oo ts aria eI genet norma RNR § THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursdey, March 11, 1965 -- Bay Ridges Residents Plan Blitz For Hall BAY RIDGES (Staff) -- Bay Ridges ratepayers, at a general meeting Wednesday night, dis- cussed such items as telephone rates, juvenile delinquency and a Community Hall in_ the Frenchman's Bay Community. The Board of Transport Com- missioners, answering a request by the ratepayers, told them it was unable to do anything about the increase in telephone' rates in the Dunbarton ex- change recently. Ratepayers were also informed that the board was unable to take any action on the fact 'that the Ohawa telephone book did not contain all the numbers that can be reached from the Dunbarton exchange. The hoard, however, promis- ed the ratepayers that it would ask the Bell Telephone Co. to look into the matter. Dunbarton phone rates went up recently when the number of telephones in the exchange reached the 20,000 mark. Ratepayers at the meeting said their long distance bill equalled their telephone bill be- cause most of them are from the metro area to which there is a toll charge. It was decided by the mem- bers to let the telephone matter rest until the Bell Telephone Co. does a survey of the area in April. Ratepayers' President Byron Lowe told the members that the executive committee had protested to the Pickering Townhip Council about the propoed $10 per meeting pay- ment to the senior township parks board. Mr. Lowe said council had since decided not to pay the board. Mr. Lowe also reported the executive committee had also protested about the 90 per cent farm exemption on the town- ship fire rate. A motion was carried at the meeting that Pickering Town- ship Council be requested to place crossing guards at the Holy Redeemer separate school and at the Bay School, both on Liverpool road. It was also car- ried that the police report, sub- mitted by Chief Reginald Park- er to Council last July, be im- formation had already been lage were sent a questionnaire last summer were willing to pay $5 a foot frontage for the installation of sewers. should ask the commission for a date when it will make the application to the Ontario Muni- cipal Board on behalf of the vil- ed limited parking in the Bay Ridges subdivision, a sidewalk between the Base Line and) been threatened with a knife and several others complained about the fights around the g the juve- Highway 2 and a reduced speed limit along the Base Line from Liverpool road to Kroano bou- levard. Several ratepayers informed the membership about the teen- age problem around the Liver- pool road south shopping area. One member said his son had Pickering Asks Action By Board PICKERING (Staff) -- At a meeting of Pickering Village Council Tuesday night Council- lor Basil Kearney requested council to stop shilly-shallying with the Ontario Water Re- sources Commission which is preparing the village request for permission from the Ontario Municipal Board to install sani- tary sewers in the village. Mr. Kearney said that the commission is tying the village|f application up in paper work and the village might as well deal with one government de- partment. The matter was brought up after Clerk Bruce Hogarth told council the Water Resources shoppi niles. subdivision's 1500 homes h the support of all the service clubs in the area as area A motion to obtain the neces- ary fund to build a commu- nity hall by a local improve- ment debenture, which would] cost home owners 50 cents a year on their tax bill for the next 20 years, was voted down by the ratepayers. BLITZ PLANNED The Bay Ridges Parks Board with the help of local service clubs. will Ridges area in a one-day blitz April 10 to obtain the $37,000 necessary to build a community hall. canvass the Bay The hall, a 50-120-foot building would include two small meet- ing rooms, kitchen and wash- room facilities room and will cost $50,000. The Consolidated Building Corpora- tion, the developer of the sub- division, $10,000 toward the structure and the parks board has $3,000 in its coffers for the project. and a_ cloak has agreed to pay The one-day blitz through the has well as our churches. About $25 per home is needed to make the Community Hall a reality. It was mentioned at the Wednes- day night meeting that the com- munity hall project could pos- ibly curb the quent problem in the area. teenage delin- Commission had sent him