Oshawa Times (1958-), 31 Jul 1962, p. 5

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WHITBY and DISTRICT Whitby Bureau Office: 111 Dundas St. West Manager: Lioyd Robertson > Moore, Tel. MO, 8-3703 IN SUMMER WEDDINGS OF WHITBY INTEREST PICTURED after. their wedding recently in St. John the Evangelist Roman Catho- lic Church are Mr. and Mrs. Rene Anthony Lalande. The bride is the former Miss Gale Gwendolyn McLuhan, daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs- Harold E. McLuhan, Whitby, and the bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. R. Whitby. --Photo by Azzopardi Studio Lalonde, | By GERRY BLAIR { Ronnie Moore and Dave Houston almost singlehandedly ov a classy lacrosse unit from Kitchener as Whitby- Oshawa Green Gaels recorded la close 14-12 verdict. Moore was top point man with four goals and five assists, | while Houston, in his best per-| formance of the season, scored) five goals and added an assist.| Both players showed dexter-| ity im ballhandling and shoot: | ing, especially in the second} iod when Gaels overcame a 7-5 deficit midway through the = \stanza and rapped im six un. answered goals. Kitchener had two outstand- ing performers, also, Chester Sajakowski and Pat Westphal. They accounted for nine of| their club's total. peemasinans registered five times. Whitby - Oshawa needed their} productive second period to gain the victory as Kitchener outscored them 5-3 in both the finst and third periods. Jim Hinkson played a strong game on defence for Gaels, handing out several solid |\checks, two of which folded jopposing forwards in a heap and they. required assistance 'off the floor. Hinkson also chipped in with a goal and an assist. | Kitchener impressed in the first period, by building up a Green Gaels To Win '|death cars which tuxnbied down|broad stream is extremely low Houston Lead 3, Kitchener; Sajakowski OWORR) 5s ss vepxccccers 1:58 4, Kitchener: Westphal (OSDOK) cpconsscssuccey Bat 5. Kitchener: Forwell .. 13.37 6. Whitby-Oshawa: Hinkson (StrOUd) csccesesgesess 2019 7- Kitchener: Sajakowski 19.01 8. Whitby-Osh.: Moore .. 19.18 Penalties: Markus 8.59, West- phal 17.15, Armstrong 18.44. 20. Second Period 2. : Whitby-Oshawa: Brady 4.34.22. Whitby-Osh.: Houston + Kitchener: Osbelt 6.09, (Davie, Moore) +. 13.27 aoe 'wa: Moore . Kitchener: Sajakowski 13.50 ouston) . ' -s ki Kitchener: Sajakowski a, semen mh wishin hts Malia eae (La Flamme) ....... 18. Whitby-Osh.: Penalites: Westphal 9.28, Fields 12.49, Moore 13.35, Hinkson 15.38: Third Period Whitby-Osh.: Peters (Stroud) .....20%00000, 10,29 Kitchener: Westphal 11,05 Kitchener: Westphal 11.54 19. 9. 10. i. 12. 13. 15.46 THE OSHAWA 'TIMES, Tuesday, July 31, 1962 5 Natural Death Ruled By Jury On Sask. Baby © YORKTON, Sask. (CP) -- A coroner's jury ruled Monday night that 10-month-old Carl Alexander Derhousoff died a natural death July 1 en route to Lrg ---- and listed meningitis as the cause. n The jury brought in the ruling, TMeY are fullbacks Bob after deliberating 25. minutes, It/Blakely and Tom Wagner, hailf made no recommendations and|backs Billy Jo Christle and laid no blame. _ |Frank Fraser, end Wally Fon- The verdict was brought in taine and tackle Ron Kosteutz. after Dr. Michael Yaholnitsky) testified that a post mortem and, The cut leaves Bombers with a pathologist's examination both|27 Canadians and 16 imports for revealed that the infant had/their next exhibition game Wed- purulen (pussey) meningitis. nesday in Toronto against Ar- Peter Derhoussoff drove from the family's home at Ushi 5 Sask., to seek medical serivee at Yorkton, 85 miles south---the day Saskatchewan's medical 'care plan went into operation, . BOMBERS CUT SIX WINNIPEG (CP) -- Winnipeg Blue Bombers of the Western Football Conference pared six imports off their pre - season roster Monday in preparation for the 1962 season. : Whitby-Osh, ; H The child died as his father, | gonauts. (Moore OR 14. Whitby-Osh:: Moore ..11.32/26. | 15. Whitby-OsHiawa: Davie | -- (Hinkson) . ++ 16.15 13.05, Penalties: Shaaf 13.04, WHITBY | ARTISTS! CIGOTE): Se. ca sae se cse 16. Whitby-Osh.: Houston Moore 17.40, and Hinkson 13.16'19.47. | (Moore) Track Blamed In Train Derailment | STEELTON, Pa. (AP) -- Aing along about 70 miles an| Pennsylvania railroad officialjhour, railroad officials said, | says the derailment of a special/when the derailment occurred) BARBER SHOP Enquire be gd the advantages (W. E. Mifflin & Sons) | oF joining our wilt BE cuosep || RAINBOW oe CLUB Staff Holidays CALL WHITBY PAINT Aug. 6-Aug, 13 inccusive Re-Open Tues. Aug, 14 125 BROCK ST. N. WHITBY MO 8-3488 & WALLPAPER baseball train in which 19 per-/next to the Bethlehem Steel! sons were killed and 100 were|Company plant in this centrai injured '"'was apparently the re-/Pennsylvania steel town. Offi- sult of track being out of align-|cials said the speed limit is 7° ment."' m.p.h. "But a definite cause cannot) Railroad officials said the be assigned until a thorough in-| stretch of track at Steelton was vestigation has been com-|ysed by 40 or 50 trains a day. pleted," said James F. Newell, Just an hour before the derail-| the Pennsylvania's vice - presi-| ment, officials said, a mail train dent in charge of operations. | passed over the same track. Su-| Newell's statement concerning|pervisors inspect the rails four) the track being out of alignment/or five times a week, officials was based on first-hand reports! said. | given by Howard C. Kohout, the| 'The cars which tumbled into! railroad's regional manager in\the river--the last three--were| Philadelphia. Kohout directed/the only ones occupied, Two of| the. salvage and repair opera-|the others also left the rails but! tions. Crews worked throughout/remained upright. The two, Saturday night. to repair the along with three more up front, 1.500 feet of track. were to be filled by fans who r > jwere to boar dthe train along er ae ee ee tn the 90-mile run at Lancaster. service, the railroad began pre-| The death toll might have parations to hoist the three|been higher except that the = You EXPECT spree F WHITBY . OSHAWA -- Goal,|_ 40-foot embankment into he|because of an 11-week drought. ; Marshall; alts., Garrard, Mar-|shallow waters of the Susquen-| Peanuts, pennants, little boys' kus, Hinkson, Brady, Kolesnik,!/hanna River. The railroad will/baseball caps and lunch bac- \ WHITBY SPORTS PARADE By GERRY BLAIR 1,29 7.25 OMLA EXECUTIVE GET SECOND CHANCE The president of the Ontario Minor Lacrosse Association, Bob Sinclair, is not too popular with the executive of the Whitby- Oshawa Green Gaels. Apparently Mr. Sinclair made the decision of fining Mimico Juveniles $15. without consulting the major- ity of the OMLA body and calling a proper get-together Lloyd Gibson, one of the chief contributors to lacrosse in Whitby, so happens to be Ist vice-president of the same organ- ization of which Mr. Sinclair presides. Lloyd was not informed of said fine for Mimico's failure to fulfill Gaels. their scheduled obligation with Whitby-Oshawa Green The: latest development in this ridiculous hassle has the secretary Ed- MacDermaid refusing to recognize a well-construct- ed letter from the Whitby-Oshawa officials asking for a hearing on the matter and recommending a4 year's suspension for Mimico. This is on insult to the hard-warking group who run Whitby- Oshowa Green Gaels It cost their club at the very minimum $25 for rink rental at the Whitby Community arena, and nothing is in the offing to reimburse Green Gaels for their. embarassment of sending their largest crowd of the season home because of no Opposition. Now the OMLA executive is involved with onother club failing to show for a scheduled tilt. Huntsville did not appear in Brampton last Thursday. This is the consequence of levying a meager $15.00 fine for a team not arriving to play peanuts compared to the club's travelling expenses This 'is Why not forfeit a gruelling road trip, and instead, cough up with a bit of change ? Whitby-Oshawa Green Gaels' executive, manager Fronk Wilbur and coach Jim Bishop do not go along with the insecure attitude of president Sinclair ond his men in charge (excluding Lloyd Gibson). They have sent still another letter, demanding at least a hearing or they will not continue in the OMLA Juvenile league. There you ore gentlemen -- take it or leave it ! EPHL WORKING WITH IHL Eastern Professional Hockey League held on important meeting in Chicago last Sunday to further solidify their inten- tions to operate in the coming 1962-63 season. Four National Hockey League general managers, Frank Selke, Tommy Ivan, Muzz ond Lynn Patrick, and two representoties from the EPHL, "Sammy Pollock and Wren Blair, met with representatives from the International Hockey League to. set-up an interlocking sched- ule with their six clubs with points to count. This