp an- nounced today that latest fig- ures show that 70,396 new cars assembled in the company's Oakville plant had been sold by dealers this year compared with 61,397 at the same time in 1960. In addition, Mr, Kemp said, Ford of Canada's retail sales of| 21 Pass Test H es ere a nearly blind Oshawa resident on Highw Lincolns and Thunderbirds, which are manufactured in the| Twenty-one of 22 participants also reco in an Ontario Department ofipath leading to the busy high- U.S., increased 26.8 per cent to 1,201 units. As a result of these sales in- creases, Ford of Canada's share of Canadian retail sales of North American-type passenger cars increased to 29.7 per cent, com- pared with 26.2 per cent the same time last year. "Ford's compact Falcon and Comet contributed greatly to this success," said successfully passed the required|utes, found that |Mr. Kemp, "with 14,684 Falcons| examinations to permit the is- 40, of Toronto, |being sold against 10,850 in 1960 suing of a hunting licence, Ron which struck and killed W {and 12,941 Comets against 7,395. He a Department of Lands Hunka, 73, of 420 Dunkirk ave. |" "The most striking facet of and Forests qualified hunter nue, Oshawa, on Sept. 15, was |this bright picture," Mr. Kemp| safety instructor, said today. (In No way io blame. continued, is that dealers' in-| Ay members of the two-lesson oiogist, told the jury that Hunkal |veniories of 1961 passenger cars| . y : z ing pt Sli low, leaving] Course this time were male, but had died within minutes of be- them in a most. favorable posi- 2 special course will be given ing struck from hemorrhage and tion for introduction of the 1962 for women if 15 interested fe- shock, caused by multiple major {models." males register within the next fractures. {ie two or three weeks, Mr. Heard] Mervyn Bowles, 19, Coolmine| said road, Torento, a passenger in a . 'ar driv.n by Johnston, said The Department of Lands and|G3T, CT! y 0 iy ; Forests ruled that in order to og he nes say Huvka wit obtain an Ontario huntingicaiq the windshield broke in licence, the applicant, if not a\rron: of him. He said that he present hunting licence holder, fourd the victim in the grass in| For 2 Years must pass a hunting safety|the entre boulevard of the high. | Charged in magistrate's court COUrse. (way here Friday with arson, John Courses, given at Mr. Heard's Jo inston, of 625 Bedford Park Allman, 22, 23 Harmony road home, 41 Sandra street, consis sjavente, Toronto, said that he south, Oshawa, was placed on|of two, two-hour instructional had been travelling about 55 or two years' suspended sentence.|Periods. Students are taught|60 oh and as caching up to Allman had previously been| safety measures, rules and reg- another westbound car when he A coroner's jury in Whitby on Friday night ruled the death of | ars, the ; cals ty course held here last week deliberating less than 15 min- Lands and Forests hunter safe-|way be closed at once. The jury,| MIGHT HAVE MISSED Ralph Johnston, car to the left but could not driver of the car avoid hitting him. He said that illiam he struck the man just as he than two-tenths of a mile from applied his mated the man was only 35 or Pedestrians may cross under the 40 feet ahead of him when he highway in safety. Dr. G. Beatty, Oshawa path-|first saw him. Blind Man's Death Ruled Accidental Jury Out Under 15 Minutes In Case Of Wm. Honka, 73 saw a white cane appear at the|the fence making a gap to allow north edge of the pavement. As|persons easy entry to the path. he neared, he said, he saw a ay 401 an accident but|man running across to the south|p mmended that a foot-|ledge of the westbound lane. He said that it is assumed at Hunka had come down that path to the highway, and that it thad been at the junction of the his Path and the highway that the © | collision had occurred. He told the jury that it is less Johnston said he swung brakes. He esti- the path to Wilson road, where y While he was investigating the He said that the 'man flew up accident, he said, two or three on the windshield for a second, people expressed concern about then passed over the car and children using the path to cross struck the trunk lid Highway 401. He said that he "If he had not been running," |Was told that people had cut the