The Oshawa Times, 23 Sep 1961, p. 3

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

BR TOTAL OF 42 GRADUATE IN NEW COURSE A TOTAL OF 42 PERSONS graduated at O'Neill Collegiate and Vocational Institute Fri- day night from "schedule 5", the first in a series of courses in the city in advanced tech- nical evening classes. The courses are sponsored by the Federal and Provincial gov- ernments and are designed to reduce unemployment by re- training people to new skills. Prohibit Offshore Drilling On Huron SARNIA (CP) -- The Cana- dian - American committee on water pollution was told Friday the Ontario government will wd permit drilling on Lake Huron] for at least five years. C. E. Janes, member of the| legislature for Lambton East, said Energy Resources Minister| He added that Premier Frost has said there should be prohi- bition of drilling in Lake Huron entirely, except in an emer- gency, because there is an abun- |dance of oil. The committee was formed two years ago to deal with pol- lution from off-shore drilling in the lake. Committee Chairman J. W. Murphy, member of Parliament |for Lambton West, said the | committee is concerned at pres- Macaulay stated drilling will be|ent with pollution from sewage stopped for that period. and used oil from ships. COMING EVENTS Neo EEE Past Times meeting every Friday 2 p.m. until further notice. CORONAT'ON ORANGE TEMPLE TURKEY Dinner, Centre Street United SATURDAY, Chutel Wednesday; October 25. Adults SEPT. 23rd 7:30 P.M. ALL SENIOR CITIZENS Invited to attend the CONVENTION ON SEPTEMBER 26TH AT UAW HALL Anytime Topics ssed FERNHILL PARK 4--3$40 Jockpots to go. 1--$150 Jackpot to go. In the top photo, OCVI princi- pal, G. L. Roberts (left) and Mayor Christine Thomas (sec- ond from right) chat with two members of the graduating class, Margaret Monroe and Edmond Donald. In the lower photo, Mrs. Thomas presents a credit card symbolic of graduation from the course to Domenico DePaola, of Ajax. --QOshawa Times Photo *% from the industrial and senior CLOSING SAT., SEPT. 23, 1961 OBITUARIES 6:30 P.M. HOME BAKING - BOOTHS FISHPOND FREE TREAT FOR MEMBERS' CHILDREN SIM LASH ond HIS TRIO Parties Dances Weddings Banquets 725-8762 725-4706 BINGO U.AW.A. HALL SATURDAY, SEPT. 23 7:30PM. 20 GAMES $10 A GAME 4 GAMES OF $20, $30, $40, $50 JACKPOTS ONE GAME $150 SHARE THE WEALTH KINSMEN BINGO 20-$20 GAMES $150 Jackpot $20 each line plus $50 Full Card 5--%$30 Games; 2--%$250 Jackpots JACKPOT NOS. 56 and 54 TEAM 2 JUBILEE PAVILION FREE ADMISSION--TUESDAY, SEPT. 26 Children under 16 not admitted Monday BINGO 8:00 p.m. ST. GERTRUDE"S AUDITORIUM 690 KING EAST AT FAREWELL 20 REG. GAMES -- TOTAL $300 Snowball 58 Nos. -- $100 -- $20 Con. Plus $10.00 each horizontal line Regular Jackpot, 58 Nos. -- $100 - $20 Con. SHARE-THE-WEALTH GOOD PARKING EXTRA BUS SERVICE FREE THANKSGIVING TURKEY TICKETS NO CHILDREN, PLEASE WHITBY BRASS BAND BINGO CLUB BAYVIEW, BYRON SOUTH, WHITBY Wednesday, Sept. 27th, 8 p.m. Bus Leaves Oshowa Terminal--25¢ Return SPECIAL GAME OF $200 MUST GO $20 each horizontal line--$100 a full card. $25 ADDED EACH WEEK, NOW WORTH $125 IF WON IN 51 NUMBERS Church Bus leaves 4 corners 7:30 p. 5 GAMES AT $30 -- 20 GAMES Ls $20 TWO $250 JACKPOT GAMES 1st--No. 54, 2nd--no. 52, $30 Consolation. $1.00 ADMISSION INCLUDES ONE CARD Door Prizes--Proceeds go to Building Fund Children under 16 not admitted. WOODVIEW COMMUNITY CENTRE BINGO -- MONDAY, SEPT. 25 2--3$500 Jackpots Nos. 56-57 1--$150 Jackpot (Must So) (Jackpots Pay Double in 52 Nos. 20 GAMES--$20 AND 5 SPECIAL GAMES AT $30 REGULAR GAMES PAY DOUBLE IN .17 Nos. or LESS Car $100.00 DOOR PRIZES ADMISSION $1.00--EXTRA BUSES Admission Ticket Gives You Free Chance on Door Prizes RED BARN NORTH OSHAWA MRS. EVA CAMERON Seriously