Oshawa Times (1958-), 24 Sep 1962, p. 16

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NIA LR rR so -Rightist Party 16 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, September 24, 1962 DEARE -- At the Oshawa General Hospital on Wednesday, Sept. 19, 1962, to.Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Deare, (nee Arlene Cowley), Pickering, a daughteer. , GRAHAM -- Terry and Gladys (nee Reardon) are happy to announce the arrival of their son, Kevin Scott, 6 lbs., 7 ozs., on Thursday, September 20, 1962, at Osha' Hospital. brother for Richard, Bruce and John. A GOOD NEWS STORY -- When you announce the birth of your child in The Oshawa Times, clippings of the notice are available for Baby's Book, Family Tree Records and to mail your friends and relatives in those far-away places. To place a birth announcement, call Oshawa Times Classified. Phone RA 3-3492. DEATHS DORSAY, Ernest Archibald at the Oshawa General Hos- A. Dorsay perial Oil Ltd.), beloved husband Rhea M, Conrad, dear father of John of Oshawa and Richard of Sarnia, in hii 68th year, Resting at the W. C. Town Funeral Chapel, Whitby, for service in a RY AE ete Many Prize Horses | CLYDESDALES A) sell Cochrane. Foal of 1962 -- Half mile race, over 15% hanas -- I, Cochrane, L. Blight, G. Cochrane, G, Cochrane. | Half mile race, 15% hands and | under -- L. Blight, G. Cochrane, ; \L. Hoskin, I, Cochrane. Yeld mare or gelding -- S.| Dawson, H. Down, R. Robert- son. Brood mare and foal -- Rus- By MRS. C. REESOR ! PORT PERRY -- The follow- ing are additional results from the Port Perry Fair. Russell Cochrane. / h Two-year-old. filly or gelding) Kin, I, Cochrane. -- R. Robertson. Heavy draft} team in harness -- Heber Down,| ess ae 8. R. Dawson, Light draft team); foskin, Anne Mitchell; D. in harness--S, Dawson, H. Down: te Linda Luke. R. Robertson and Russell Coch-| Brent, maa pete |R. Sadler, E. Burton, Mrs. BELGIANS OR PERCHERONS)|Cullough, Yeld mare or gelding, Bel-| Holmes. gian:--- V. Mark, L. Stevenson, Saddle Horse, English tack -- :At Port Perry Fair M. Bailey, R. Marquis, M. Bailey. Herd of five animals, M. Bail- ey, R. Marquis, M. Bailey. Three animals, get-of-sire i'M. Bailey, M. Bailey, R. Mar- Lady driver -- L, Blight, Nor-|quis, R. Marquis. man Smith ,D. Brent, G. Hill.) Special -- Best type horse,|M, Bailey. Roadsier -- I. Cochrane, L. Hos-| Grand Champion, male -- Grand Champion female |M B.ailey. : SHORTHORNS Bull, 2 yrs. and over -- Les- lie Taylor. - | Bull, one yr. and over -- N, D, Saddle Horse, Western tack =| Hoge. Al G. Charlton, Patin p Hogg, N. D. Hogg, N. D. Bull calf, under one yr.-- |Hogg. | Cow, 3 yrs. and over -- N. D. '| son, Hughes Bros., Hughes Bros.| CLASS 6 Ponies other than ergete | Brood mare over 11 hands} Brook mare and foal, Per-|and foal -- Ray Hayes, eo b i poll sade cheron -- Hughes Bros., Leslie palo i Ray Coch-| Heifer. sok under 4 oR Coch . Foal of 1962, Percher-|rane, \. S. y | c on os Wedhes Bros, Tesile Coot Foal -- G. Hayes, G. Hayes,| Hogg, L. Taylor. A. Hickson. A. Yeld mare or! | Hogg, L. Taylor, L. Taylor. gelding, Percheron -- V. Cook-| 'the chapel on Tuesday, Sept. 25, at 2 p.m. Interment Mount Lawn Cemetery, Oshawa. inister, the Rev. S. Arm-) strong. FISHER, Baby Th the Oshawa General Hospital on old filly or gelding -- V. Cook-|G. Hill, baby) son, Saturday, September 22, 1962, Fisher, infant son of Mr, and Mrs. Kenneth Fisher (stillborn). Interment was in Oshawa Union Cemetery. JACKSON, Matthew N. Suddenly, at Ottawa, on Sunday, Sept. 23, 1962, Matthew N. Jackson(The Di- rector of Investigations, Customs and Excise, Ottawa), beloved husband of