said Johnston, "I might/original fence at the head of have missed him." ~ |the path and two posts had Another passenger in the car, since been placed in the fence Gary Colligan, of Cardinal, also/t0 make a gap. told the jury 'hat he never saw| Dr, J. A. Patterson, Coroner, the man until he appeared com-|told the jury that Hunka had ing over the hood towards the been registered as blind with windshield. the CNIB. He said that he had PC John Pettit, of the Whitby 24 - 100 vision in one eye and Detachment of the OPP, who in- could only see hand and foot vestigated the accident, told the{movements with the other. jury that a footpath leads from| The jury found that death was a fence 97 feet north of the accidental and recommended north edge of the highway. He|"the footpath be closed at said that there are two posts in|once." tried for setting fire on Sept. ulations of hunting, rifle famil- [1 roperty of Archie } zation and are given field S d Y h T Bo Shapes) Artie M. tr with rifles. en out S 0 | Reformatory was in court Friday for sen. Anyone interested in taking a Charged in magistrate's court tence. course is asked to contact Mr. In passing sentence, Magis Heard at 725-4325. here Friday with breaking and entering, two Oshawa youths trate F. S. Ebbs said he was ~ were given terms in the Ontario satisfied the accused had been under severe emotional «wn Bomb Blast Reformatory at Guelph. was sentenced fo eight months road south, was sentenced to one year definite and three months indefinite and John Pol- lard, 19, 407 Humewood avenue, due to separation from his | wife, and that drink had played |a part in the affair. He also {took into account the fact All man had no previous record and had already spent some time {in custody after his offense. I T t Allman. will be required to| n oron 0 defini P h report to a probation officer | a | efinite and four months inde- once a month or as often as the| TORONTO (CP) -- Mrs. Jean| finite. officer sees fit for a period of! Kuciks gazed wistfully at her An officer of the Oshawa two vears. During that time, he|Packyard Friday and said "it| Police Department testified the must not drink intoxicating sta x be a mce backyard all two yer aug Wille breaking { ane a mrs cv full of roses, i e | " [beverages nor associate with Today there is a 16 - foot- i oll Yt ye pany: anyone else on suspended SeN-'geep hole in the yard and a|piok y 8 . tence or on parole or who has| oncrefe mixer is pouring the picked up standing guard out. a police record. walls of what is believed io be side, while McInnis was found in Magistrate Ebbs suggested the Metropolitan Toronto's first the building. accused attempt a reconciliation bomb blast shelter 'The owner of the company, {with his wife, failing which, hel John Kuciks, 49, a spray William -Frobel, told the court must support his wife and four painter, | children for the two years. shelter -- first of a new design/and some keys had been taken er pe - produced by a metro firm. Ku-/from a cash box. ciks makes what he calls "aj -------- fowed ne money Tor the shel. Oat Student Award Record ter Dave Anstey, 22, of Etobicoke Time Served Will Count partner in the firm which is | building the refuge, says he Apparently, William David, of spent 'a year designing it and TORONTO (CP)--A record 700 Norland, Ont., doesn't believe in|having it approved. students have been awarded On- waiting to be sentenced by a He said it is the first ap. !ario scholarships this year, Ed- court. David was charged in|proved blast shelter -- as dis- ucation Minister Robarts an | |Oshawa Magistrate's court Fri- tinct from fallout shelter -- in nounced Friday. This is an in- Canada. He says it will protect ease of 61 per cent over last Constable W. F, Si X a family living three to five' , the Brecken eb Simmons, | miles from os of a five- All winners graduated from | | achment of the i Grade 13 of secondary or pri- |OPP, testified he picked David megaton bomb. y I ate sch i {up on the Rama Indian Reserve JHE ychools With 30 average of Prepari |day with drunk driving. near Orillia. The officer had| received a complaint that David| had been driving a truck around |the reserve while drunk. When tion and literature. Earl McInnis, 20, 374 Ritson| |for two days. {room