ill for the past four months, Mrs. Eva Cameron died at the Oshawa General Hospital Friday, Sept. 22. She was in her 81st year. Born in Cornwall, England, the former Eva Prest was the daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. John Prest. She was mar- ried at Hastings, Ontario, on June 14, 1911, moved to Osh- awa shortly after and lived here for 48 years. She resided at 43 Gibb street at the time of her death. A member of St. George's An- glican Church, Mrs. Cameron was a Past Grand Mistress of Rebekah Lodge, No. 222. Mrs. Cameron was prede- ceased by her husband, the late |David Cameron, on March 29, 1953. She is survived by two sons, David M. and Glenn B. Cameron, both of Oshawa, and three grandchildren: David, Ca- therine and John, all of Oshawa. The memorial service will be held in the Armstrong Funeral Home Chapel Monday, Sept. 25, at 2 pm. Rev. C. D. Cross of St. George's Anglican Church will conduct the service. Inter- ment will be in Mount Lawn Cemetery. Tonight, at 7.30 p.m. members of the Sunshine Rebekah Lodge, 222, will hold a memorial ser- vice at the funeral home. MRS. HELEN L. KNOX Funeral service for Mrs. Helen L. Knox who died at the Osh- awa General Hospital Wednes- day, Sept. 20, in her 47th year, was held at the Armstrong Fu- neral Home Friday, Sept. 22 at 2 p.m. Rev. R. B. Milroy of Knox Presbyterian church conducted the service. Interment was in Mount Lawn Cemetery. Pallbearers were: Kenneth Code, Donald Read, Douglas Read, J. Bircham, J. Partridge and P. Dobbin. ELMO CYRIL PATTERSON In poor health for several years, Elmo Cyril Patterson died at Hillsdale Manor Friday, Sept. 22, He was in his 80th year. A native of Orono, Mr. Pat- terson was the son of the late William and Mary Patterson. He was an adherent of Centre Street United Church. Surviving besides his wife, the former Irene Rogers, are two sons: Roger, pf Pontiac, Michigan, and Edmund, Van- couver, British Columbia. Also surviving are two sis- ters: Mrs. Leah Dearborn, of Oshawa, and Mrs. Edward Cin namon, of Saskatchewan. e body is resting at the errow Funeral Chapel; Me- morial service will be held Monday, Sept. 25 at 2 p.m. Rev. W. G. Dickson of Centre Street United Church will conduct the service. Interment will be in Orono Report Deficit Ot $82,300,000 During August OTTAWA (CP)--The federal government had a deficit of $82,300,000 on August operations which put it in the red for the first five months of the 1961-62 fiscal year, the finance depart- ment reported Friday. The monthly treasury state- ment showed that expenditures in August outstripped revenues $548,900,000 to $466,600,000. This resulted in a five-month deficit of $77,400,000, on cumula- tive expenditures of $2,384,000,- 000, and revenues of $2,307,000, 000. In his June budget, Finance Minister Fleming forecast a bud- getary deficit of $650,000,000 for the year ending next March 31. Last fiscal year, when the gov- ernment had a deficit of $340,- 421,092, there was a surplus of $106,100,000 after five months on revenues of $2,300,100,000 and expenditures of $2,194,000,000. In August, 1960 the govern- ment reported expenditures of $551,200,000 and revenues of $449,700,000 for a deficit of $101,- 500,000 for the month. Lagging receipts from corpor- ation income tax and increased spending, . particularly on de- fence, debt charges and social welfare payments, have com- bined to put the government in the red after five months of the current year. TWO CALLS The Oshawa Fire Department reports two ambulance calls over the night, and one false alarm at 11.30 p.m. Friday from the alarm box at Simcoe and Bloor streets. Technical Evening Courses] Designed To Aid Jobless A total of 42 persons were graduated Friday night at OCVI from the first