Oshawa Times (1958-), 10 Oct 1964, p. 15

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Second Section - City and district features, sports and classified advertis- ing. Emergency Numbers Hospital 723-2211 Police 725-1133 Fire 725-6574 -- She Oshawa Sine OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1964 X-Ray Survey Being Planned Plans for a mass tuberculin test and X-ray survey in the community and industry were discussed at the management committee meeting of the On- taric County TB and Health As- sociation this week. The presi- dent, Rev. W. G. Soloniuk, was in the chair. Dr. H. A. Richmond, mass survey chairman, will be meet- ing with the Ontario Depart- ment of Health; Dr. C. C. Stew- art, MOH, and Dr. Margaret R. Braund, MOH, Ontario County Health Unit. Arrangements have already been made to conduct a compiete survey of both am- UNION ENDORSES STRIKE ACTION AJAX (Staff) -- A strike vote has been unanimously endcrsed by Local 1278 of he Textile Union at Hamil- ton Cotton Co. Ltd. in Ajax. The vote was taken in case a strike becomes necessary in the negotiations with the union and management. A conciliator has already been appointed by the Minister of Labor to settle the four month dispute. Negotiations began in June when the Hamilton Cotton Co, took over the plant on Monarch avenue from. the Monarch Knitting Company earlier this year. Hamilton Manager N..C. Grindahl said that he. be- lieves a settlement is pos- sible before the conciliation board meets in November. Mr. Grindahi stated that it was a matter of ironing out three or four -- specific clauses of the contract which affects about 140 workers. Fairview Lodge this month. The case finding report show. & ed three local TB epidemics, have occurred in Ontario this|/ past year. The epidemic in Lon-|/ don was centred in one of the elementary schoools with a stu- dent population of 350. Thirteen children were admitted to a sanatorium; two teachers and seven children are taking drugs as out-patients, In Wheatly (Kent County) 1,362 population, 10 active cases of TB were found; one adult and nine children between 15 months 'and 17 years of age. Four other children are under investigation as suspects of TB. In Hearst (North Cochrane) | 7,700 population, 17 active cases of TB were found. Eight were adolescents and young adults -- some with advanced disease. Arrangmeents are being made to prepare the Christmas Seal letters the first week in. Novem- ber with the help of directors | ' jand friends. Members of th |Oshawa Soroptimist Club are| #4 folding the séals in readiness, | Committee chairmen of the various committees are: medi- cal advisory, Dr. W. G. Grant; case finding, Dr. Daniel Rogers; mass survey, Dr. H. A. Rich- mond; rehabilitation and social service, Rev. H. A. Mellow; Christmas Seal campaign, Mr. D. L. Crozier; health education, Mrs, R. W. Shier; publicity,| SERGEANTS' ME Winner of the Ontario Regi- ment Sergeants' Mess golf tournament, George Brown- SS GOLF CHAMPION RECEIVES TROPHIES ing, was presented with two left to right are Peter John- Browning and Jim Sullivan, | trophies, Thursday night, at son, district representative of convenor of the tournament. the Armories. Pictured from Carling's Breweries, Mr. : _--Oshawa Times Photo | To Display Jailed 30 Days 'Simcoe Hall Newcastle Boy Found In Orchard Grant MacDonald, 13, was found dead from chest wounds Friday afternoon in an apple orchard near his Newcastle @e\home. A .22 rifle was found e| Close to the body. The boy was found by e wor- ker in the orchard of Wallace | Getting "a little hot under the longings and dates the body around 1700 and that of @ woman in her late twenties. He hopes an ornamental comb. made from a deer antler, will assist him in de' the dians, which heretofore have not been found east of Winni- leg. Along with the skeleton was a French copper kettle, an iron knife and glass beads of various colors. Professor The skeleton of an Indian woman, believed to be from 200 to 2,000 years old, was found this week by Ross Mar- tin behind his stable at Rouge Hills. The skull was identified Products For Trespass 'Clubs Busy Of I d | "This week has been a busy n usiry collar' cost Wayne George Paul [Flyin ont hor ge many different clubs at Simcoe | Fox, 23, of 76 'Colborne street, | why the charge = Sg in| Hail. the code was to check Peeping * dustrial Harvest of the Oshawa)" Fox appeared on a trespass|Toms and persons who might|fine on Wednesdays _ oe Community, will be displayed) change inserted in the Criminal| be 'casing a joint'. direction of R. Kraglin. Las Street United Church this Sun-|« without 1a wful excuse| preposterous story about..a.tie|and the winners received day, when the minister will lead] toiter or prowl at night upon the|and clip," Mr. Affleck said.