22 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, Merch 13, 1963 ciammegnane a ney gt eee wee OBITUARIES MRS. T, COUSINEAU COBOURG -- Funeral service was held today for Mrs. Thom- (nee]as Cousineau, the former Thel- Ibs. Lo ma Stinson, who died Saturday aries at the Cobourg and District "|General Hospital. For the past five years Mrs. Cousineau was the women's placement officer at the Nation- jal Employment Service here, |which she joined as a clerk nine years ago. She served -under three managers. She was the daughter of the late G. H. Stinson and Mrs. Stinson of 443 Victoria street. Mrs. Cousineau is survived by her husband; one daughter, Mrs. Darrel Douglas (Terry); seven brothers, Albert of Mont- William of . Ottawa, Bruce of Toronto; four sisters, Mrs, Mariéh Denton of Lambeth; Mrs. Bruce Eagle- "Ison (Catherine) of Cobourg, ;|Mrs, D, McKracken (Mary) of .{Toronto, Mrs. J, Byers (Rose- marie) of Port Hope. Service was conducted by the announce/Rey, E. C,-Kelloway of Trinity i|United Church at the Templer and/funeral home. Burial was in PEOUD parents: The news of your Blessed Event can be announced to your friends and relatives in The Osh 'awa Times for only $1.50. Just tele- phone 723-3492--A courteous Ad-writer will assist you in writing a Birth Notice, Union cemetery. MISS ANNE FORGIE, R.N. The death of Miss Anne For- gie, RN, occurred at Fairview Lodge, Whitby, Monday, Mar. 11. She was in her 88th year. DEATHS Born Dec. 25, 1875, at Clare- mont she was a daughter of the la'g Mr. and Mrs. John Forgie. BLAIR, Edwarl rook Hospital, Toronto, on Procateg: Marek 12, 1963, Edward Biair, in his 77th year, beloved widower of Jane Beckstead, and loving father of Mrs. W. Lemaire (Helen) of Prescott, Mrs. Cyril Smith (Dorothy) of Oshawa, Mrs. W. Colquhoun (Katherine), Pick- ering, Charlies and Wilson, both of Car- dinal, and Wilbert of Oshawa. Mr. Blair is resting at the Emmons Funeral Home, Cardinal, Ontario. For further information call Gerrow Funeral | 728-6226. READER, June Louise At Memorial Hospital, Bowmanville, on Welnesday, March 13, 1963, June Louise Reader, aged 36 years, beloved wife of Ernest Reader, 24 Albert Street, Bow- manville, and dear mother of Daisy, Joseph, Ann, Catherine, and Donna. Resting at the Morris Funeral Chapel, Bowmanville. Service in the chapel on Friday at 2 o'clock. Interment Bow. manville Cemetery. SMITH, Alva Edison Entered into rest after short illness, at Oshawa General Hospital on Tuesday, 1963, \o Hitch-| Interment 'imont Union Cemetery. , Conn., A. Hart Smith of Markham; also surviving a brother, Benson, of Newmarket, twenty grand- _Snildren and twenty-two great-grand- children, Mr. is - ice in the chapel on Friday, March 15 ce .m. Interment Armadale Ceme- STEVENS, Joseph Patrick short illness at the Oshawa on Tuesday, March 8 it st i A Fs .| Hospital A former correspondent to The Oshawa Times for the Claremont area, Miss Forgie also taught school for several years. She was also a registered nurse and was a supervisor at hospitals in Guelph, Lethbridge and Cleveland, Ohio. She was an adherent of the Claremont United Church and was a member of the women's missionary society at the church. She was also secretary- treasurer of the church board. For a number of years Miss Forgie served the Claremont school board as secretary of the board. She is survived by a large number of nieces and nephews. A funeral service was held at 2:30 p.m. today at the Mc- Eachnie Funeral Home, Picker- jing. Rev. A, E. Cresswell, min- ister of Claremont United Church, conducted the services. followed in Clare- The pallbearers were Frank MeAvoy, Gordon Forgie, Keith Carson, Aubrey Carson, Lorne Carson and Allen Carson. JAMES GOVAN TORONTO (CP)--James Go- van, 81, of Toronto, internation- ally known hospital architect, died in hospital here Tuesday. Mr. Govan was associated for a time with the firm of Neer- gard and White, hospital con- sultants in New York, and was a member of the American Consultants Associa- tion. He was an architect for hos- pital construction in Jamaica and in