could be o pre- "Jude to a 10-team pro circuit the following year, including the IHL, which is contemplating moving into pro ranks, should this trial bosis prove satisfactory. This year's edition of the EPHL will involve four clubs; Kingston, Hull-Ottowo, Sudbury ond either, Syracuse, New York, or Toledo, Ohio Chicago Black Hawks are currently bargaining with both Syracuse and Toledo, to determine the fourth club New York Rangers, pulled their stokes from, Kitchener- Waterloo and moved into Sudbury, to replace Detroit Red Wings. Rangers can rest assured thot financial difficulties will not be near as significant operating in a proven hockey town, such as Sudbury, compored to their woes over the past two sea- sons ot Kitchener OLA SENIOR FINAL PREVIEW ? Brooklin Hillerests are set to equal their won-loss record with Brampton omblers in tomorrow's encounter at Memoria! arena Brooklin Brampton have taken two out of three to date in Brocklin from Hillcrests. Local lacrosse fons should receive a definite sneak preview of a tentative Brampton-Brooklin OLA Senior final when these two clubs clash tomorrow evening at 8:45 p.m rebuild the cars as part of the kets, remnants of happy fami- investigation. lies and children goiag to see a The train, carrying fans.to a big league game, could be seen National League baseball game floating on the river. in Philadelphia, left nearby Har-| 'You saw those bodies along risburg--where all passengersithe bank of the river and the boarded--at 5 p.m. It was roll-icoaches in the water and you). realized these were families on WHITBY PERSONALS their way to a baseball game," said Rey. Stephen J. Hribic,) pastor of St. Peter' Roman) Catholic Church !n Steelton. Mr. and Mrs. David Kerno-, party in honor of Mrs. William) 'That was the sad thing about Steffler, Father Leo J. Austin|the wreck. There were at least on behalf of the members pre- 10 dead on the hank above the sented Mrs,.Steffler with gifts river. I know because I gave and a spiritual bouquet. Mrs.'them. the last rites.' Steffler thanked the members) 4; Connie Mack Stadium in and mentioned how touched she Philadelphia, thousands of fans hed bs he unde S generosity./rose from their seais ta pay si-| Assisting the hostess in serving f ictims. were Mrs. V. Mallon, Miss Ber-(/°ht 'Tibute to the victims. nadette Robinson and Mrs. Leo Steffler. "LOCAL" SOUVENIRS u AB tt P Whitb SYDNEY, Australia (AP) -- eee A ee ee ; ItOY sailors from 'a Japanese naval with her daughter, son-in-law) cquadron that was in port here and family, Mr. and Mrs, James/purchased as souvenirs a large Stephenson of Rexdale, enjoyed/nymber of black cushion cov- a motor trip to Fort Henry,/ors. depicting the Sydney har- Cornwall. They toured the St./por bridge. They were made in Lawrence 'Seaway by boat. In Japan. " And you get more than your share in the Mercedes-Benz 220 Series . . » classic, undated lines and impressive performance that means fully rewarde ing driving pleasure. Look for famed Mercedes-Benz craftsmanship inside, too: doors with safety locks, padded dashboard, con- tour seats in rich upholstery. Underthe hood it's the same inspiring story... the high torque precision-engineered Mercedes engine with fast acceleration. Suspension, steering . . . every checkpoint you make proves the achievements of the world's oldest car manufacturer, No price change on most Mercedes- Benz models. 82-1 MERCEDES-BENZ 4-1 margin without much oppo- sition, Whitby - Oshawa rear- guards were guilty of sloppy ball handling and leaving their checks. uncovered. Goaltender Merv Marshall was shaky as he handed Sajakowski the bail for his finst goal. Other goal scorers for Whitby - Oshawa were Brian Brady, Gary Davie, Neil Arm- Mr. = gh Donald gti hk iene -- strong and Terry Peters. Allan Dickson who were mar- | Dixon, of Glen Williams, an ' . : ried recently in Glen Williams, the bridegroom is the son of cane ec big pol Ontario are making their | Mr. and Mrs. Nelson S. Dick- scored one for Cann ares home in Espanola. The bride | son, of Thamesville. with Sclakoweki's and West. the former Rhoda Eleanor --Photo by R. Gordon Robinson | thal's buteut: alt : Dixon, Whitby VON, is the Brampton | KITCHENER Goal ta | |Flamme; alts., Forwell, Saja- BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT kowski, Fromer, Smola, West- |phal, Fields, Gooding, Sha a f, | '5 . pOaber, Bisch, Werk and Ignor. Canadian Oil | Armstrong, Gutsole, Braiden, | |Peters, Sheedy, Davie, Stroud, | f OO O er Moore and Houston. | First Period By FORBES RHUDE speculation, others are yet to) 1. Whitby-Oshawa: Moore Canadian Press Business Editor come, (Stroud) Take-over bids featured last! Meanwhile, the chartered 2- Kitchener: Westphal .. week's business scene. banks twanged the "'taut Shell Oil Company of Canada ' money" wire and sent a quiver Ltd., Canadian arm of the vast/through many businesses across international Royal Dutch-Shell|the country. They decided' to group, bid $114,000,000 through/discontinue from Sept. 1 the a subsidiary for Canadian Oil system of overdrafts under L n Companies Lad. which some individuals and/han, Bayview avenue entertain- Rio Algom Mines Ltd., north-| firms have been allowed to tem-/ed at their home at a "Bon ern Ontario uranium producer!/por arily draw upon more| Voyage" party in honor of Mr. and the Canadian arm of the money than there is in their ac- and Mrs. George Stott who left) British Rio Tinto group, said it| counts. on Saturday for a six weeks trip expects to bid $45,000,000 plus USE OVERDRAFT abroad. They will visit mem- 680,000 of its own shares for At--US™ d bers of their families in Scot- las Steels Ltd. of Welland, Ont.| Some businesses did their) land. It will be a happy reunion Triad Oi] Co. Ltd., a mem-jshort - term financing in this| aS they have not seen their rela- ber of the British Petroleum|way. For instance, if a firm' tives for the past 32 years. group of London, England, of-|knows it wants $1,000 today, an- ae e fered $7,991,000 for Devon-Pal-'other $2,000 tomorrow, and per- ad peed goed i gaa mer Oils Ltd haps $3,000 the day after, it mek mdcerat B "eh street British American Oil Co. Lid.jmay prefer to run an overdraft|- he . Po , wise. Ww. i be said it plans to offer to buy aill|for those amounts as they are| poo 3 ih fee ch a ed 450,000 outstanding shares of|jneeded rather than borrowing) OnE se egy a Fea ? Bed Superior Propane LAd. at $18 ajand paying interest on $6,000 at Safe on Ot Civic Hae i share, or a total of $8,100,000-'the start. Overdrafts, of course, 'al sate March." ee IS CONSIDERING bear interest also. Canadian Oil Companies, whose brand name is 'White Rose'? and whose Canadian ownership is a feature of its advertising, 2pparently was ta- are to get accommodation. lite, strike observers as chilly,|Pennies, and perhaps partly be-| |And Power Corporation of Can-|Cause it seemed an opportune ada, which owns about 25 per time for them to get rid of a cent of Canadian Oil, has ques- S¥Stem which, they say, caused! jtioned whether the offer, in the 2% undue amount of work. manner in which it was made satisfied legal requirements The proposed Rio Algom-At-|banks, bond prices strengthene las deal appeared to be agree-|showing at they both announced it, but they/ interest rates, emphasized that a number of factors have to be settled be- fore there can be a definite! dian Hel agreement. Atlas figures the offer is worth about $37 each Atlas share. is The developments followed on Oil a rash of other takeovers in re Com cent months and, Company, Military Junta Awaits U.S. Thaw LIMA (AP) -- Peru's ruling damaged two automobiles not military regime waited today far from the Prado estate for a thaw in relations with the! Prado did not disclose his fu- United States following the jun-|ture plans and it remained to jta's release of deposed presi-|be seen whether he had decided WHITBY AMAZING SECRET WEAPON OF. ARCHIMEDES! ALSO Second Feature Attraction 'BELLE SOMMERS' Storring POLLY BERGEN, DAVID _ JANSSEN BROCK Evening Shows At 7:00 & 8:40 Last-Complete Show At 8:40 Ive Adult Entertainment ROSSANO BRAZZI TINA dent Manuel Prado. ie live in exile. He was reported In Washington, a state depart-|in good health. ment spokesman said "we're| The junta president, Gen. Ri- |very happy that Dr. Prado has|Cardo Perez Godoy, told a press 'been released.' He would not|conference Prado could remain say, however, whether the move|in Peru or go abroad. There would help speed U.S. recogni-|Was speculation he would go to jtion of the junta and restora-|France, where he lived for sev- tion of the economic and milit-jeral years' before he ran 'for ary aid suspended after the! President in- 1955 July 18 overthrow of Prado's| Perez Godoy said it would be government. up to Washington to decide The junta had promised to re. Whether