| Stamps for their collections. Thanksgiving to God. The ser-|ooe street north". The words| was hanging around and these|its members for a competition mon theme will be "Gratitude,! "or prowl" were deleted. people don't have to put up with {with the new Simcoe Hall Boys This is the second annual| walking up Simcoe street north) Mr. Hennick argued that there | helping the children in this service at Centre Street when| to the Red Barn last July 18 and|was no evidence Fox was loiter-/ field. x one for the volunteers of our | said the 'universal view" as to Articles representing the In-| 39 qays in jail, Friday. The stamp club is going along at the morning service at Centre| Code in 1959. The charge read| 'This is an incredible and| Week there was a bingo game the congregation in a service Of| property of Mrs. Karn, 448 Sim-| "There is ample evidence he|, The chess club is preparing the sinew of Faith." | Fox told the court he was| this kind of nonsense." |Club. A. Tilk and R. Noel are P. Marlow is helping with the products of undustry have|was annoyed because a friend shared the harvest theme along) had not picked him up and no with the pumpkins and autumn} buses came along. leaves usually Mr. Magee suggested this em- for the service after a Group in Carstairs, berta, included a bottle of crude oil in its Thanksgiving decora- tion of the chu "We're thankful for the Oil too."' | Because Oshawa is predomin-| 1, ently an indu | 0) | | our thanks for these manufac-| tured articles as well as for the) William Karn, who had also! }seen the accused on her lawn} Members of the congregation) and sitting on a fence bordering} ar-} in - factories! the police who caught Fox in pumpkins and the squash. have been asked to secure ticles produced where they work and the leading industries have been enthusias- tic about the suggestion and/|trate Harry Jermyn said: 'You have provided the things that|may think, by virtue of your Oshawa men and women pro- name, that you are allowed to up west side of the street at Buck-| looking for it. ie Ww ingham avenue and began to/on a well-lighted street". walk, south. He ripped off his} tie and tie clip and threw them » and noted) ON HANDS AND KNEES strial centre|and knees on a lawn by Mrs. rather than an argricultural|Bruce Bradley who was one, it seems fitting that we say| walking her dog. ing "in the sense of hanging around". He said Fox "'threw|the Monday night gym period. his tie over a little brick fence"/There is a great variety in this and down| program. i as walking) Tuesday nights will be occu- [pied with the badminton club |starting Oct. 13. Archery will begin on Oct. 16 at 7 p.m. It is not too late to join the basketball leagues. You may do so by calling Frank Walsh at 728-7525. Five Hurt He said he crossed to the|and was walki n the grass. "Eat Canadian' Theme Pushed | t LONDON (CP) -- Most visi- ou! tors' to Britain's food fair this| Mrs.| Year are carting home their) -.ifree samples in bright yellow) shopping bags bearing bold red) ee maple leaves. | I C ll The bags, together with eal n 0 1s10n expensive advertising campaign) | on London's bus and subway) Injuries sustained in a two- system, are part Of a massiv€).a, collision early today sent) Going back to look for them ater, he was seen.on his hands She called a neighbor, er property. Mrs. Karn called Alexandra Park In passing sentence, Magis- assault on the British palate by 31 Canadian food firms exhibit- ing at the fair | five persons to the Oshawa Gen- eral Hospital. James Bungess, RR 3, Bow- | Second World War and deputy CLUB SPEAKER Dr. J. J. Green, MBE, for- mer chief research aero- nautical engineer to the Air