Oshawa Times (1958-), 15 Jul 1965, p. 5

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a | 4 1 : ; ea tht: k wren. ane hele cen tate een tien cae ae ea being taught daily to young- sters of all ages at the Whit- by Community Swimming TRAINING IN WATER safety and the correct me- thod of staying afloat are 600 Children Receive Swimming Instruction WHITBY (Staff)--The Whitby Community Swimming Pool is the big attraction these days as the thermometer soars into the high 70's, More than 600 chil- dren, enrolled in swimming pool has been given daily since the pool opened and will con- tinue until the closing in Sep- tember. During August, it was noted, information on swimming classes, are receiving daily training by qualified instruc- tors. Swimming instruction is pro- vided Monday to Friday at the 1 located in the Kinsman Park, Byron and Walnut sts. Hours of instruction are 8.30 a.m. to 2,30 p.m, with the large number of children divided among various groups accord- ing to age. In addition to the preliminary and more ad- vanced instruction, a Royal Lifesaving class is also receiv- Ing excellent guidance, taking ver the pool at 5 p.m. daily. Instruction and supervision at fhe pool is provided by Dave instruction periods will be made known to the parents of all children through the medium of the telephone. Dave Davidson, the pool supervisor, stated there is still opportunity for parents to enroll their youngsters in the beginners' class, Commenting on the use of the pool, the supervisor stated the coolness of the weather has limited pool use to some ex: tent. He estimated the record day's attendance at approxi- mately 400 persons at public swimming sessions, "This is one reason why the perees assisted by three able|community should have an in-jat the appropriate time, it wasiRose, Berhart Roth, Linda leguards, Joey Bryant, Diane jr eos the ; ceo explained, | Smith. | McIlveen and Barry Davidson|stated. " an Indoor pool) Now in the discussion stage! paws Ss : perform the numerous chores|both children and adults could)js adult 'swimming sessions. It PS bd Nanline wheueaee obtain more swimming time if a pool was available all year round," The pool is open from 2.30 around the pool including the job of keeping a watchful eye on the activities, Swimming instruction at the Whitby PUC Purchases Heydenshore Park Area plan to cover the country withh MONTREAL (CP) -- More WHITBY Staff) -- Whitby|manufacturer, from a Mr. Hey-|, network of television stations residents will have a new parklden, It was from him that the|>srorin teh tates wien Ga fice in in the near future. The Heyden- catering states, vain Wednesday as explosions shore area, located east of the\*evelopment received its name. ges and a population of/wined out a row of CPR ware- pumping station on the lake-| The first cottages, many of{nearly 500,000,000. (a piusiin Gemeicuaee shore, hes been purchased by|which are still standing, were) The plan has been approvedim omen mastered bl 7 the Whitby Public Utilities Com-|puilt by the late Mr. Hatch, the|by the cabinet and will cost an cher bad vonsd' the mission for $38,000. late Mr, Gold, the late Dr.jestimated | %,000,000.000 | Fupeet buildings. TH ged Bg ng A Bet binges = Charles F, McGillivray, the late|{? oan during the Flames reaching a pile of be used for future expansion of/George Ross, a Whitby Mer! i weekly educational televi-lexplosions which locaton. the the waterworks department. chant; Mr. Whitfield, a Whitbyision programs were int ia ae eee the "We intend to clean it up and|druggist, who was the fatherleyoerimentally in New Delhi in bomen. then turn a into * pare for voll iene ee of T0-11959, The ministry of informa i Whitby residents," he said, |ronto, who for many years was The" purchase consists of 13,5]manager of the Dominion Banko ant ore ang earl acres of land plus a water lot of 13 acres, "with the purchase of the land," Mr, Simpson said, "'we can now control the use it might have been put to when in private hands." The land 'now occupied by '|Heydenshore was purchased by the late Fred Hatch, a Whitby given their first instruction Poo! in the Kinsman Park, Walnut and Byron sts, In the above photo toddlers are by trained lifeguards on