of a series of advanced technical even- ing courses in this city. The courses are designed to reduce unemployment by re- training people to meet the de- mands of a machine-geared so- ciely, and are sponsored joint- ly by the federal and provincial governments. The courses here are under the guidance of the Oshawa board of education and its advisory vocational com- mittee. Mayor Christine Thomas ex- tended her congratulations to those who "stuck it out" through the hot weather to grad- uate. "I wish I could say there was a job waiting for each one of you," she said. "Although this is not so, you will never regret having taken the course because it will stick with you." WRONG ATTITUDE Mrs. Thomas recognized the fact many of the students have had difficulties getting jobs. "We are here to try to help you," she stated, "then you must help yourself." If.a person has a proper attitude to life, he will emerge a better person af-| ter experiencing hardships, she said. As an example of the wrong attitude, the mayor told of a student who phoned her to say should finance his university education. She reported she be- came a little severe with him, and ironically enough, has now been invited to his wedding. OCVI, where the classes were held, told the group he was pleased on the whole with the quality of the work done. Profit- able results can be seen in that many have already got work, he said. Mr. Roberts outlined three ways the graduates could get more education. 1) They can take another course similar to the one just completed. The next classes will start at the beginning of No- vember, with added classes and more students if staff are avail- able, he said. 2) They can go to the regular night school classes. These will be "farmed out' this year, par- ticularly to Central Collegiate and Vocational Institute, be- cause of the overload at OCVI, Mr. Roberts explained. 3) They can return to day school. There are many at day school this year who have quit their jobs to return after be- ing away as long as three to four years, he said. "We are getting quite a vari- ety of educational opportunities in this area," Mr. Roberts con- cluded. CREDIT CARDS Presenting the credit cards if she didn't get him a job she symbolic of graduation were: G. L. Roberts principal ofjt THE OSHAWA YIMES, Saturdey, September 23, 1961 3 CAPSULE NEWS Mrs. Thomas, Barney Wilkins and Howard Wagner, members of the advisory vocational com- mittee of the board of educa- tion; John Hutton, one of the hers of the cial sec- tion; Walter ane, machine shop teacher. Other teachers were: Owen Henderson (machine shop) and G. Tweedy (welding). The graduates from this "schedule 5" course are as fol- lows: MACHINE SHOP Francis Chircop, Richard Gal- lagher, Robert Huddleston, John Jackson, William E. Loge- man, Floyd Robbins, Ronald Thompson, Rodney Walker, Hu- bert Weinsheimer. WEDING James Carroll, Frederick Chomisky, James Cronin, John Jeffery, Robert Mountenay, Gary Reis, Donald Ward, Josef Wietkowski, Wessel Wubbolt. COMMERCIAL Ida Bartley, Ursula Beeching, Evelyn Bryce, May Burnfield, Doreen Craggs, Domenica De Paola, Edward Donald, Diane Durgan, Carol French, John . Graham, Agnes Horrigan, Bar- bara Kochany, Pauline Leves- que, June Loscombe, Marlene McDougall, Samuel Parm, Myr- tle Prybick, Margaret Rice, Mary Seneco, Irene O. Sinnott, Montey Tennier, Joy Vancott, William Walsh, Mary White. BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT By GREG MacDONALD Canadian Press Staff Writer A little known Quebec mining company stole the limelight mining issues on the Toronto Stock Exchange this week and brought back memories of the speculation heydays in 1958. Lake Dufault Mines, a small mining concern in the Quebec area of Rouyn-Noranda, leaped $2.02 in price on Wednesday, from 48 cents to $2.50 a share, in one of the wildest trading sessions since July 1958. The stock began to move early Wednesday morning when a rumor circulated that a rich copper strike had been found by the company on its property in the Norbec field. Rumors of the strike were conflicting-- some said it was a strike of six - per - cent copper over 100 feet and others said it was three - per - cent copper over 125 feet -- but it was enough to set the scene that drove in- vestors to find out where and what Lake Dufault was. On the trading floor traders were having a field day. While leaping ahead $2.02 in price the stock traded more than 802,960 shares in one day. Many trad- ers and investors were recall ing a similar action in July, 1959, when another little un- known mine, New Hosco, jumped from 19 cents to $7.25 in a five - day period. FINISHES AT $2.08 But it was not to be with Lake Dufault. On Thursday it was hit hard with profit taking and at the open dropped almost immediately to $1.95 a share. An hour later it was back to $2.20 a share but at the close was again down to $1.95. On Friday it hovered around the $2 mark before finally closing the week at $2.08 a share. However, in three days it had|; traded a total of 1,616,244 shares. And the speculative fever had caught on. Other juniors be- cause active. Such mines as Mining Company Steals The Show Coghlan traded in the hundrdes of thousands of shares. On the industrial market an up and down action was the characteristic in the daily ses- sessions with no great progress made in either direction. High - priced stocks were on the down side and investors say the market still lacks confirm- ation that the dominant uptrend is to be resumed. Steels, oil refining, utility and paper issues were all down. Senior base metals moved in an almost identical manner. Ventures, Labrador and Sher- ritt Gordon were the only is- sues to gain ground. OILS UNCHANGED Western oils, as in the last few weeks, were weak in light trading and there were no sig- nificant changes. The total volume at Toronto this week was 12,462,000 shares compared with 10,054,000 last week. Dollar value was $38,- 364,119 compared with $42,998,- 409. On index at Toronto indus- trials were down 7.37 at 598.44, golds 2.15 at 86.67, base metals 1.92 at 200.97 and western oils 1.61 at 95.54. At Montreal industrial vol- ume totalled 385,227 shares compared with 571,091 last week and mining volume was 1,638, 937 compared with 1,237,048. Index changes at Montreal: Banks off 0.07 at 67.43; utilities off 0.3 at 144.1; industrials 0.3 at 322.9; combined 0.3 at 263.3; papers 0.2 at 497.9 and golds 0.43 at 89.09. Of 399 issues traded at Mont- real, 96 advanced, 142 declined and 161 were unchanged. SEVENTH OFFENSE Charged in magistrate's court here Friday with having wine in a place other than his resi- dence, William Cunningham, 517 Fairleigh avenue, was fined $50 and costs or one month in jail by Magistrate F. S. Ebbs. was his seventh such offense. Goldfields, Joliet and Wiltsey 4 Cars Hit Damages High A four-car collision about 8 p.m. Friday resulted in esti- mated damages of more than $1,000. The accident occurred on Kin, street east at Ontario street, when a car driven by Thomas Somers, 44, 224 Central Park boulevard south, collided with the rear of a car driven by Douglas McKay, 31, 89 Gibbon street. The McKay car was shunted forward to collide with a car driven by Victor Siblock, 19, 1153 Ritson road south, which in turn was shunted forward to collide with a car driven by Lawrence Thompson, 24, 147 Simcoe street north. Estimated damages were as OTTAWA (CP) -- More than 2,200 troops will parade at Camp Petawawa Wednesday when Lt.