Transport Board during the director general to the Chief of Air Staff, RCAF, who will W. Gibson, The body was taken to the Memorial Hospital, Bow- manville, by Mr. Gibson and pronounced dead on arrival. Grant, son of Mr. and Mrs. by Royal Ontario Museum Cur- ator Walter Kenyon and has been sent to Los Angeles for a more definite identification. The skelton is apparently that Gordon MacDonald. was the oldest of six children. He was a} Grade 8 pupil at Lockhart} School, a two-room building a} half-mile from the' orchard) where he was found. | Mr. MacDonald said that of-! ficers of the Ontario Provincial Police, Bowmanville Detach-| ment, told him that they are at-| tempting to find the owner of| the rifle, H Grant is said to have left) school shortly after noon and on his way home would have passed the orchard, where: he had worked part-time this sum-| mer, | of a woman of the Plains In- Kenyon said that the glass beads were probably in a beaded hung from around her neck. He said it was com- mon for the Indians to bury _ their deceased with their be- date closer. Glass beads, said Professor Kenyon, were made in Venice but were carried by fur traders of all nationalities. --Oshawa Times Phote Draws 18 Months For Assaulting Officer Assaulting a police officer cost Ronald Gaul, 24, of 51 Colbounne street east, 18 months definite and six months indefinite in A post-mortem was held this morning at the Oshawa General Hospital by pathologist Dr. V. S. jreformatory. Thirty days con- |cumrent was added on a charge of causing a disturbance. order would be damaged "'if you don't put a stop to this kind} of nonsense." | Gaul pleaded not guilty to the assault charge but refused to |testify. He told Magistrate Jer- driver's licence end Gaul be came "antagonistic and belli- gerent" when asked for his, according to MacIntyre. Police Insp. Emest Barker came along and told Macin- tyre to search the car. He said Gaul "went against the door," jmyn he had been drinking and |thought police had to have a search warrant to search a car. The assault occurred early in the morning of Sept. 25. Con. Reginald MacIntyre told court The "Eat Canadian" theme is|manwille, was admitted to the attractive but fattening. The) OGH suffering from a fractured exhibitors have made a calcu-|left arm. He was a passenger| lated appeal to the notorious! in one of the vehicles driven by| 44 British sweet tooth with lavish| Donald Ray Cornish, 26, of aia) ®* displays of fruit cake, honey,' Celina street. jams, frozen pies, maple syrup) The accident occurred at Gibb! _ and big chocolate bars street and Park road and also Focal point of the Canadian involved a vehicle driven by display is 'an eight-foot model of Stanley J. Shelley, 20, of 132 the famous 22,000-pound°"mam-)|Grenfell street. Passengers in moth cheese" of Perth, Ont.,/the Shelley auto: Shirley Shel-| exhibited in Britain in 1892 and ley, John Vilfeneuve, 280 Mon-| later cut up and sold. pbs st ~ his wife,| Also drawing the crowds are Mary, and June Merrick, of . delectable samples of a fruit] Uxbridge, were treated for) Convention cake made from an original/bruises at the OGH and recipe favored by Henry. VIII,| leased. x4 | Oshawa Districte Insurance To tempt British visitors fur-| Some 15 minutes earlier, at) agents are looking forward to ther, Canada's trade and com-|12.45 a.m. William Laundrien,|attending the 44th annual con- merce department, which is/2%, Of 579 Albert street, suffer-| vention of the Ontario Insurance sponsoring the exhibition, has 4 @ bruised' shoulder when his] agents' Association which will go around on your hands and knees -- looking for grasshop- be the speaker at the meeting of the Canadian Club of On- tario County in Hotel Genosha Wednesday night. His subject will be "Man on the Moon; What Next?" Naiken,. The sentences were handed Besides his parents. the boy is\down Friday by Magistrate survived by three sisters, Carol,|Harry Jermyn in Oshawa Mag- Heather and Shelagh and two/istrate's Court. : brothers, David and John. Before sentence was passed, _| The funeral service will be|Crown Attorney Bruce Affleck|Gaul was sitting in e car parked a at "e agonal oc og |said levying a fine would be in-|on King street west with