Betty E, Starr; loving father of Donald of Ottawa; brother of Mrs. David Mac- Donald (Florence), Woodstock; Miss Peggy and James Jackson of Oshawa, in his 59th year. Resting at Hulse and Playfiar Funeral Home, Ottawa. Arriv- ing on Tuesday evening, Mr. Jackson will be resting at the McIntosh-Anderso Funeral Home, Oshawa. Service in St. George's Anglican Church on Thursday, Sept. 27, at 2 p.m. Interment Union Cemetery, Oshawa. In lieu of flowers donations to Ontario Heart Foundation will be appreciated. Masonic service on Wednesday evening 7.30. | PATTERSON, Annie | Entered into rest in the Oshawa Gen-| eral Hospital on Sunday, September 23, 1962, Annie Chomiak, widow of John Patterson, mother of Mrs. Michael Swartz (Nellie), Columbus, Mrs, Alice Saychuk (Jean) of court, Mrs. Stanley Zarowny (Mary), Mrs. Arnols Broadbent (Alice), Miss Doris Patter- son, Walter, Michael, John and Joseph, all of Oshawa, in her 74th year. Rest- ing at the Armstrong Funeral Home, Oshawa, with mass in St. George's Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church, on Tuesday, September 25 at 10 a.m. Interment St. Gregory's Cemetery. LOCK'S FLORIST Funeral arrangement floral requirements for occassions. OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE 24 HOUR PHONE SERVICE aaa ~ GERROW FUNERAL CHAPEL Kindness beyond price yet within reach of all. } 728-6226 390 KING STREET WEST | and oll IN MEMORIAM le R. Sadler, R. Sadler, Ivan| a pete bpm egy Clarence Wil- lug! ssed away Sep- tember 24, 1955. oft | Gone from us, that smiling face, Those pleasant, cheerful ways. The heart that won so many friends In happy bygone days. | you broken hearts | Who loved you so sincere. | Who never can and never will | Forget you dear. | Sadly missed by loving wife, Iva and | daughter, Darlene and sons, Bill, Bob | and Garry. | WALKER -- We would like to express our sincere thanks and appreciation to all our relatives, friends and neigh- bors, Reverend and Mrs, Larke, Major and Mrs. Lewis, Unit 2, Albert Street Church, General 9 King and Morgan. and the Armstrong Funeral Home for all 'their kindness #hown, cards and flowers sent during the recent loss of a dear mother and| sister, the late Florence Walker. --The Walker family McHUGH -- In loving memory of | } Congress Held In Germany KASSEL (AP)--Amid of "Germany first, then the world," the reorganized treme rightist German National People's Party held its first congress here Sunday. ., One speaker after another stood up before a gathering of about 100 persons to intone the glories of German nationalism and the need to cleanse the shouts country's cultural heritage of|chewan government had made | 'foreign influence One speaker, Otto Kar! Due-) pow, explained Germany's right to assume '"'the leading, the |ing -- Bruce Lawson, Davi ex-/day, ke |G. Hill, D. Watkins, Ray Coch-| Herd of 5 animals -- N. D. One year old filly or geldingjrane. _ See oa ' ohatve os -- Hughes Bros., A; Hickson, L.| Brood mare, 11 hands and a hee te yey L stevenson, C, Buckley, Two-year|under, and foal -- M. Ritchie,|~ ee ee G. Hill, L. Sedore,| Taylor. A. Hickson, Leslie Coch-|Jackson Bros. IN rane, C. Buckley. | Foal -- L. Sedore, G. Hill,|N. D. Hogs. Percheron team in har-|M. Carpentier, W. R. Bacon, G.| Herefords ness, heavy Hughes Bros., -- V.}Hill. : ; Cookson. Percheron team in| Colt or filly, foaled in 1961 --/ leo, Jas. Winterbottom. harness, light -- -V. Cookson,|D. Hurl, R. Hayes, L. Sedore, gu) 'one yr. and over -- N. Hughes Bros., Leslie Cocirane.