most Canadian prov- ~ |inces. For many years he headed the Toronto firm of Govan, Ferguson, Lindsay, Kaminker, Langley and Keenleyside, from -|which he retired less than five years ago. Born in Scotland, Mr. Govan % i d graduated in art design an LOCKE'S FLORIST Funeral arrangements and floral requirements for all occasions. OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE 24 HOUR PHONE SERVICE 728-6555 IN MEMORIAM DEW -- Treasured memories of a Gear and father, Charles L. : who left us so suddenly, March 14, HOGG -- In loving memory of a dear wife and mother, Caroline Hogg, who Passed away March 13, 1962. Time passes on, months have Passed Since death its gloomy shadow cast ba oem our home, where all was And took from us a shining light. We miss that light and ever will, Her vacant place there's none to fill, Down here we mourn, but not in vain, For up in heaven we'll meet again. ty hae ashes Thoetee ant cee! "Sanette and son-in-law Bill. RIMAR MEMORIALS MONUMENTS ON DISPLAY IN.OUR SHOWROOM, Complete Monument and Inscription Service, > 152 SIMCOE SOUTH Phone 723-1002 CARD OF THANKS CORN -- We wish to thank all who 4 at flowers, cards and gave words of thy in our recent bereavement in the loss of my mother, Mrs. Ada Co: A special thanks to OES No. 73 to b oaghpere a service, Toronto Shrine . 4 al ~ ao construction from the Glasgow School of Art in 1905. Two years -llater he came to Canada. At the Ontario Hospital in Whitby, he introduced small separate units or cottages for patients in preference to nous- ing them all in one large build- ing. and two children. REV. W. A. PIPPEN TORONTO -- Rev. William A. Pippen, 89, rest home. Church and Adelaide streets. ings 'and Roseneath with resi- retired. Anilrews, predeceased him some years ago. The death of Mrs. June Louise Reader, 36, of 24 Albert street, Bowmanville, occurred at the tal, Wednesday, Mar. 13. Mrs. several weeks ago. Dorey. An adherent of St. John's Anglican Church in Bow- manville, she married Ernest Reader in Bowmanville. She is survived by her hus- band; one son, Joseph and four daughters, Daisy, Annie, Cathy and Donna, all of Bow- manville, Also surviving are a_ sister, Kingston and four brothers, Ralph, Edward, Earl and Paul No, 3 for 3 also Armstrong's Funeral Home Ongley for their - and Rev. E. 8, words. Dorey. ; The funeral service will be held at the Morris Funeral Home, Bowmanville, Friday, Mar, 15. Rev. John Frampton, rector of St. John's Anglican Church, will conduct the serv- ice. Interment will be in Bow- manville Cemetery. He is survived by his wife retired Anglican clergyman, died Monday in a Born and educated in Toron- to, Mr. Pippen had served for a rumber of years as an assist- ant to the late Dr. James Bain, the first chief of the Toronto Library when it was housed in the Mechanics Institute at Later he entered the church and served as rector at Hast- dence in Port Hope. He served the church in Pickering prior to coming to Toronto as curate at St. Cuthbert's Church in Lea- side, the church from which he His wife, the former Grace MRS. JUNE LOUISE READER Bowmanville Memorial Hospi- Reader had been in failing health following an operation Born at Gananoque she was a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mrs, Doug Lyons (Edith), of EDWARD BLAIR The death of Edward Biair, in Sunnybrook Hospital, Toronto, his 77th year amd had been in failing health for the past 12 years. Mr. Blair was born in Alloa, and before coming to Oshawa, lived in Pickering for nine years. Prior to that time, he resided in Cardinal, Ont. He married the former Jane Beckstead in Williamsburg in 1905 who predeceased him. bridge operator im the Cardinal area. He was a member of the Presbyterian Church. © During the First World War, decorations for overseas service. He is survived by three sons, Charles and Wilson, of Cardinal and Wilbert, of Oshawa and three daughters, Mrs. W. Lemaire (Helen), Prescott; Mrs, Cyril Smith (Dorothy), Oshawa and Mrs. W. Colquhoun (Katherine), Pickering. The body is at the Emmons Funeral Home, Cardinal. further informaticn call Gerrow Funeral Chapel, 728-6226. WM. C. (HARRY) EAKINS The death of William C. (Harry) Eakins occurred sud- denly, Friday, March 8, at his home, 605 Ardmore avenue, Erie, Pa. He was in his 59th ear. Born at Shoal Lake, Mani- toba, he was a son of the late William and Louise Eakins. He was married at Port Hope and for the past 14 years has lived at Erie, Pa. Previous to living in Erie he lived in To- ronto. Mr, Eakins was manager of the Middle Atlantic Transporta- tion Company and was a mem- ber of the Traffic Club and Delta Nu Alpa Club at Erie. He was an adherent of the Methodist Church. He is survived by his wife, the former Lois G. Gibson and one son, Robert G. Eakins of Oshawa. Another son, John B. Eakins is with the U.S. Army at Panama. Surviving also are a brother, John, of Toronto and a sister; Mrs. D. Diamond (Margret) of Cooksville. A funeral service was held at the McIntosh-Anderson Funeral Home at 2 p.m. today. Rev. P. .W Page, minister of Hampton United Church, conducted the services. Interment was in Osh- awa Union Cemetery. The pallbearers were Tom Long, Frank Long, David Diamond, William Gibson, R. Gibson and S. McGee. MRS. MARY MATTHEWS DURHAM -- Mrs, Mary Mat- thews, 88, of Durham, died Mon- her granddaughter, Mrs. Ruby Sheach, Durham. She was the former Mary Schenk, born June 6, 1875, in Egremont Township, daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Schenk. She was a member of St. Paul's Anglican Church, Egre- mont Township. After her mar- riage in 1897, to Robert J. Mat- thews, she lived in Egremont Township and later in Holstein and Oshawa, moving to Durham in July, 1962. Her husband died in 1922. Surviving are two sons, Mil- Hanover; two daughters, Mrs. Claude (Ruby) Mattison of Lau- rens, S.C., and Mrs, Donald (Amanda) Bell of Oshawa; a brother, George Schenk of Hol- stein; 14 grandchildren, 26 great - grandchildren and two great-great-grandchildren. 2 p.m., with entombment Maplewood Mortuary. ALVA EDISON SMITH Smith, 124 Kingston road east, two weeks. A son of the late Rev. and Mrs. Christopher Milo Smith, he was born Aug. 19, 1887, at Sheffield, Ont. Mr. Smith was a resident of Pickering for the past 20 years. Before coming to Pickering he lived in Toronto for 25 years. Prior to that time, he resided in Norwich and Brantford. The deceased was a member of the Free Methodist Church and was a local preacher for 40 years. He married the former Alber- ta Harnden, in Kingston, Ont., in 1900, She predeceased him, June 2, 1955. Mr. Smith was a building con- tractor until he retired 15 years ago. He was a member of the Christian Business Men's Com- mittee. Surviving are four sons, W. Lavern, Pickering; Alva M., Rochester; Albert E., Agin- court and Hart, Markham; three daughters, Mrs. F. B. Hitchcock (Evelyn), Rochester; Mrs, M. D. Munn (Ila), The Philippines and Mrs, L. E. Whitmarsh (Rozella), Hartford, Conn., as well as 20 grand- children and 22 great-grand- children. Also surviving is a brother, Benson of Newmarket. The body is at McEachnie Funeral Home, Pickering, The Friday, March 5, at 2 p.m. in the chapel. Interment will be in Armadale Cemetery. 1801 Dufferin street, Whitby, died in the Oshawa General Hospital Tuesday, March 12. He was in his 82nd year and had been in failing health for the past year. For the past 40 years he was ® commercial fisherman 71 Westmount street, occurred Tuesday, March 12, He was in Scotland. He was a resident of Oshawa for the past three years Mr. Blair worked as a swing the deceased received several For day, March 11, at the home of ford of Durham and John of The body is at the McTavish Funeral Home where the funeral will be conducted Thursday at in The death of Alva Edison The reasons for troubled labor - management relations in the United States are sur- veyed in this article, which also tells what has been done to try to prevent bitter, pro- longed strikes. Compulsory arbitration may be demanded by Congress { present meth- ods of keeping labor peace continue ineffective. By NORMAN WALKER AP Labor Writer WASHINGTON (AP) -- The latest spasm of labor strikes in the United States is a symptom of something worse--a bad case of real and fancied economic jitters. The recent 34-day East-Gulf Coast docks strike crippled U.S. foreign commerce and cost an estimated $800,000,000 in lost business and wages, Newspaper sirikes in New York and Cleveland have cut off whole cities from their daily Papers for long periods, dam- aged community business and posed a question whether some Publications can survive. Big space-missile firms re- cently barely escaped shut- downs. Walkout threats lie ahead in a number of key indus- tries. The railroads, for exam- ple, face a labor crisis in the next few weeks. Too often more attention is focused on cures for the strike symptoms than on cures for the basic economic disease that somehow goads labor-manage- ment protagonists into trying to kill off each other at the public's expense. GIANT SQUEEZE Behind the turbulent labor re- lations scene, management and labor are in a giant squeeze. Each is puzzled and piqued OBITUARIES Wwe SS SS SPS ENE ee prior to his retirement he was a printer. The deceased was born in Quebec City and was the son of the late William and Eliza- Leth Stevens. He married the former Bertha Florence Colby in Toronto in 1904. She pre- deceased him. Mr. Stevens resided in Whitby the last 46 years of his life. Before moving to Whitby he spent 14 years in Toronto. He was a member of St. John the Evangelist Roman Catholic Church, Whitby. He is survived by two sons, Robert E. and Joseph C. of Whitby; a sister, Mary, of To- ronto and a brother, William, of Whitby, three grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. The body is at the W. C. Town funeral chapel, Whitby. Rosary will be recited in the chapel at p.m, today. High requiem mass will be sung by Rev. L. J. Austin in St. John the Evange- list Church at 8.30 a.m., Thurs- day, March 14. Temporary entombment will be in Oshawa Union Cemetery, then interment at St. John's reoigaa Whitby, at a later late. FUNERAL OF SIDNEY PATFIELD The memorial service was held at the Armstrong Funeral Home, Tuesday, March 12, at 2 p.m. for Sidney Patfield, 55, who died Saturday, March 9, at the Toronto Western General Hospi- tal. Rev. Leonard Ware, rector of Holy Trinity Anglican Church, conducted the services, Inter- ment was in Oshawa Union Cemetery. The pallbearers were five nephews, George, Henry, Ed- ward, Gordon and Gary Patfield and Donald Haight. because increases in profits and, wages aren't achieved easily any more. The economic pie they cut up isn't growing as much as it once did. ; Fierce new sales competition --at home as well as abroad--} has made it even more compell- ing for employers to push auto-' mation, streamline the produc- tion process, and cut costs. Raising prices has become in- creasingly difficult. The production streamlining helps contribute to a shortage of jobs in a constantly expanding work force and leaves workers grimly intent on hanging on to the ones they have. They wor- riedly seek higher pay and job oe against res -- y sullenly complain ut the boss' suddenly tight purse Strings. It obviously would be much simpler for an employer to trim obsolete manpower, or "'feather- bedders," from his payroll if a full employment economy pro- vided jobs elsewhere. WALKOUTS DESPERATE The underlying economic tur- moil has: created new tensions in labor-management relations. It helps explain why, although the number of strikes hasn't in- creased significantly, the walk- outs that do develop are far more desperate and irreconcil- able. Too often the strikes are cha- otic, wasteful and inconsiderate of the public interest, U.S. Labor Secretary W. Wil- lard Wirtz has acknowledged the public is fed up with the shin-kicking it has taken lately --as in the newspaper and docks Strikes--and is about ready, should another major labor crisis come along, to support compulsory arbitration, or some other tougher method of dealing with big strikes than presently is authorized. If labor and management fail to make the collective bargain- ing system work better, Con- gress may accommodate a pro- testing public with drastic new shackles on either side or both. President Kennedy seems dis- posed to ride out the storm. There was no mention of the labor problem in his messages to the new Congress. Instead, he has posed his tax revision bill as an antidote for over-all economic ills. NOT EASILY SETTLED George Meany, top man in the labor movement as president of the AFL-CIO, concedes the col- lisions between labor and man- agement over the new problems they are encountering are not Susceptible to settlement by strikes "or by he art of com- promise as we have known it in the past." Solutions must come, Meany Says, through "close and whole- hearted co-operation by labor, Management and government on a@ scale not previously accept- able to any of them." Some feel that real labor peace comes to disputants only after they have nearly ruined One another and thus won mu- tual respect. This school points to the sudden end of coal strikes after the industry and union had it out a dozen years ago. It takes note, too, of the prom- ising new year-around consulta- tive labor-management systems adopted in the U.S. steel indus- try after the record 116-day 1959 steel strike, The government is doing some soul-searching on its own role in the labor relations arena. There doesn't seem to be any disposi- tion to reduce the frequency of disputes interevntion that hit a dramatic peak when Arthur Goldberg, now a Supreme Court Strikes Indicate Case Of Economic Jitters justice, served as Kennedy's labor secretary. Some second thoughts are being given, however, as to how' to make federal intervention work better. ADMITS IMPROVISING Secretary Wirtz--a busy man riding herd on the trouble labor scene in the five months since he succeeded Goldberg--frankly admits the government has been improvising. Hinting that government in- tervention moves may not al-' out, Wirtz says they were un- dertaken not only because the done but to "prevent collective bargaining icide."" The White House and labor department generally get into the major labor disputes in an extna-legal sort of way. Without specific sanction of law, and merely stating intervention is special board or send in a spe- cial mediator to recommend a labor dispute compromise. The recommendations have no legal force but they usuaily have, or erful backing of public opinion. The U.S. presiden* has at his disposal the Taft-Hartley Act. This piece of legislation gives him the power to set up a fact- finding board to consider whether a national emergency exists because of a strike; then he may seek a court order to enforce an 80-day cooling-off period, during which the strike sought. At the expiration of the sumed. NEEDS MORE WEAPONS have been invoked only 22 times available, and President Ken- nedy has suggested that he weapons. As paralyzing as some recent strikes have been, are even more ominous clouds gath- ering on the labor relations horizon, New storms break out in 1963 in a number of industries, including tele- phone manufacturing. The steel con- tracts are reopenable on wages, -- and insurance bene- its, The year 1964,.a presidential campaign year, also is poten- Some of the biggest labor-man- agement contracts will fully run out then, including James R. ing pacts, agreements with the top auto firms, and David J. McDonald's contracts with the big steel companies, HAD EARLY UNIONS Until the 19th century the baz- aar artisans of Arab lands were organized in guilds which ne- ways have been wisely carried|® public demanded something be . from committing su-|CA™ "in the public interest," the gov-|cpr ernment suddenly will create a Can nite at least seek to have, the pow- ve 80 davs the strike can be re- Gu These emergency provisions}! in the 15 years they have been I needs a bigger selection of|% J tially chock full of labor strife.