another "uneral Home, Bowmanville, atiterpreted as license to take a/man, and a girl who was behind|tvre had knocked two pairs of 10:30 a.m. Monday, Oct, 12. In-| poke at police. lthe wheel. ppt on > cg floor and terment will be in Bowmanville ; | ; #9 Cemetery. Rev. F. Swann, min-| He said respect for law end! The girl admitted she had no'wouldn't pick them up. byierien Church, "Bowman vle| i conduct the | Library Has Energy, of-Sea ' Shevchenko will conduct the service, Control Claimed Exhibition duce for world markets. Mr. and Mrs. William Frost, | and Mr. and Mrs. Earl Hann Oe oibis = AF d ti will arrange the display. ite oe ne and: Ge _|clip is not given much credit around here. There is no be- havior more disconcerting to women in the area (than loiter- ing)."" Fox's lawyer, §, J. Hennick Langued that the accused should be tried on a lesser charge of petty trespass. He established that the street 'is well-lighted and there is a bus stop at the 93. of place where Fox was seen sit- =v) ting Polish Vets jamming Macintyre between the frame and the (rear) door. The Inspector said Gaul pushed him twice trying to get at Mac- Intyre. He said Gaul threw off his coat and started te swear. Gaul complainted that MacIn- Accused Admits Possession Of Castings Jack Eugene Brigley, 440 Ritson road south, pleaded guilty to possession of steel castings, Friday in Oshawa Magistrate's Court. Sentence was put over for one week for a pre-sentence report Local Agents Will Attend Tartan Twirlers 'Win 17 Trophies Of interest to Oshawa citi The court was told the cast- ings belonged to Fledco Con- crete Pipe Limited of Ajax and had an estimate! value of $4,590 Police found Brigley and an- 'other man breaking the cast- ings with a sledge hammer and loading them on a rented truck, in a field on Stevenson road | south. Damage to the castings was estimated at $1,500. Fabian Conlin, 55, of 100 Brock street east, was fined $25 and costs or 14 days for intoxi- cation (2nd offence). He told court he is under a doctor's care and has to take six differ- net kinds of medicine. Edward John Westbury, 17, from Kingston, Ontario, was | dig given a suspended sentence and! placed on two years' probation! by Magistrate Harry Jermyn,| and told to return home and/moron live with his people. He was up on a charge of uttering. The magistrate said he was involved with three other youths | in stealing $526 through forged} cheques. He said Westbury is responsible for one-quarter of| the amount. Westbury's sister! told court reqiitetion will be made. Kenneth Beer, 510 Monteith avenue, was fined $25 and costs} or 10 days on each of two) charges of failing to file a 1962}: income tax return. The magis- trate noted there had been no reply to two demand letters RNC VESSEL COMING The Royal Canadian Navy Training Ship Port St. Jean will arrive in Oshawa Harbor at about 4 p.m., Sunday and spend dies' hair dryer, door prize, spot)ly at Waterlog Lutheran Uni- |prize, lucky ticket prize, etc. | versity, the night in the harbor, prepared 23 recipes for exotic\C@™ Tan into a hydro pole at be held Wednesday, Oct. 14, 15 | Plan Banquet -- Plans are now completed for the annual charter night, anni- versary banquet and dance of the General W. Sikorski Polish Veterans' Association, It will be held in the Polish Alliance! Hall, 219 Olive avenue, Oshawa, | on Saturday, Oct, 17, at 6 p.m.! This is considered one of the! best social functions among the K Polish community in Oshawa, and much effort has been put! into it to make it the gala ev Mill and Centre streets. Laun- drien told police that he was driving east on Mill street when a west-bound vehicle forced him off the road. The hydro pole was broken into two pieces and the car re- ceived an estimated $500 dam- age to the front end and the dishes involving Canadian prod- ucts, Traffic Detour On King East 2s: Traffic will be detoured from, More than $800 was estimated ing street east, between Wil-|t0 have been caused in a two- son road and Farewell street,|Car collision Friday at Albert starting at 7 p.m. next Tuesday, |Street and Olive avenue. The : ent/The block is expected to he/| drivers were: Robert G. Olliffe, it usually is ,closed off for about six weeks|2l, of 365 