and broke her left leg. is paying $2,300 for a only a few post-dated cheques This is the third year of the coffee port scholarship plan. Winners re. shortage of 352,000,000 cruzeie-|her $600,000. Movie Queen, 64 Dies Of Cancer HOLLYWOOD (AP) -- Marion| She retired from films in 1937 Davies, w h o s e philanthropies|to launch a second career--this matched her fame as a movie|one of giving. Wounded war vet. queen, died Friday night at 64|erans and needy college stu. after a three-year fight against|dents alike received her aid. cancer. In 1958, Miss Davies donated The star of Hollywood's color-|$1,500,000 {o the University of ful 1920s had been in a coma! California at Los Angeles Medi- ical Centre for construction of {the Marion Davies Children's last May 16. She underwent jaw-| Wing. The Jewish Home for the bone surgery June 7 for osteo- Aged, American Legion, City of myelitis, inflammation of the 10s Angeles and Los Angeles one marrow. Then, 12 days|Retarded Children's Foundation later, she fell ir her hospital/Presented several of the nearly {100 citations she received for her Capt, Horace Brown, her hus.|charitable work. band of 10 years, was at her| The blue-eyed blonde was bora bedside when the end came. Fu- Marion Cecilia Douras Jan. 1, neral arrangements are pend-|1897, the daughter of a New ing. |York judge. She left school at Miss Davies, educated in a|an early age to join the Follies New York convent early in life,|and to model. reached movie stardom via the] In the early 1920s, Hearst Ziegfeld Follies and the promo- guided her rise to movielagd's tion of the late publisher, Wil- peak through his International liam Randolph Hearst. Films Company. She became his Her movie success brought confidante for 32 years until his her a $4,000,000 beach home, a|death in 1951. leading role in Hollywood social Miss Davies entered hospital life and a fortune estimated at/SAYS HEARST several millions. Hearst himsel! admitted she - saved him from financial ruin with a $1,000,000 loan during the depression. He called her "my loyal friend' in his will, As the millions poured in, I Miss Davies decided in 1926 to build a Santa Monica beach (AP)--Police have home. It became the "Versailles Arrest Brazil Bank Manage SANTOS at least 80 per cent in eight pa-|announced the arrest of the|of Hollywood"--a cluster of co- pers, including English composi. manager of the Royal Bank of) Canada branch in this Brazilian lonial buildings with 55 bath- rooms, 37 fireplaces and a staff after an alleged|of 32. One fireplace alone cost | Constable Simmons arrived, he {found the accused outside the | truck and he appeared to be drunk, David had only one request of the court -- that his sentence ceive $400 on condition that they|ros (about $1,175,000) was found! She lived there for 15 years, enrol in a Canadian university on his books. serving "intimate" dinners for in a degree course, an Ontario Police identified him as Peter|50, extravagant cocktail parties teachers' college or a provincial Smith Watson, 31-year-old Brit-|and court-style banquets for the or polytechnical institute; and|ish subject who is believed to|cream of Hollywood society. In that they have not won more be a native of Brechin, Scot-1945, she sold the home for the 'For Snap Election "| rotation, "SPACE BIOLOGY TEAM Tallahassee, Ia These , scientists at Florida State Uni ! versity will head a team which ! will make a space biology stu: rautics and Space Admini- { dy to determine if atmospheric | stration. From left are Dr eonditions in euter space will | Seymour Hess, head of the support life. The study is be- ing made under a $784,000 rant from the National Acro- department of Meleorology, | Dr. Charles Metz, zoologist, and Dr. Sidney Fox, biochem- 15st who will head up the new | program. Mr. Murray Holtby, ithe meeting, outlined his crop seed mixtures used, land his pasture management practices. host for | Mr. Fugene Lemon, Stouff- %lville, the official judge for the |Ontario County Pasture Compe- | tition, complimented all the con-| |testant _|year, for the very fine job that Ithey did some of the more imporiant| points on the score card that | was used for judging the compe- { tition, Mr. Ken Fallis, Field Crops Branch, Parliament Buildings, | Toronto, stressed the impor- tance of good pasture manage- {ment in the overall hay and pas- ture programs. He also answer- |ed questions that had to do with weed control in pasture One of the main supporters of the Pasture Competitions in the Province the Ontario Plant Food Council. Mr. G. C.