|% Hoffa's major teamsters truck- P: Walter Reuther's| on TORONTO 11 A.M. STOCKS By The Canadian Press edi » xw--Ex-warrants, Net change is| from previous board-lot closing sale. INDUSTRIALS 11Net Sales High Low a.m. Ch"ge beggse | = i | = 22see if sigigelSeuss 3 EePeSSapsetgggutgge' Ege SS oyse = == gk Bezzee ges dee = 17 z g8s 2s B°3g8"*3 + +1 S x oUBSE Yet eS208 6% % 24%» Con Paper 837% 37% Con Gas xl 615 $205 20% 20% -- % C Gas A xd 25 $106% 106% 106% Crown Zell 6 93 53 588 Dale 100 270 270 270 Dalex pr 725 $79 79 =679 Dist Seag 850 is suspended and solutions are|cmc Horne Pf rt 150 Hur Erie rt 200 Imp Oil could| Levy Co pr rubber and electrical] re,°u 440 $22%4 22% 1670 $13% 13% 36 106 195 5 520 $47% 47% 4744 -- % 100 $15% 15% 15%4-- % 3 $26 6 6 --% 1548 $32% 32% 32% 235 $18% 18% 18% 100 $16% 16% 16% 300 $21% 21% 214 -- % 150 450 450 450. 925 $8% 8% 8% + % 35 6% 36) % Today's Stock sida 2 ge ° 8 es sees 9 d ; FF 3 a E nt 3 ++) 4+ Hut g pisses tye of ghsgestsys F Ter gre z" 2 = 2 F 1 + + z # é $95°E*E at Sars see 3 x 3 Bead a9 > ER SESE ER TORS CEEUSSMSASEE 8 ling? 353° PEEESU EE 7 3° FS + = 1 OTS pe we ew POS SECC TEST ET ee ey He EEO OOS IY Market Stock Bales High Low a.m. Ch"ge East Sull 1600 215 211 215 +4 102 -- iy vr E i agesSys.Fouck & +~ + + ess bee $is52282es8igealiencts 3 3 +1 ? P+ 3 : : ++ Ne seSduSey agekS§x 888k § sefgulse veegigs.8oenk 3, se8gu8se Ly LL 7 oe 35 é = > = & - sé i & SENERDSSERESESSSeeanssh > *g Bs BengesSuggsrg t+ thee ag oP egeesess2 Séug Lb tele! Zee iiwe 3 & sa8seug hl age gaa ye Seger tysbaeee ty ete a ebySbedé Ss Begg = + = ZzzZz 25 & 1 - + DO tal z 2 é +++ - Pt i ra 'i 169 $11% 11% 11% + 51 51S 52 118 800 60 159 115 118 «+5 7% 2S --S bd 1 14643 14 44 5 6 15 200 280 230 uv 3 8 % M % 13% 134% 13% 630 630 «630 310 «310 310 2% 21 2 105 103 104 51 -l =8 t + { es F ivf eof eas. BE8Su segue, essounet Bet. 88y 4 ByBSESs upee, Sasseussreiesssey s * i sendshiasubesBassent & = S858 = FS 4 tt b Usb Rot Ro8E8 = = = Becta dSseeetasdesteseecseseeeeseuSessestese eerSay Fs < a 28 woveidetsrt Sat ybayyes 3 SERS SESS & se OSS oe Egae Belay gee $55 + ++ Lad si Soute L = ~ es Bosseasarz Lb +1 +1 i Lemon Juice Recipe vaBeitetauesoy Sales to 11 a.m.: 1,039,000, Watch For... CHRYSLER Announcement THURSDAY'S PAPER pr Royal Bnk Relieves Arthritic & Rheumatic Pain a2 ith of water, lemons: 1 ey! No trouble . 48 hours-- & Lovell Lid. WHITBY, OSHAWA BOWMANVILLE gotiated for the membership and fixed prices on their goods. ACADIAN CLEANERS Odourless Cleaning Shirt Specialists @ Pick-up end Delivery Service © Drive in Service @ Same Day Service Vaults on Premises PHONE 728-5141 299 BLOOR W. When you feel you are coming down with a cold or grippe, and feel headachy, with muscles that ache, a sore throat and fever, the Sirst thing you should do is take two Aspirin tablets, You should do this before you do anything else, because Aspirin goes.to work in- stantly toreduce your fever, relieve that dull, headachy feeling and ease your muscular aches and pains, so you feel better fast. Used as a gargle, Asprrin also brings quick, soothing relief from sore throat. Just dissolve three to five Asprrin- tablets in one-third glass of water and gargle thor- oughly. Repeat gargle every two hours if necessary. Buy Aspirin today, so you'll be sure to have it on hand when you feel a cold or the grippe coming At the First Sign of a Cold or Grippe, Before You Do Anything Else, Take Two Aspirin Tablets 1. 88. on. For your children, get Fla- voured Children's Size Aspmm, It's the 1%4-Grain dosage recom- mended for' chil- genuine Aspirin. Look for the pack- age with the Bayer cross. Pickering, occurred Tuesday,| ; March 12, in Oshawa General] © Hospital. He had been ill for } funeral service will be held}! JOSEPH PATRICK STEVENS Joseph Patrick Stevens, of andl pi ae eo a ee a we A a 16 MAGNIFICENT BOOKS Each illustrated in Glorious full colour: covers all your questions on popular garden plant, shrub, bush, tree, and flower! Shows new exciting ways to enhance the beauty of your garden and the value of your property, ALL OTHER VOLUMES 99¢ FREE! GARDENING FOR CHILDREN by John Bradshaw Save all 16 coupons in each of the senior series! 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