an- other letter asking if the vil- lage property owners had agreed to pay frontage to cover some of the expenses for the sanitary sewers. Mr. Hogarth said all this in- given to the commission. Property owners in the vil- asking if they Council decided the clerk B plemented. Mr. Parker suggest- 4 lage. 3 TOP QUALITY 4MM Isolation Theme To Unitarians Man not become & does human being simply by being h born into the species . . . hejpassable condition. cannot function as a whole man in an isolated state, the Osh- awa Unitarian Fellowship was told Sunday. Speaker was Edward W. Braunlich who outlined _ his theme with the topic: "Free- dom and the Wolf-Man". Preceding the talk Mrs. Carro raunlich read verses from Edna St. Vincent Millay's "Epi- taph for the Race of Man" RANDOM "VEED" MAHOGANY s PANELLING No] MAHOGANY OPEN DAILY FIRST COME FIRST SERVED ON THIS SPECIAL BUY! Council Asks Road Repair PICKERING (Staff) -- Trucks being used for the construction of the 34-room addition to Pick- ering District High School are breaking up village roads. At a meeting of the village council Tuesday, Reeve Ross Murison was called to tiie phone by an irate taxpayer who claimed he could not enter his driveway because the large trucks used on the construciion job had torn up the road in front of his residence on Park road. Clerk Bruce Hogarth said he had received several calls at the office about the large trucks using Park road, to haul leads of dirt from the excavation for storm sewers for the high school in a field adjacent to Park road. Councillor Basil Kearney sug- gested that Park road was a no-exit street and should be barricaded preventing the trucks from using it. Mr. Kear- ney also suggested the trucks were probably carrying more than the required half load and that the Pickering Township Po- lice Department should escort each one to the weighing station. Reeve Murison suggested the contractor was responsible for the roads and that he be asked to keep them in passable condi- tion Councillor Vic Dingley sug- gested that by the time the high school addition is built every road in the village would be broken up. Councillor Wilfred Hunt asked why no agreement had been made by the village that the contractor be held re- sponsible for the condition of the roads. Councillor Kearney said that it was too late for that now and that it had been an oversight. Council decided to have Roads Committee chairman, Clare Balsdon: visit the field office of the contractor and request that the roads being used for trucks be graded by them and kept in SOUNDPROOF HOMES LONDON (AP) -- The Labor government announced Wednes- day a $7,000,000 program iur soundproofing homes against jet noise around London Airport. About 60,000 houses are in- volved. Grants of 50 per cent of the cost of soundproofing up to three rooms will be made by the government, with the maxi- mum grant $300 a house. BIG 40 FOOT BUNDLES 1'0" x 6'6" 16" x 6'6" 1'8" x 6'6" 110" x 6'6" 2'0" x 6'6" 22" x. 6'6" 2'4" 6'6" 2'6" 6'6" 2'8" 6'6" i BUY ANY QUANTITY--FOR VARNISH STAIN OR PAINT FINISH AJAX YARD 161 DOWTY ROAD OFF HIGHWAY NO. 401 AT INTERCHANGE 66 $3.56 $4.09 $4.30 $4.52 ea. ont San ROCKWOOL Ya" x4' x8 PANELLING 4.74 ea. pope cc. ~=INSULATION SANDED & Layers per bu - -- xO- ee ' "$5.29 on. 2, Pe orem ss ret 1x 6-8)... $4.25 $5.49 00.09 ber 'Conte 3 $3 1 8 dite gee In Smaller lots add 20c a 8 feet long 1.1 M.M. H BROOKLIN PHONE 942-1221 Corner Highways No. 7 and No. 12 PHONE 655-3313 4 Full 9" x 9" YARD 2 From A$ 2 FAMOUS ¢ NAME Company 8 A.M.to 6 P.M. SATURDAY 'til 5 25 CARTON LOTS OF NAME BRAND ECONOMY GRADE 2x 4's VINYL ASBESTOS 2 SAVE > FLOOR TILE $ SAVE $ 4 31: IGH VINYL CONTENT Val PER TILE 5 Nice Vinylflex lors In Carton Lots of 112 Pieces 34" MAHOGANY CUPBOARD PLYWOOD AROMATIC CEDAR CLOSET LINING FACTORY GRADE laard, 243 Lupin drive, Whitby, is reported in satisfactory con- dition in Oshawa General Hos- pital following a one-car acci- dent Wednesday morning on Township, was on his way to the communication system was described from its early begin- ning right up to the present day. operation with the iohases brought forward by a co-ordination of resources be- has been awarded Australia's highest TV prize as the most popular overseas program. KNOTTY PINE 4-PIECE BATH SET Ruto Hits Tree Driver Injured AJAX (Staff) -- George Kol- Highway 2, at Audley road. Mr. Kollaard, a teacher at the Brock Road School, Pickering