- Troop Parade At Petawawa SENTENCE THIEVES LONDON (Reuters) -- Prison ranging up to six Gen. S. F. Clark, chief of the general staff, turns command of the Canadian army over to Maj.-Gen. Geoffrey Walsh. ARMY GROUP SAILS MONTREAL (CP)--A 400-man contingent, the first of a group of Canadian Army reinforce- ments ordered to Germany be- cause of the Berlin crisis, sailed for Europe Friday aboard the Greek liner Arkadia. CHARGE LOTTERY OTTAWA (CP)--Police Friday laid lottery charges against the Central Canada Exhibition Asso- ciation and the Ottawa Shrine Club in connection with a raffle of $25,000 at the Ottawa Fall Fair last month, Raffle tickets for $25,000 in silver dollars, won by Franklin J. McGregor of nearby Carleton Place, were sold at $1 apiece. MANLEY RESIGNS KINGSTON, Jamaica (Reut- ers) -- Prime Minister Norman Manley, 68, today resigned as president of the West Indies Federal Labor party which he founded in 1957. His resignation was believed to be a result of Jamaica's referendum decision this week to leave the West In- dies federation, a move Manley opposed. NEEDS A PUSH LONDON (CP) -- Canadian Trade Commissioner Bert But- ler suggested Friday that a trade push now by Canadian businessmen could offset much of the sting if the United King- dom enters the European Com- mon Market. He said: "We set no limits to what we can sell here," and promptly added one proviso--it depends on the sales ability of Canadian producers. CLUBS MEET MONTREAL (CP) -- Some 1,200 delegates from Quebec, Ontario, the Maritimes and New England gathered here Friday for the international con- years were handed out Friday to nine men convicted of steal- ing nearly $700,000 in gems and currency from London Airport mailbags. Philip Ilbury, 30, an airport loader, was sentenced to six years for admitted thefts to- talling about $602,000. TO0 MANY BILLS IN YOUR FUTURE ® Where there's a BILL, we have the answer with EXTRA CASH-fastl See Seaboard today! SEABOARD FINANCE COMPANY 29'2 SIMCOE S$. PHONE 728-6283 gress of richelieu clubs. follows: Thompson car, $400; Siblock car, $450; McKay car, $100; Somers car, $100. CELEBRATING BIRTHDAYS Congratulations and best wishes to the following resi- dents of Oshawa and dis- trict who are celebrating birthdays this weekend. Those who celebrate to day are: Mrs. Adeline Roughley, 1421 Evangeline drive; Sandra Joyce Brightling, 188 Farwell av- enue. New in OSHAWA Plain Rolls, Buns, Rye Bread, Cheesecoke, Bagels, Onion Rolls by . . . IMPERIAL BAKERY Available only at . . VIANNA DELICATESSEN 543 RITSON RD. S., OSHAWA -------------------------------------- Special This Weekend ! Maple Leaf or Schneider's Wieners, Ib. . 43¢ We carry a complete line of , Smoked, Cooked or Fresh Meats, G ies, G Pastry, Sundr For FREE Delivery Ph 728-3281 BUEHLER'S You $39 On Meat "BUYS™ Really Save Specials ! For Mon. and Tues. MEATY SLICED PORK LIVER LEAN RIB STEW BEEF MEATY PORK HOCKS FRESH MADE CHICKEN WINGS 2 .- 25° Country Sausage 4 ... 1.00 BUEHLER Tender EAT'N TRUE- E-TRIM BE BEEF 3 12 KING E. -- 723-3633 uv 29° 4 ..100 4. 1.00 $5 1 Es £5 5) = Lorre UNIVERSITY of TORONTO University Extension Class In "Written Communications in Business" an Introductory Course Register in person, Tuesd 7:30 p.m. ay, September 26, 1961, O'Neill Collegiate and Vocational Institute, 301 Simcoe Street North. Telephone 723-3411, 10 sessions on Tuesday evenings at 7:30 in Room 113, Fee 20.00. Lectures begin Tuesday, October 3. Cliff Mills 48-Hour Special 1955 OLDSMOBILE CONVERTIBLE Fully Power Equipped. Completely Re-Finished *1145 CLIFF MILLS MOTORS LTD. 230 KING ST. WEST 725-6651 © The Finest Fuel Oil o Prompt Metered Delivery Service! ® 24-Hour Service! o Lowest Prices! RRR HONIG

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy