~~ Mr, John Emergency Numbers Hospital 723-2211 Police 725-1188 Fire 725-6574 She Oshawa Zines OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1964 ' Second Section City and district features, sports and classified advertis- McLaughlin has become one of the events of the annual Rotarian Friendship day -- a gathering planned to secure inter-club bonds and to ex- change ideas and experience. The day, which included golf, Driver, 2] F ined $100 '| Rotarians from many Central "land Southern Ontario centres in Oshawa Monday for the 16th Amual Friendship Day . a staged by the Oshawa Rotary Peter Sjonger, 102 Elgin street|Ciub. east, Yaaro guilty to the care-) Club President Stan Lovell less driving charge after Act-|said today that 226 visiting Ro- ing Crown Attorney J oh Nitarians and guests spent the day withdrew @ danget-|in the city under the ot aus erring charge 0 give' @ club. The entertainment in- 7 brea' " cluded golf at: the Oshawa Golf Mr, Humphreys told Magis-|Club; bowling at the Oshawa .|Lawn Bowling Club and a movie in a local theatre. A highlight of the Friendship Day was a reception held by Honorary Rotarian Col, R. S. Gregor, luncheon, bowling, and films, was climaxed with a banquet at the Hotel Genosha, Shown above, from iefit to night: B. Hogarth, president of the Club of Pickering; Gordon Miles, director of the ' Rotarians Hold Friendship Day The day closed with a dinner held at the Hotel Genosha when a formal welcome was extended by President Lovell. Alderman Walter Branch extended greet- ings on behalf of the City of Oshawa and Rotarian Tibor district governor for district 707, also brought greet- ings, Fay Brooks, Achi The Fri MeLaughlin at his id Parkwood. The visitors had an opportunity to meet Col. Mc- Laughlin and tour the Parkwood gardens. entertainment) committee. chairman, presented the Storie Cup to the four prize- winning golfers from the Guelph Cup, The Dobbie Lawn Bowling Trophy was won by the Toronto Rotarians. p Day saw Ro- tarians present from: Cobourg, London, Gravenhurst, Sound, Peterborough, Toronto, Barrie, and other communities. Parry r Two more |bling Squad raided the Prince A one-day Seminar dealing)... , heat rain ith tat lati in O rio | Monday. Mag: will be held at St. George's) Remanded until Oct. 16 were Anglican Church, Oshawa, Mon- narges of bookmaking, necord- day, Sept. 28 at 9.30 a.m. ing bets and being a found in The seminar is brought about | cainst Roy Snider, 48 King| and a found in| ard Were, and Mr. Tom 55 McLaughlin boulevard. ward Island, = Anti-Gambling Squad In Raid gambling chargesjfichuk, 277 Ballard street willl" laid when the OPP Anti-Gam-|face the same charge Oct. 16. Ohanges of having beer and) | Variety store, 444 Prince street,|having beer against George H. | were remanded in|Campbell, 496 = St. Lawrence Courtistreet, were remanded until |Oct. 5. A change of failing to supply the necessities of life against Bernard Myers of Prince Ed- l,, was dismissed when the accused failed to show charge against John Caruana,/up in court, The charge was| laid by Mrs. Joyce Myers. Oshawa Rotary Club, L, Tay- lor of the Pickering Club, Dougias Johns of Oshawa, and Wilf Hunt, of the Pickering Village Rotary Club. Rev. Lawlor To Speak The Catholic Men's Luncheon Club will have their first meet- ing of the 1964-65 season iim the Piccadilly Room of the Genosha Hotel Thursday at 12 noon. Rev. J. E. Lawlor of Bolton, ont., will be the guest speaker. Father Lawlor is well known in the Oshawa District as he was the assistant at St. Greg- He was the organizer andcon- sultant of the Co-operative Hous- ing Movement in Oshawa and Orillia. He is the director of Twin Pines Senior Citizens Apart- ments in Weston, Ont. He was also :lecturer for the Toronto Diocesan Labor School from 1949 to 1951. Father Lawlor has had a life- time interest in Education, Agri- culture and Labor Problems. The Catholic Luncheon Club was established about three years ago and meets on the last Thursday of each month for lunch and an address by some prominent speaker. The club has been host to many fine speakers such as Arthur Malo- ney, Q.C.; Archbishop Pocock nd Bishop Morocco. ory's Parish from 1953 to 1958.) City Artist One Of 10 In Show An international art show held Arts Foundation as one of the ten Canadian artists to be rep- resented at the show. The exhibition will be shown in the new Tokyo Culture [all and fis sponsored by the Japan- ese UNESCO Institution and a Japanese newspaper, Maininchi. The ten artists ere ail prize- winners in contests sponsored by the Foundation which is dedi- cated to the assistance and pro- motion of art iin High Schools. Paul, son of Mr. and Mrs. James B. Topping, was edu-| cated at St. Gregory's Separate) School and OCVI. } Following graduation from) OCVI he studied art for two years at Central Technical Col- legiate in At present Paul is showing several watercolors, ink and charcoal drawings ait a "Toronto gallery. The work chosen for the Tokyo exhibition is a charcoal drawing of a negro girl. Entries in the exhibition will be from Camada, the United States, the U.S.S.R., Australia, most European nations, South America and the Middle Bast. GUEST SPEAKER Mr. Murray Dowdell, RIA, Comptroller of Coulter Manu- facturing Limited and its sub- sidiaries, will address the Oshawa District Chapter of the Society of Industrial and Cost Accountants next Thurs- day, September 24, at the Hotel Genosha at 6.00 p.m. Mr. Dowdell's subject will be 'the Practical Application of Electronic Data Processing to a Medium Size Business". Mr. Dowdell had his own manage- ment and cost control prac- tice in Toronto prior to joining Coulter Manufacturing Lim- ited. Coulter's have installed an IBM System and equip- The club is making an effort! to create better fellwoship by) inviting non-Catholic men of the| same profession as the speaker, to these luncheons. The club comprised of over 100 local business, professional and labor men as well as the docal Catholic clengy, has proved to be an ideal méans of bring- ing many Catholic men from different walks of life together for a most enjoyable diversion \from routine lunch hours, | A false pretences char ge| ' ' : against Frank Toth, 218 Celina) pags te ig a hag pang was remanded until can Church of Canada. Sept. 28. Although under Anglican au-| A charge of assault and spices, the seminar is open to|causing a disturbance against} al] denominations in the Osh-|Ivan McDonald, 77 Arlington| awa area, and most of the major;/avenue, were remanded until denominations. wi repre-|the same date Edwards »f the Industrial Rela- Fine Man $50 For Intoxication Hans Fjellheim, 58, denied in| Oshawa Magistrate's Patrick I. Mooney, 230 Toron-/Monday that on Sept. 18 he'd) Bxcerpts from the warks of T. 3% clergymen will be present. (to avenue, will face on Oct. 5 ajbeen drinking rubbing alcohol) Huxley, Paul Tillich, Albert The seminar will be address-| change of being.drunk in charge|found in his possession. ed by Mr. Reed io Labor Re Board, and will then hear sub-| missions by Mr. Dave Archer, President of the Ontario Labor] Federation of Labor, and by| Mr. Ferguson, QC, representing} management, | The morming session will be spent examining the Act and its) Ratepayers To Meet functions and under the chairmanship of ers Gas, will debate the sub- missions made by the panel The afternoon session will be a ohictnod today that matters of impor- { enlodal Mer. Kea Cowan, | ance would be presented at the Personnel Manager of Duniop| yee ns to be held at 8 p.m. Conede 544, senting man.|Mt. DeHart said, the taxpay- ca a ie e Tom fd.|¢Ts in the Lake Vista area eas of Local 494 Rubberwork-| Should be aware that permits ae ing the Oshawa|2re ready to be issued which and Birr yr Si Council, will would allow duplexes to be built discuss the day to day effects|!" Our area, on septic tanks. of labor legislation at the plant) 'This would not only down- level. ation will be held- Sumtay "eve: ning at a General Meeting to be held im St. Philip's Church: President John DeHart said [ation Vista Ratepayers' Associ-. 8 confined to clergy-| The president also noted that first. instance andjthree trophies and $50 in prize press excluded. It és hoped|money would be awarded to the with the ex se gained|owners of the three best kept occasion future affairs|homes in the area. The prizes held on a public basis/will be presented by Mr. Bran- intent of lessening the|ton and Mr. Johnston of the Of industrial dispute, |Oshawa Horticultural Gociety. 2¢¢ z fat fee But that stuff,' Palos ; fied on a provincial basis.) The election of officers of the! Fjellheim, of no Magistrate H. W. lowntown by | Thomson. "But I hadn't bene .drinking|icm' Mr. Sabiston traced some- the accused: testi- _|Thinking from Socrates through Lavi ee JOHN De HART court fixed address, was fined $50 on an| Robert intoxication change. Jermyn Oshawa jwas told the man was arrested|on synday. | | Constable Cleo) : 'Unitarians Hold Meet Schweitzer, C. H. Waddington and many others were used by Campbell Sabiston to illustrate his address to the} Unitarian Fellowshin| Speaking on the subject "Humanism and Unitarian. Free |thing af- the history of |Copernicus, Galileo, Sir Walter |Raleigh, Thomas Jefferson and| |so to present times. l Having sketched in this back- |ground, Mr. Sabiston posed the | question . . . where do we go from here? The answer to this question, he feels, is to be found in a more positive approach to the workl's ills. Unitarians could well afford to concentrate less on the divergence of opinion be- tween themselves and' other religious groups and more on the support of public welfare programs and social action committees; on education. and the relief of poverty. Mr. Sabiston is a native of Toronto and a member of the American ,Humanist Associa- tion. He has worked largely in the fields of editing, printing jand public relations, and is now an Associate Editor of a national business magazine. ment under his supervision for production control and ac- counting. 'Gets 15 Days $750,000 'To Loc Levy Fine Of $100 A 21-year-old Oshawa man| was Monday fined $100 in Osh- aw a Magistrate's Court after it} It looks like Oshawa will get awa Magistrate's Court after it|a $750,000 motor hotel, And its his nose at police when re-|first sewage pumping station, quested to do so. Ph sn gg Lec bearw : lay night, city council rule spats ws © ie that developers of the Carousel was" asked perform. the [MY (oll chan) pled fr finger to nose test as part of 'ennt 'of Stevenson 1 most an alcohol co-ordination test.|.0. one-half the cost of servic- Thibault Monday was facing alP@¥ ' : ' ling the land. charge of being drunk in charge] estimated cost of services is of his auto following a brief high|s95 999, 'This includes between speed' olive chase on Simcoe 129) and 1500 feet of sanitary street noi uly 4. ing station -- Patrol Sergeant Peter White ogee ve -- -- told Magistrate H. W. Jermyn) The second recorded vote taht Thibault's performance of me after deal. had been the finger to nose test was only| worked out to allow the develop- "fair." TS a of the cost "Well he didn't touch the tip bes Prose song canes of his nose so I didn't either,"| Council approved an agree- Thibault testified. ment which will give owners a Following a fiery defenc elrebate from other persons hook- charge that "it's a pity these|ing onto the station; contmibu- days that a person's word is not/tions will be based on a formula as good in court as a police offi-|involving the number of plumb- cer's, "Acting Crown Attorney|ing fixtures. John Humphreys retorted: | A zoning bylaw amendment "We must accept the opinions|was passed, allowingthe. motel of police officers for one very in the M1A (industrial) area. good reason: they are usually sober while on duty." |NOT TOO TOUGH Thibault was convitted on a| Ald. Cliff Pilkey moved the weduced change of impaired|motion calling for the develop- driving. ers to meet half the cost of servicing. "We are schools 0 provide sewers, and then charg- ing them," he said, "I think this enterprise should be able to provide something. This (con- tributing 50 per cent) is not too tough a restriction. "Besides, we don't know the cost of servicing the pumping PEACE CORPS ARRIVE FREETOWN (AP)--A group of U.S. Peace Corps volunteers has arrived in Sierra Leone to begin a two-year tour of duty. They bring the total stfength of volunteers in the West African country to 147, Drunk Driver he found Duncan to be "'very un- concerned about the accident and laughed when he saw the damage to the car'. Oshawa Constable J. H. Hobbs said he and other officers were "called names" by the accused, The court was told Duncan's record of 13 convictions involved assault, careless driving, caus- ing a disturbance and intoxica- tion, Wallace Nelson, 11 Sherwood road, Pickering, admitted allow- ing Duncan to drive his car "be- cause I was in no shape to drive. his licence was under suspen-| "I got into the back seat and sion, went to sleep,"" Nelson added. OPP Constable Jerry Bihun| He was fined $50 for allowing testified that on stopping -at the|an unlicenced driver to take the Taunton road accident Aug. 30|wheel. A young father of two whose careening auto mowed down 18 roadside wooden posts was laughing when he saw the $150 damage to the vehicle, Oshawa Magistrate's Court was told Monday. 2 And Gary Duncan, 134 Gren- fell street, was also 'belligerent and called policemen names," police testified. As a result Magistrate H. W. Jermyn jailed Duncan for 15 days for being drunk in charge of an' auto and dished out an- other 15-day sentence -- to run concurrent -- for driving while /REPORT FROM OTTAWA New Act Can Borrow $15,000 Sum By RUSSELL C. HONEY | MP, Durham | Last week the corftroversial flag resolution was referred to an all-party Committee of the House of Commons thereby clearing the decks for other leg- islation. The government has given priority to farm legisla- tion and early this week the House debated and speedily adopted an Act to amend the Farm Improvement Loans Act. Present legislation limits loans to farmers to $7,500 and the new Act doubles this ceiling to per- mit each farmer to borrow a maximum of $15,000 The Farm Improvement Loans legislation is designed to make credit more readily available to farmers through the chartered banks, To achieve-this~end--the government guarantees each! bank against loss up to 10 per} cent of the farm improvement loans made by that bank during the lending period. During the period of opera- tions under the Act technological advances and the mechanization of farms have been a dominant feature of Canadian farming, and farm improvement loans! have played an important role: in facilitating those develop- ments. Although loans under the Act are made for a wide range of farm improvement projects they have always been used quite prominently to help fi- mance the purchase of machin- ery and equipment. In recent years about three out of every| four dollars borrowed under the} Act have been used for the pur- chase of machinery and equip-| ment. to-$15;000; with others to purchase expen- To Help Farmers There has also been over the years, along with an increase in the average size of farming operations, a trend toward the sive machinery which would otherwise be out of his grasp because of cost. I will give you more details of this legislation in Council A prov Motel ate In S.W. Area |station. That $25,000 won't all go to the city." The reference to the $25,000 was first made by a lawyer from the firm of Newman, Reiver and Weinstock of To- ronto, who applied for the re- _ change (from MIA to 1). N. Reiber told council the developers were prepared 0 pay sewer frontage costs only in front of their own property. He claimed this: is the policy in Metro Toronto, When confronted with the pos- sibility of having to pay estimated $13,000 in costs, Mr. Reiber reminded council] the motel would repay these costs in the first year of taxes -- an estimated $25,000. Mayor -Lyman Gifford sug- gested a charge similar to that paid by subdividers: $5 per lin- eal foot for sewers for the 1200 feet to take the service to the site of the proposed pumping station. City Engineer Fred Crone described the $26,000 servicing cost as a 'very preliminary estimate." Ald. Finley Dafoe balked at voting on the matter without knowing the exact cost. Ald. Dafoe suggested the motel site was not as ripe for development as "other nearby properties." The mayor claim- ed there is no comparable site nearby. ' | Ald. John Brady said the 50 per cent share (about $13,000). the developers were being ask- ed to pay was not "out of the way," "We shoyld be responsible for extenidng sanitary sewer on the same basis as we use with the subdividers,"' said Ald, John Dyer. 'But we should tum this scheme down.' NEED SEWER The city has to accept the|* |lresponsibility for providing |services. "We shouldn't hold up anybody for one-half the serv- ice costs which they should ex- pect, "The city has to accept the responsibility of i sew- age disposal available to all properties MAYOR GIFFORD ue i g ; Baz rH : F His Worship said motel to be built was the kind of accommodation needed in Police Raid Leads To Fines | Sunday drinking at Dniepro Gainer, 23, of 1115 King Hall ted to the conviction Mon-|street.east, was fined $50 or 10 day in Oshawa Magistrate's Court of two Oshawa men changed with having liquor. Mykola W. Weres, 812 Douglas street, and John Luchkiw, 501 Dieppe avenue, both pleaded guilty to the change laid follow- ing a raid by police Sept. 13. Police testified that large quantities of beer and liquor were found in the hall where some 150 were attending a shower. "Sunday is a bad day for this sort of thing," commented Mag-|pleaded istrate H. W. Jermyn in passing A 10-day jail tenm was "'trig- use of heavier and more expen- a later Report. sive machinery and equipment. /. sentence. This has been reflected in the size of individual credit needs which have been met under the provisions of the Act, and the maximum amount permitted under the Act to an individual farmer has been raised from time to time. While a maximum of $3,000 established originally in 1945 served the purposes of the Ac. for many years, this was raised to $4,000 in 1953 and again to $5,000 in 1956. The pres- ent maximum of $7,500 has been in effect since 1959 and the new legislation, as already stated, has now doubled this maximum It is a good indication of the soundness of the scheme, and a tribute to the farmers of Can- ada, that on a total loan vol- ume of close to $1.4 billion since inception, accumulated losses during this period have been only slightly above one-tenth of one per cent, As this Report is written the Minister of Agriculture, Harry Hays has just introduced a Farm Machinery Bill which will provide for setting up co-opera- tive groups who may wish to purchase farm machinery for use by members of the groups. It will provide credit on reason- able terms for such groups, This is a new and imaginative legis- lation which should provide great assistance to the smaller farmer who will be able to join The 16th annual Mess Din- ner of No, 420 (Oshawa) Wing RCAFA Association was held Saturday night at the Oshawa Airport. Colonel Lief Bangs- boll, U.S. Army (retired) who NO. 420 WING ANNUAL MESS DINNER was a secret service agent during the Second World War, was the guest speaker. Colo- nel Bangsboll (left) points out a feature on a Second Worid War plane to Mayor Lyman Gifford and Mr. Gordon Channing, president of the Oshawa Association. More than 100 attended the difiner. --Oshawa Times Photo _