school when his car went out of control and struck a tree on the south side of the highway. The vehicle, a late model convert- ible, was completely wrecked. He suffered a fractured wrist, fractured ankle and lacerations about the face. Pickering Town- ship police investigated. Canada Is Hub Cable System WHITBY (Staff) -- 'Canada is the hub of world cable system', Whitby Rotarians were inform- ed at a recent luncheon meet- ing. Guest speaker was W. J. Burnett, traffic representative, Canadian Overseas Telecommu- nication Corporation. Describing the complexity of the Trans-Atlantic cable system, the speaker suggested Canada has made a vast step forward in inter-communication between this country and the four cor- ners of the world. Under the 'system' almost any part of the world is as close as the tele- phone, a fact clearly indicating the advancement of modern technology. "In a few short years great changes in communication be- tween countries of the world has occurred," Mr. Burnett stated. "Canada has played a major role in this program." Further- ing the verbal description of telecommunicaiton was an ex- cellent 'film' which left nothing to the imagination. Step by step, Car Damage Is Light PICKERING (Staff) -- Police Chief Reginald Parker in a let- ter to Protective Service Com- mittee Chairman Wilfred Hunt told counci] Tuesday that only 20 motor vehicle accidents had occurred in the village during 1964 involving 39 cars. Chief Parker of the Picker- ing Township Police, whichpa- trols the village, said that dam- age to the vehicles had been $5,139 and that only minor in- juries had been sustained in the accidents, He said only one accident had occurred at the village's main intersection. after a flood of complaints was received at the municipal office. Mr. Kearney asked council to make up its mind and either enforce the bylaws or forget about having them. Protective Services Commit- tee Chairman Hunt suggested that another advertisement tell- ing villagers that pylaws would be enforced be placed in the local paper. ag action was taken by coun- cu, TO VISIT ROME LONDON (AP)--Prime Minis- ter Wilson's office announced Wednesday he will visit Rome April 27-29. A spokesman said it had not yet been decided whether the prime minister would have an auéence with Pope. Paul. would like to see the ladies "have a project of their own", Miss Adams said the home safety project would attempt to reduce the number of accidents in homes particularly involving children. : Home Safety For City Safety Unit Oshawa Safety League may branch into the home safety field. 2 Judith E. Adams, director of Between the home safety division of the ' Toes : Ontario Safety League, attend- F. Relief ed last night's meeting promot- _e : ing the advantages of such a or program. Painful She said such a program|Foot Trouble could be expanded throughout ies Spaniel Sag various organizations in the oe Percept sad sone ego ain abs city and include the fire de-|most instantly ... lity, Seonaee them when used the separate partment, public health nurses and the medical field. Jim Fe'tis. chairman of the Oshawa Safety League, said he medicated disks included. D! Scholls Lino-pads Chief Parker suggested that a traffic signal be put up at the intersection of Kingston road and Church street in the village or that a pedestrian crosswalk be put into service. He said that if a crosswalk is installed it would elimiriate a good deal of parking on Kingston road. Councillor Basil Kearney ask- ed council to make up its mind about the village's parking by- law. Last year, after placing an ad in The Pickering News that all bylaws would be enforced in the village, police ticketed all cars parked overnight in the village and then were asked by council to rescind the tickets Here is a plan to provide fo you survive . . . You make $300 A MONTH FOR LIFE you start receiving $300 a month for life, or if vou prefer, $44,150 in cash, Both of these amounts can be increased by leaving your dividends on deposit. Should you not survive te age 65, a minimum of $30,000 will be paid immediately to your family. sscesnmesgconnannen Dy FROM AGE 65 your family if you should die, or for your retirement yeors if regular payments to the Sun Life of Canada, then at age 65, By completing the enquiry form below, you can obtain details suitable to your personal situation. 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