duty at the pool, --Oshawa Times Photo Pupils Named For Diplomas The following Courtice High School students have been re- commended to receive their Sec- ondary School Graduation Dip- lomas, subject to approval of the Department of Education: Klaus Anselstetter, Charles Ashton, Jean. Baker, Brian Bradley, Judy Branton, Larry Broome, David Brown, John Cousins, Joan Dalby, Ted Do- broshisnky, Marion Essery, second swimming pool injRoger Farrow, Sharon Fisher, Whitby a special advantage Michael Gibbs, John Gilbert, would be derived, the super-\A®drew Goodwin, Donna Good- win, David Green, William Hall visor suggested, Competitivelnoreen Hamer, John Hancock. swimming and olympic type f Edward Hanewich, training would be available for! Shirley Johnston, Wayne Jor- anyone who desired to excell iniqan Jo; i the water. In reference to the an, Joseph Korak, Feul Le t Chapelle, Alex Laird, Stephen competitive form of recreation, |r int; 7e : it was noted, the local commu-|yponer, ge ag ne MeNai 4 nity pool will hold competitions cNair, Wendy Nesbitt, Chris tine Pamment, Randee Peel with Ajax and Oshawa within|p Pot a couple weeks, Further news syne Potapchuk, Wendel! Prime, Jer of these events will be released Roberua, Dovid "beans oe p.m, to 5 p.m. and 6.30 p.m, to 8.30 p.m., Monday to Friday for public swimming, Saturdays and Sundays. the pool is open from 2 p.m, to 5 p.m. Life- guards are on duty at all times when the pool is in use, Thrgugh the addition of a has been suggested the adults may have the pool to them- selves 5 to 6 p.m, each Satur- day. David Tonkin, Willlam Turko- cio, June Turnbull, Mary Van Camp, Ben Watson, Betty Jane Werry, Ronald Wilton, Thomas PUC To Spend $163,000 On Capital Works Program WHITBY. (Staff) -- The Whit- {ties Commission expects to spend more than $163,000 on a capital works program this|the electrical department is up year, $22,000 over last year. This figure will take in both WATER DEPARTMENT departments of the PUC --| The water department is electrical and water. jdown almost $9,000 from last The electrical department has|¥¢4!, but a $216,000 debenture ; < to build a new pump house has fgg ggg an estimated) on approved, Last year the k : installation of new 24 and 18-inch Improvements to street light- Bn feeder mains was debentured ee the building of a neWlat a cost of $214,000, substation are the two biggest) 'The Jargest slice of the $49,000 items on the budget, with $20,000/hudget, $23,000, will go to in- slotted for each. Water heater|.ta1) new mains and hydrants in installations will account forline town. another $30,000. | A new digging machine called Improvements to the districtia backhoe will cost $10,000 and service, lands and buildings willinew water meters $5,000. cost an estimated $18,000, | The remaining $11,000 will go Line transformers, meters, of-|to pay for new trucks, tools, fice equipment, tools transmis- buildings and payments on the sion line and trucks and equip-|booster pumping station. ments will take the remaining $45,000. This year's expenditures for 60 Sex-Criminals Shipped From Millbrook To Mimic TORONTO (CP)--Sex offend-|pected to be completed by Fri: fl the maximum-security day, rook, Ont., reformatory! Mr, Grossman said there ts will be transferred to the AleX\no vocational training at the re- G. Brown Memorial Clinic for/formatory because "they are alcoholics and drug addicts atithe kind of inmates that refuse nearby Mimico, Reform Institu-|tg eo-operate in any kind of pro- tions Minister Allan Grossman| gram. |. . They represent seri- yn ee oe Fed behavior problems." r. Grossman said in an in-| ye gai i ' : terview the transfer of some of eear Stang, ae tovtenee the 60 sex offenders is immi-\the investigators and whatever nent. The other 160 Millbrook) -- en as drugicorrections committee on voca- oo: yes ag y sang oo tional training in provinciai in- 0 defy attempts at rehabili-|stitutions will make in future. | eS Wo Clue Found The minister was discussing! his department's investigation of alleged brutality and un- favorable conditions at Mill- brook, near Peterborough. proposals a labor-management-| Deputy Minister L. R. Hackl! confirmed Wednesday that) guards used tear gas on about) 20 