| Callister represented the Coun- cil at meeting. He stated that competitions of this kind are very much worthwhile; par- ticularly when the contestants and other interested farmers| are given the opportunity of go- ing over a farm where good pasture management is prac-| {ticed, and hearing an outstand-| ling speaker like Dr. Young Mr. Norman Lehman, presi-| dent of the Ontario County Soil and Crop Improvement Associa- tion, Mr man of the le also reviewed is this Pasture Commit tee and Mr. Lynn Fair, agricul tural representative for Ontario County, were in charge of the meeting. s in the competition this| 'You always serve your sen- Oct Murray Holtby, chair-| be dated back to the time of his tn y "PY--Ontari _lcase of those continuing their] arrest, which was Friday, Sept. OTTAWA (CP)--Ontario Lib g | 1 "rid: ) oral T.oader J Wintermeyer education in their home com- !15, as he had been in jail since eral Fone hg provincial | munity, or $1,000 in the case of that time, arly is preparing for a snap those going to school els here. Ee i pa y Magistrate ¥. S. Ebbs recalled|ajociion following the selection Se than $750 in other awards in the|land. : ' _|price of that one fireplace, and Police said they were seeking moved to a Mediterranean style. a second party, Alejandro Maria mansion in Beverly Hills. Capurro who had an account in| the Canadian bank here. | Miss Davies appeared in more than 42 movies. David had been similarly held of a new leader of the Progres- on another occasion and had his|sive Conservative party at a sentence dated back. leadership convention in Toronto] 5 a Two unidentified delegates to the Union Nationale Party convention in Quebec City, | take a rest after a long ses- tence in advance," the magis-| Mr. Wintermeyer told a press) trate commented in giving David|conference here that the present| eight days in jail dating from provincial government under] the time of his arrest normal circumstances likely es - would remain in office until at least June, 1963. However, he d 3 said, this picture could change an Y 1garette if the new Progressive Conserv: ative leader felt he should seek y a mandate Clinches Case There is a real possibility that there will be a provincial elec- It was probably the candy tion before June, 1963, he said. cigarette that. clinched a jail| "We are preparing for any term of seven days for Robert eventuality, including a snap Brown, 85 Alcorn avenue, Tor-|election by the new Progressive onto, Brown was charged in|Conservative leader, whoever he magisirate's court here Friday May be ; with drunk driving. Constable] The Ontario Liberal leader Donald Martin, Pickering Town. Puke 0 reporters following hii ship Police, testified he found| iH Ottawa Valley constituen- the accused on Sept. 19 on Bay| is in the provincial legisla- sireet stepping out of his car ture. About 30 Liberal execu'ive which he had just backed from! embers from Ottawa South, a driveway into a ditch Ottawa West, Ottawa East, Car- "He emerged from his car leton, Russell, Prescott, Glen- shouting and swearing and stag-| garry, Renfrew North and Ren- gering," the officer said. '""Then|frew South attended. | he said he wanted a cigarette! Mr. Wintermeyer announced| 3 and pulled a package of candy(that a three-man co-ordinating 2 cigarettes from his pocket and|committee has been establishe tried to light one." by the nine constituencies for | Besides giving Brown jai] | liaison with Liberal headquar- term. Magistrate F. 'S. Ebbs|'e5s in Toronto 5 | Tea be ik oy . Members of the committee are {suspended his operator's licence|yieor Hossack, Morris Kertzer| for six months and had his car|and Marcel Joyal, all of Ot-| |impounded for the same period [tawa. BETWEEN-SESSION REST sion on the convention. Above them is a battery of posters piaced by supporters of Jean- Jacques Bertrand, one of the | two main candidates for the party leadership. (CP Wirephoto)

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