|G. Hayes. ; McLeod, Jas. Winterbottom. Belgian team in harness, heavy| Celt or filly foaled in 1960 --| Bull calf under one yr, -- N. V Mark -- S. C. Nesbitt, L. Ste-|R. Sadler, R. Hayes, M. Car-|ycteod, Jas. Winterbottom, N. venson, C. Buckley. ipentier, R. Larmer, G .Hill. McLeod. Belgian team in harness, light)/Pony team other than hackney! Cow 3 yrs. and over -- Jas, -- S. C. Nesbitt, L Stevenson,| E.Burton, M. Ritchie, R. Hay-|winterbottiom, N. McLeod. A. Hickson, C. Buckley. es, G. Hill. Heifer, 2 yrs. old and under 3 Special Four Horse team---S.| Pony in harness other than) = MicLeod. Jas. Winterbot- C. Nesbitt, Hughes Bros., S. R./hackney and over 11 hands -- : . Dawson, V. Cookson, Russell|&, Burton, R. Sadler, R. Hayes, Cochrane, H. Down, A. Mark,'D. Watkins, G. Hill. | C. Buckley, L. Stevenson. WAGON HORSES Team in harness -- Russell Cochrane, A. Mark, Russell Cochrane. | Single horse -- A. Mark, Rus- Heifer, one yr. old and under 2 -- Jas. Winterbottom, N. Mc- Pony in harness other than) ooq N. McLeod, Jas. Winter- hackney, 11 hands and under--|)otiom, E, Burton, E. Burton, | Heifer calf, under one yr. -- Hayes, G, Hill, Ray Cochrane. |.. ° winterbottom, N. McLeod, Saddle pony -- G. Hill, G.|j,.' Winterbottom, N. McLeod. Hill, D. Watkins, D. Watkins,|" jrorg of 5 animals --N. Mc- 'call C) R. Larmer. i Ww. tom. ot oan. Russell Cochrane, 'Johnston's Special -- Norman Leod, Jas. Winterbottom Three animals get-of-sire -- Best horse on grounds -- S. C. Smith. Jas. Winterbottom, N. McLeod, Nesbitt. Best team on grounds CLASS 7 N. McLeod. ; -- S. R. Dawson. Hackney Ponies Grand Champion Female -- Belgian Brood Mare and Foal B mare and foal -- Ray|Jas. Winterbottom. -- A. Hickson, L. Stevenson, comme on a al thane SS as C. Buckley. Belgian --Foal of] Foa) of 1962 G. Hayes,| McLeod. 1962 -- C. Buckley, A. Hickson, Ray Cochrane, G. Hayes. | Laslia. Cochrane. | Colt or filly foaled in 1961 --| pu caf -- Rr Batty, CARRIAGE HORSES G. Hayes. | Batty, M. Bailey. Brood mare and foal -- Ken Colt or filly foaled in 1962--) Bull, 1 yr. old -- R. Batty. Flint, Bruce Lawson. Foal of|E. Burton, Ray Cochrane, Larry) pul' 2°yrs. and over -- H. 1962 -- Ken Flint, Bruce Law-|Johnson, G. Hill, \Baird. son, One year old filly or geld-|_ Team, hitched -- C. Vernon, Champion Bull -- R. Batty. d)Ray Cochrane, D. Watkins. Heifer Calf, junior -- Larmer Brent. Two year old filly or| Single, hitched, over 13.2\p,o. M. Baitley, R. Batty, H. gelding -- Ray L. Cochrane. jhands. R. Sadler, Ray Cochrane,|p, 5-4. Team, hitched -- Ralph Sad-|C. Vernon, D. Watkins. Heifer. Calf, senior my ler, Harold Patton, Harold Pat-| Singled, hitched -- 13.2 Batty, H. Guthrie, H: Guthrie, CLASS 7A |Larmer Bros., H. Baird, R. H|_ Fine harness pony team -- N, | Batty. ton. | 'Smith, G .Hill, Ray Cochrane, | Heifer, 1 yr. old -- R. Batty, Single, over 15% hands Ralph Sadler, Ralph Sadler, |R, Batty, H. Guthrie, Larmer iBros., M. Bailey, H. Baird. Patton, H. Patton. GH Single, 15% hands and under|" -Hayes. Heifer, 2 yrs., dry -- Larmer Bros., Larmer Bros. Fine harness pony, single--N. ° Hayes. Aa | Heifer, 3 yrs. dry -- H. Baird, G. Hill, G. Special -- Best type carriage! horse -- R. Sadler, H. Patton,) ABERDEEN ANGUS Larmer Bros., H. Baird, Larmer David Brent. | Bull, 2 yrs. 'and over -- M.|Bros. s |Bailey, R. Marquis, R. Marquis | Cow, 4 yrs. and over, dry go goal and foal -- L. M.|_ Bull, one yr. and over -- M./R. Batty. Blight, Earl Durward. |Bailey, R. Marquis, R. Marquis.|" Heifer, 2 yrs., wet R. Foal of 1962 -- L. M. Blight, Bull calf under one yr. -- M.|Batty, H. Baird, Larmer Bros., E. Durward. |Bailey, M. Bailey. H. Baird. Team, hitched -- Ivan Coch-| Cow, 3 yrs. and over -- M.