reformatory prisoners last| week. He said they had become) unruly and it was a choice of! using physical force or "giving| them a taste of tear gas to sub-) tian committee set up to inves- tigate a Pakistani airliner crash that killed 121. people near here May 20 has been unable to find any explanation. To Air Mishap CAIRO (Reuters)--An Egyp- The committee announced to- due them." iday it has completed its in- Tear gas has been used iniquiry. But a spokesman. said it other provincial institutions oc-\has been unable to establish casionally, he said, but this was|why the Pakistani Airways jet- the first time at Millbrook. liner came down in the desert The investigation followed thejafter reporting normal condi- conviction last week of five/tions at 1,500 feet. prisoners on charges of arson.) The May 20 crash has been| They said they set the fires to|1965's worst air disaster so far. advertise bad conditions and|Of the 127 passengers and crew,| their complaints about brutality|121 were killed. All six surviy- after other methods of protestjors were injured. The only oc- had failed. cupants unhurt were six caged Chief Inspector David Dougall|baboons. Worden, Mary Yeo, Jan Zavit- sky, Bradley Wins Judging Test ORONO Brian Bradley placed first Tuesday in the senior section of the 4-H judg- ing competition held here for all Durham County Junior Farmers, Second place was taken by "3 Whitby and R. 8. McLaugh- Heydenshore Park, following the First World War, boasted a pavilion where dances were held, The park was the centre of activity during the summer months for many of the leading families of the town. NATRE BEATS MACHINE WATERLOO, England (CP)-- David Maskery parked his car on the beach at this resort town near Liverpool but found it hub- deep in the soft sand when he wanted to drive home. He ar- ranged for it to be towed out next morning, but the car was nowhere to be seen, It had sunk ldeeper into the sand and been covered by an unusually high NEW DELHI (Reuters)--In- dia is preparing an ambitious 2 AE Ret ag RARE AS A ap 5 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursdey, July 15, 1965 To Whole Country| Blasts Wipe Out CPR Warehouses ment has justified the develop- ment of television throughout India, Regular daily programs, with more emphasis on entertain- ment, are due to begin in New Delhi in August. At present, the capital has only 600 receivin sets, mostly in schools a community centres, WILL COACH HORNETS PITTSBURGH (AP) -- Eddie Bush, 47, a veteran with almost 30 years experience in hockey's playing and coaching ranks, was named Wednesday as coach of Pittsburgh Hornets in the American Hockey League. Last year, Bush coached Mem- phis in the Central Professional tide, Hockey League. = = oO a Z = asa " SUMMER CLEARANCE ALL SUMMER WEAR. Ladies' @ Gents' ® Children's In the log Hamer, second and Jim Allin third, were 43 registered. David Kel- took first novice section there place, David second and Phillip Lynn Brown and third by m David Brackenridge. BROCK _ fvening Shows fe 7 Pa. Twenty farmers registered inj WHITBY Matinee Saturday At 1: the senior section, wins In the junior section, wit MGM wf * +f registered, Terry Maicolm wd ° J placed first, Sharon Larmer ASuw Keroman Phoouenow « ff Olan placed third. The competition involved judging of eight different class- es: oats, hay, apples, potatoes, beef, dairy, swine and sheep, A special identification' sec- tion was also established where club members had to identify different varieties of grain, plants and grass, The competition was spon- sored by the department of hnetegersoO™ untae BOP agriculture at Bowmanville, Also 2nd, Feature Attraction "DAY OF THE BADMAN" In Color With -- Fred MacMurray, Joan Weldon DEPT. WHITBY MERCANTILE ° Air-conditioned and soft musi¢ for your shopping pleasure! OPEN FRI. NIGHTS 9 P.M. --FREE PARKING STORE © PLAZA pr RMN ON ND Nine Girls A BAD SPELL 'Rescued On | oF SKEETERS | CALGARY (CP) -- The city's mosquito problem is | a e uron acute after recent rains | washed teed chemical SPANISH, Ont. (CP) -- The sprays, Park Superinten- utente' Of bine "lris balloved dent Harry Boothman says. missing in northern Lake Huron| _ The mosquitos have inter- since Tuesday