U.S. Ambassador lease Prado as soon as his sixe\James Loeb, home for consul- year constitutional term as\tations, would be sent back president expired Saturday. here. The junta has been shar- ; ply critical. of Loeb, accusing | FLOWN TO ESTATE |him of taking sides in 'the June | The 73-year-old president, held|10 presidential elections that jon a ship at the nearby Port of|Preceded the military coup Callao, was flown in a helicop-|@'etat. Loeb has denied it, ter to the estate of his nephew,|~ Pe tense tere iH on <p etos Gustavo Prado, on the outskirts PROPER DIET of Lima. Vitamins A, B, C, D and E Three bombs exploded in,are all essential the diet ma Sunday. There were nojduring pregnancy, with ade- in Ji casualties. One of the bombs/quate calcium and phosphorus. = In future, however, everyone will be expected to make def. inite hxan arrangements if they) Her The present money scarcity ken by surprise but says it is|/Probably had a bearing on the considering the Shell offer. Its|decision, partly because' banks| responses, however, while po-|@T€ watching all their available| While money. showed increas- ing signs of stringency at the od least a temporary able to both companies in that|tendency towards lower general In another development, for- mation was announced of Cana- ium LAd, to develop pro- that duction and sales of Saskatche- for wan's helium. The new company owned by British American British Oxygen pany of London and I,'Air Miss Susan Bedding is cele- Ottawa they saw the changing " PLASTERING Bie « isth bipthday todas of the guard. On their return} Voagy Sol se " stand they visited friends in Minden. g and REPAIR WORK No Job Too Large or Small happy returns of the day. RECREATION ROOMS Mrs. L. Phone MO. 8-8733 Road, has returned from a three Mrs. Gertrude Drew and her sk aes sister Miss Hazel Rogers motor- Bouck) ls .Crayaon d to Bruce Peninsula. They took the ferry to Manitoulin Island and spent the week visit- ing at different places. 'weeks conducted tour of major |Canadian cities. They visited in | Vancouver, Victoria, British Co- NAGY MOTOR SALES 488 KING ST. WEST 728-5175 \lumbia, spent a few days ,in Seattle, Washington, visiting the World's Fair. On their return they spent some time in Chi- cago, Spokane and London, On-| } jtario. This conducted tour left from Ottawa. Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph Zeisner and children Linda and Graham| were on a motor trip. They| visited in Morrisburg, Cornwall! and Ottawa, St. John The Evangelist} { Sacred Heart League held al | "Going Away" party at the! home of Mrs. Benson Hamilton} in honor of Mrs, William Steff-| ler, The Steffler family is leay- ing Whitby at the end of the) month to establish residence in| | Lindsay. Mrs. Steffler was pre-| sented with a gift on behalf of| 'the league 'members. In her| thanks she mentioned how] grateful she was for the mem-| bers' kind remembrance. Pres-|. ' ent were: Mrs. R. McClosky, Mrs. Larry Ruest, Mrs. J, King, Mrs, D. O'Hagan, Mrs. J. Corri- gan. Assisting the hostess in| |serving were Miss Mary Ann {Hamilton and Miss Kathy. Mc- | Quaid, Fifth Whitby Scouts and Cubs Mothers' Auxiliary held a "Going Away" party in honor of Mrs, William Steffler on the lawn of Mrs. V. Mallon, Centre street north, Following a buffet lunch served by the hostess, a farewell gift was presented to Mrs, Steffler with best wishes for a happy stay in 'Lindsay. Mrs, Steffler thanked all present and invited her many friends to pay her a visit in Lindsay. Fol- lowing the lawn party the group enjoyed a social hour. Ladies present were: Mrs. W, Steffler, Mrs. L, Bedard, Mrs. P.: Bur- tinski, Mrs, W. Wenick, Mrs. L, Steffler, Mrs. G. Woods, Mrs. | P. Wolters, Mrs, H. MacDonald, Mrs. D, O'Hagan and Mrs. V. Mallon Mrs. Larry Ruest, Athol street on behalf of St. John The Evan- gelist Catholic Women's League 3. entertained at a "Farewell") There's always a phone to'carry you home' in seconds ! No matter how or where you travel this summer, the folks back home are but "seconds away' by LONG DISTANCE. Speed the news of your safe arrival and share the highlights of your trip the low-cost _ LONG DISTANCE way. And calling ahead before you go is a good habit too..: ensures a worry-free arrival, THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY OF CANADA LONG DISTANCE is twice as fast when you call by number!

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