| Heifer, 3 yrs., wet R. rane, L. Blight, L. Hoskin, Gar-|Bailey, Don Lindo, Don Lindo,|Batty, H. Baird, Larmer Bros., net Cochrane. |R. Marquis. Larmer Bros. Single; over 154% hands -- I.| Heifer, 2 yrs. old and under 3} Cow, 4 yrs. and over, wet -- Cochrane, L. Blight, L. Hoskin,|-- Don Lindo, M, Bailey, R.|Larmer Bros., R. Batty. G. Cochrane. |Marquis, M. Bailey. Champion Cow Single, 15% hands and under| Heifer, one yr. old and. under |Bros, : -- I. Cochrane, L. Hoskin, L.|2 -- M. Bailey, R. Marquis, M Dairy Herd -- -R . Batty, Blight, I. Cochrane, L. Blight,|Railey, R. Marquis. Larmer Bros., R. Batty, H: G. Cochrane. | Heifer calf, under one yr: --|Baird Guernseys R. Cochrane, H. Patton, H. Patton,|/Smith, N. Smith, Larmer Coldwell Sees | 12 IN ONTARIO Medical Care 47 Accidental For All Canada HAMILTON (CP)--All Cana- dians will' be covered by a medicare - type insurance plan| by 1972 despite attempts being made to "'sabotage" the pace. setting scheme in Saskat- chewan, M. J. Coldwell, honor- ary president of the New Dem- ocratic Party, predicted Satur- By THE CANADIAN PRESS |went into the ditch 18 miles Quebec and Ontario accounted northeast of Newmarket Sun. for more than half the 47 acci-day. * dental deaths reported in Can-. Henry Kulwiecki, 38, Toronto, ada during the weekend. drowned in the. Grand. River They reported 25 violent| while fishing 10 miles south of deaths arising from normal SO as phe : iday activities--13 in Quebec, Paul Ludwig Shierbaun, 62, of It's coming, nothing can} and 12 in Ontario. The oe prov-|Port Perry, knocked from his stop it," the 73-year-old socialist|inces also led in traffic deaths,| bicycle by a car on the highway told 105 delegates to the first), Canadian. Press survey from| Friday night. annual convention of the On-|§ pm. local times Friday to) tario NDP youth. |midnight last showed. Quebec Because of "misrepresenta-|had 10, Ontario eight tion" by the Liberal party and! Five: persons drowned, two the doctors, he said, the Saskat-| died in fires and one was killed in a hunting accident. The survey does not include Charge In new health plan industrial or natural deaths or g 3rd Man Faces | "serious compromises" in its serving, the order-bringing role in central Europe." | The reorganized party allied| itself with Hitler's Nazis in the late 1920s. "By allowing' private insur-/known suicides. A Armed Holdup ance companies to participate! Ontario dead: the government had made the) Laverne Armstrong, 66, Wind-| nit et oe rd '1€/ ham Centre, near Simcoe Satur. HAILEYBURY, Ont. (CP)--A era Hauumcre ago ert day when his car collided with|third man from Nedelec, Que., van h = iol » Mr. Cold: a truck. has been charged with armed vere atk Patricia Morley, 19, Parkhill,|robbery in connection with the But it would succeed, and the! when the car in which she rode|$9,300 bank robbery Friday at 'leadership the' DNVP became} Recalling the names of past|controversy had done more to| party leaders, other speakers|bring health insurance to the| praised Alfred Hugenberg, the|public eye than anything the newspaper king under. whose|NDP could have done. the strongest party in the. Ger- man Parliament. In 1933 Hugen- berg was named Hitler's first economic minister. | President Hugh Peacock pro- posed action designed to protect the organization from infiltra- tion by radicals. He asked that jthe executive have the power {to refuse membership in the or- g e |ganization to anyone coming to it from another political party. Road Deaths Rise . Mr, Peacock, from Windsor, was re-elected president. Other From July 1961 jofficers include Peter Home-| . nuck of Welland, vice-president, OTTAWA (CP)--Traffic accj.|regional vice - presidents are dents in Canada in July caused|Brian Laughren of Timmins, 422 deaths, 68 more than the|northern region; David Weston same month in 1961, the aicoulet Ottawa, eastern region, and| of statistics reported today, |Monty Davidson Jr. of Galt, The highest death toll for the| Western region. _ month was recorded in Quebec! 5 where 150 lost their lives com-| ITALIAN CARS pared to 87 a year earlier. On-| Italy's motorcar productio& at tario was next in line with 139|470,000 units in the first half of deaths, 12 more than July oy was 25 per cent higher than 1961 $ the same period of 1961, | struck a tree 20 miles northeast| nearby Earlton. of London. Adam Cyr, 32, was also Arthur C, Matheson, 61, Mont- charged Sunday night with car real, and his wife Gladys, 57, in theft, and breaking, entering and a two-car collision east of Ot-|theft in connection with three tawa Saturday. |.22-calibre pistols stolen last Joseph Cheff, 27, Wendover,;week from a New - Liskeard drowned Saturday when he fell| hardware store. into a quarry near plantagenet.| Cyr is a cousin of Leo Paul Raymond Meers, 5, drowned|Cyr, 20, arrested Friday night Sunday in an Ottawa aqueduct/when police raided a into whieh he fell after rescui.;|house near Nedelec and also his brother Frank, 6, who had|charged Marcel Comptois, 20. fallen in first. The trio-are in custody in this Thomas Smart, 39, Oakwood, town. 50 miles south of Kirkland in Linday Sunday after the cat-| Lake They will appear in court tle trailer he was riding from|here Friday before Magistrate Lindsay fairgrounds was struck|Saul Platus. No bail has been from behind by a car Saturday. | set.- Max Koelbel, 39, Sudbury, shot} A manhunt by OPP and QPP witn his own shotgun acciden-|went into action. Friday on the tally Sunday at his Lake Nipi-|Quebec-Ontario border after two wesi camp hooded men brandishing loaded James Samuel Cathers, 31,|pistols held up. the Earlton Ethel, when his car overturned/branch of the Bank of Nova near Brussels Sunday Scotia and fled in a stolen sta Valerie Beaton, 15, Toronto,|tion wagon after firing four farm], Heifer, 2 yrs, old and: under 3) COB Nei gad Oy " 7 reo < * nk od wey + SON UE SEE Hy etme pe wee "ee , " Mr eee ye Pe a Ey at EOE ew <i i 4 atop an economic structure created by the British, who gave Ceylon independence in 1948. They exported tea, rubber and coconuts to pay for neces- CCND Plans |Ceylon Running ne ann eS ai SE Qe Oe™ SOS To Meet With MPs OTTAWA (CP) -- The Cana- dian Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament plans to bring 1,000 of its members to the cap- ital to interview members of Parliament and record their views on nuclear arms for Can.- ada and other nuclear issues. | At a press conference here/angry voters has prevented the Sunday Rabbi Abraham L.|government from carrying out Feinberg of Toronto, national] its own calls for austerity. Most CCND vice-president, said the|4onosition politicians also shy organisnden, y from the unpopular meas- By HENRY S. BRADSHER COLOMBO (AP)--After years of good living, Ceylon is run- ning out of money. : This island nation off India ports. The' government spends more than it collects in taxes. Its foreign exchange reserves are almost depleted. which estimates} its membership at 4,000 persons, |@¥@ : has been successful in arousing|ures that Ceylonese economists public opinion against nuclear|and foreign experts say are arms, and now will concentrate | necessary. on making opposition to them) By December there will not 'official policy. be sufficient foreign exchange today imports more than it ex- Fear of repercussions from) Money