Humewood avenue Among distinguished guests| during rebuilding operations. will be provincial and federal) The city engineers depart-|217 Dearborn street. nitaries, presidents or repre-| ment said eastbound traffic will}, Another two-car accident Fri- sentatives from all veteran as-|detour south on Wilson road, sociations, not only from Osh-| east on Hoskin and north on | caused an estimated $50 dam- awa, but also from London and| Fafewell street to King. West-|age to the cars driven by: Wil- to, | bound traffic will proceed south|liam N. Cockburn, 28, of 109 Guest speaker will be Jozef|to Farewell, west on Athol street| Nassau street and John E. Per- Lizewski, the original organizer|and north on Wilson road tojrin, 20, of 800 Douglas street. Keith Alderton, 305 Brentwood ~|avenue, the club president, told in 1934 and first president of wy Street ala fe the association. All past presi-| is possible the detour route . dents of the General W. Sikor-|May be changed as work pro- Steal Soft Drinks ski Polish Veterans' Association halt on on ae street ex- since 1934 are being invited es|tension at Riverssde drive. i honored guests 8 _It is anticipated the section ot| At Tennis Club The banquet and dance is un- King street west, between Mac- : Pree ct ng or Edward Millan drive and Park road, will| 4 thief squeezed through a Zalewski, president; and chair-|@ open to traffic in about two window of the Oshawa Tennis man of the banquet committee, | Weeks. The laying of pavement, | Club 4 ng hog g adieergealen Jan Derkacz. Jan Drygala MM _| 2S well as the placing of curbs ent: drinks, a a Py Oe eat will be immer of ceremonies, |2%4 sidewalks is proceeding in} All members of the Polish mis oren community and their Canadian : lic heck: it- friends are cordially invited.| NAMED VICE PRESIDENT [Douce that he checked the Rit; There will be many attractions | Ken Aay, Oshawa, was elec-| that a washroom window on the throughout the evening, includ- ted vice-president of the sopho-|east side had been removed. ing the draw for sterio hi-fi,)more class in the elections to|Mr. Alderton added that he am-fm, power lawn mower, la-| the student council held recent- Itheft of the pop. "s be presented with emphasis on| trict, and 16 in the Royal York Hotel. Walter Famme, director of Territory 8, is chairman of the} reception with the officiating delegates |Don Ellison, M. McMurtry, urer of the local association will be atiending together with sev-| eral of the local agents. committee together) president and L secretary-t reas-| An outstanding program will | the Big "I."' The speaker at the|), Thursday noon luncheon will be} ,., Dick Jackman, an outstanding jand Edward McCaffrey, 69,' of ged from the States and a guest speaker will be the Honor-| |day at Brock and Prince streets|2¥!€ S. J. Randall, Ontario Min-) ister of Economics and Develop- ment. he Friday noon juncheon, the| There will also be a program) for the wives of the attending) 4; agents, starting with luncheon} ato, of and a theatre party at Okeefe|,, Centre on Wednesday. On Thurs-| day morning the ladies will be} ,,,.; entertained at a "Brunch'" with » aig gt Fleanor Fulcher which will in-| j;, clude a fashion show. In the ev-| ening the banquet and dance will be the highlight of the conven- tion. The ntario Insurance Agents' Association consist of approxi- mately 2,000 independent eral insurance agents in Ontar-| io which sponsors the Big The Oshawa Insurance Agents' Association which is affiliated! with the Ontario Insurance Agents' Association has been in|the Slovak League, Oshawa operation since 1939 and con-,Branch No. 6, will appear on} gen-| vl a found the front door open and/|sists of fifty independent insur-|Monday, Oct on investigation discovered the|ance agents in Oshawa and dis-/a.m., on Uncle Bobby's Hour on |Channel 9. --~ LANCASTER, Pa. (AP)--The Hamilton Watch Company says | it has developed what it calls/ an ocean motion harness ca-|bition now on display at the pable of controlling the energy) of the sea and putting it to! k. The mechanical device, de-| dustrial and military products) division, captures motion cre-| ated by ocean waves and con-| verts it into a force that can| used to run a_ generator,/} charge