afternoon heaved rupted backyard barbecues, a sigh of relief late Wednesday| Chased children from play- after a pilot with Huronia Air} Stounds and made.a game | |- Services of Elliot Lake, Ont,,| Of golf sheer misery. Drug- spotted their daughters stranded| Stores say the demand for on a small island, repellants is three times n normal An RCAF spokesman at) Mr. Boothman described search and: rescue headquarters at Trenton, Ont., reported the) girls were in good condition and| RCAF, RCMP and _ provincial| police had reached the party on| PASTORS STALK DRIVERS Eagle Island, about five miles} HALIFAX (CP) -- Two local jsouth of Spanish. churches are providing drive-in | He said an RCMP cutter wasiservices during the summer to |to take them today to Spanish,|offset customarily low church 80 miles west of Sudbury, jattendance in the hot weather. The girls -- Diana McPher-| Rev. George L. MecNeill's Bed- son, 20, Nancy Barnard, 14,|ford Baptist Church is near a Kitty Slater, 15, Caroline -Von|8pot favored by Sunday drivers, Otter, 14, Sue Wigley, 15, Kathy|and Faith Pentecostal Taber- |Harper, 15, all of Toronto, A. G,jnacle takes an organist and a |Laughton, 14, of Grand Bend,|choir of 30 to a shopping centre jOnt., and Susan Boyer, 15, andjon a platform truck, \Christin Reimers, 15, both of} ---------- |Oakville--had been on the island since Tuesday night. FISH ERMEN |STARTED FROM CAMP | The girls were believed to jhave been taken to the mouth of| |the Serpent River, 87 miles west jof Sudbury, by car or train from camp Mi--A-Konda near Parry Sound, 55 miles northwest jof Oriiiia. | They travelled in up to four! jcanoes from the Serpent to the! mouth of the French River on jManitoulin Island, 80 miles; southesst of Sudbury | Whitby, Onr % ps * Lh aM believed to) ave forc e girls on to f Eagle Island and kept them $2.00 there until spotted by Mr. Dale. | Fears for their safety grew|] Maximum Service Charge after the group was seen head- ing past nearby Boyd Island|} 'ncludes cleaning, citing, greas- lighthouse into open waters|| (n@ and adjusting, Parts extra. Tuesday afternoon. the worst on record, it as one of mosquito years Reel, Rod Repairs Send No Money C.0.D. Only Sportsman's Corner a aaa lt. FREE! Extra Trouser RUSSIA PRINTS MOST The U.S.S.R. publishes more books each year than any other} country in the world, 73,999) titles in 1961 as opposed to Brit-| ain's 24,892 and the U.S.A's! 18,060. SESSION ARE 5S Sa with FREEMAN'S every made-to-measure suit FORMAL RENTALS Made to Measure Clothes || @ House of Hobberlin @ Tip Top Tailors so USS Regular or Summer weight mat- erial, Any style available. . .: Limited time only, |MERCANTILE | DEPT. STORE omy meceuene and Douglas Penfold, a psychol- os ogist in charge of staff training, INDIANS SPLIT UP arrived at Millbrook Monday to; The divorce rate in New Delhi carry out the investigation. Mr.|(poptlation 260,272) doubled in EEVE MEN'S SHOP 321 BROCK ST. S. WHITBY PLAZA ¥ Beat SANS Before you Buy a Bug or a Beetle-Drive CMI's new Bellet will change your point of view about Bellett costs about the same as the wn cars, It's the Beautiful just as economical to run. And it has the support of a full Canadian service network. End of comparison. CMI's new Bellett has handsome, contemporary styling. (Your neigh- bours won't make jokes about it--they may even envy you a little.) Bellett is all power. It has 71 horsepower and a butter-smooth four speed transmission that lets you run circles around the other imports, Bellett is luxurious. Full carpeting, bucket seats, whitewalls, chrome WRAL Bellett Hackl said the report was ex-two years to $62 last year. '| 129 Brock St. $., Whitby I |209 DUNDAS STREET WEST wheel discs, padded dash, armrests, cigarette lighter are all standard pie er a ae many cars costing twice the price look under- , you consider an imported car, treat yourself to a drive in the hot, tuxurious new Bellett. See your CMI dealer today and drive home a bargain. 24 hour service protection. CANADIAN MOTOR INDUSTRIES LIMITED, 2000 EGLINTON AVENUE EAST, FORONTD MONTREAL: 2244 COTE DES NEIGES - VANCOUVER: 1345 WEST GEORGIA ; BESTWAY MOTORS DIAL 668-4792 , WHITBY

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