nephew of prime minister Mrs. Sirimavo Bandaranaike. As .finance minister, he pro- posed to cut rice imports and substitute cheaper wheat for a fourth of the weekly rice ra- tion, , Older politicians in Mrs. Ban- daranaike's cabinet considered a rice cut political suicide, They forced her and Felix Bandara- naike to back down, and the fi- nance minister resigned. The budget he had introduced was further distorted by failure to collect a new 7% per cent sales tax. After two. chaotic days this effort to reduce the deficit had to be abandoned. In addition to subsidized food, the government provides free education and medical service and subsidized transportation sities. EATS UP GAINS The exports gave Ceylon one of the highest standards of liv- ing in Asia, with a per capita income almost double that of India. But in 1961 Ceylon's i0,- 167,000 people averaged 617 ru- pees ($129.57) apiece, scarcely higher than the per-capita rate in 1948 bcause a population in- crease of 2.8 per cent a year has eaten up small economic gains. Ceylon needs foreign aid but has imperilled it by seizing some assets of U.S. and British oil companies. Private foreign investment has been frightened off by contradictory talk of na- tionalization and efforts to re- strict expatriation of profits. For political reasons of nation- alism among Ceylon's buddhist sinhalese majority, the talents of the Hindu Tamil minority Rabbi Feinberg said CCND}to import enough rice, basic "lobbyists" will converge on Ot-|item in the Ceylon diet. De- tawa during the organization's|spite the lush agricultural pro- peace week Nov. 5-11. He said|ductivity and good fishing pos- ally will be held in sibilities of this tropical island, 5 aa ay z .., |Ceylon imports 43 per cent of front of the Parliament Build-|it, rice needs, 74 per cent of its ings. fish and much of its other food. Federal and provincial gov- are being wasted. Racial ten- sion could explode. and housing. These benefits were added [ icthceseeclenceepentincacl | |Liddle was on his way to Auck-| | when the car 2 which she rode| warning shots. Grand Champion female, 1,| tensified program of public edu- | cation drawn up by the CCND jboard of directors at meetings | Bull, 2 yrs. and over -- N.|here Saturday and Sunday. jney. He's 93 years old. | Deaths In Canada ; WARNED OF CRISIS ernments will be. asked to sup- The country was warned of port peace week, part of an in- A bedroom. the December crisis by Felix extension Dias Bandaranaike, 32-year-old} Z | saves IF YOU ARE NOW TAKING | A LAXATIVE ONCE, TWICE or | ery ! THREE TIMES A WEEK | and hurry! oo. THEN YOU SHOULD BUY MR TODAY the Laxative Tablet with the land when the car in whicn he} GENTLE DIFFERENCE was riding broke down. Undis | Take gentle-acting M .. . Nature's mayed, he hitch-hiked for the) Remedy! There is no letdown, no remaining 180 miles of the jour-| uncomfortable after-feeling. NR is | an all-vegetable laxative. For over | 70 years, Nt has been giving folks | pleasant, effective relief overnight. M fonight... tomorrow alright! Helps you feel better . and look better! | REGULAR - CHOCOLATE COATED + JUNIORS AGE NO HANDICAP AUCKLAND, N.Z, (CP)--H ARTS FESTIVAL Prince Philip has agreed to) become chairman of the advis- ory council for the Common- wealth Arts Festival in London in 1965. oe err oe we Seas MORE OFFENDERS Daily average prison popula- tion in England and Wales in 11958 was 25,100, compared to fewer than 11,000 in 1938. O'NEILL'S LAST ai ' Eugene O'Neill's la 'ull- length play, "A Touch | of the Poet," opens in London's West End late ,in 1962. 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