a battery or transmit an! electronic signal. In principle, a'company| spokesman said, the device} functions. in much the same} way as the self-winding mech-} anism of an automatic watch. | |zenis, particularly to those of Ukrainian descent, is an' exhi- McLaughlin Public Library of | the paintings and writings of the Ukrainian poet, Taras Shev- |veloped by the company's in-/|chenko. Shevchenko, who lived from 1814 to 1861, helped to shape the history of his people and was a poet of striking beauty and orig- inality. To Ukrainians he is a symbol of their national spirit and longing for freedom, since he shared all the hardships of serfdom and exile. The current exhibition; which was organized by the Ukrainian Hamilton engineers foresee | Committee of Oshawa with the m on harness, an operate for long periods | without the maintenance attery powered any possible uses for the mo- |help of Dr. D. Antonevych and As a power gener-| Dr. Roman Storoshchuk, will be} buoys, for example, it|on display in the auditorium of the McLaughlin Public Library re-|until Oct. 17. output may used auto-| matically to wind marine chron- ometers- or to operate sailboat instruments requiring power. The original model weighs less than one pound and nieas- ures three inches each way. Larger ones may be developed! later. | ON TV SHOW The Junior Tatra Dancers of! 12, from' 9 to 10) i CELEBRATING BIRTHDAYS Congratulations and best wishes to residents of Osh- awa and district who are celebrating their birthdays this weekend. Those who celebrate on Sunday are: Dorothy Wil- son, "T2 Banting avenue and Francis Lailey, who is celebrating his 8ist birth- day, Phone. 723-3474. 4 | Oshawa majoriettes brought home 17 trophies from the Trent River National Baton Twirling Contest held recently in the memorial arena at Peterbor- ough. The contest drew 600 en- tries from many sections of On- tario as well as Utica, N.Y. The Tartan Twirlers from the Harvey Dance Academy brought home 17 trophies which were won for fancy drill conps, team twirl, dance twirl, solo twirl, military and fancy strut. The Tartan Blues Juvenile Corp won second place under Captain Marilyn Cross. Mem- bers of the troup were: Cindy |Chamberlin, Wendy Allin, Wendy Smith, Sherry Davis, Kathy Ross, Jane Krantz, Wendy Ewart, Valerie Brooks, Marilyn Elsey, Cheryl Young) and Margaret Newell. | | The Tartan Lassie Junior) |Corps won third place under] \Captain~ Karen Branton |Memebrs of 'the troupe were: |Patsy Blake, Linda. Bryant, |Dale Wilson, Gayle McNally, |Joan Major, Diana Thertell, Oheryl McCune, Lola Moore, Brenda Henning, Debbie. Zaka- row, Leslyn Chamberlin. The Sea Cadet drummers, Jim Bez- zant, Wayne Elliott and Mario Panylo did much to help the Lassies with their snappy beat. The Tartan Lassie Team Twirl, »with Leader Patsy Blake and Twirlers Dale Wiilsdn, Gayle McNally, Joan Major, Cheryl] McCune, Brenda Hen- ning and Leslyn Chamberlin, |won finst place. | The Lassies Cha Cha Dance| jand Twirl placed fourth with 1 leader Gayle McNailily and dane. ers Dale Wilson, Patsy Blake, Joan Major, Cheryl] McCune, Lola Moore. Marilyn Cross placed second in Military Sturt 7-10 wears; and Karen Branton 8th in the ll-14 year group. There were about 40 in each group. In Fancy Strut Brenda Hen- ning was third, Judy Harper, fourth and Karen Branton sixth in the 11-14 yr, group. Other results were: Intermediate solo, 7-8 years-- Margaret Newell, first. place second 86.1; Linda Ferrell, place, 82.6. Advanced solo, 7-8 years -- Cheryl Young, fourth place 73.8. Novice solo, 9-10 years, Kathy Ross, first place 80.6; Wendy Smith, 74.5. Intermediate 9-10 -- Marilyn Cross, 75.8; Maifilyn Ellsey, 75.6. Advanced 9-10 -- Cindy Cham- berlin, 77.17. Novice 11-12 years -- Dale Wilson, 4th, 79.4; Diane Ther- tell, 78.4. Intermediate, 11-12, -- Gayle McNally and Cheryl McCune, 74.6 Advanced, 11-12 -- Patsy Blake 82.8. Novice 13-14 years -- Suzanne Williams, second place 81.3; Joan Major 75.3. Intermediate 13-14 -- Leslyn Chamberlin, third 78.3; Judy Harper, fourth 77.7. Advanced, 13-14 -- Brenda Henning 77.77; Karen Bran- ton, 77. : Miss Junior Trent River Championship 11-14 years -- Patsy Blake, 82.1,

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