Oshawa Times (1958-), 14 Oct 1965, p. 13

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y The Oshawa Times OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1965 Move That Junk 'Some Say Debris successfully enforced in the eR aah A, ae "All grounds, yards and va- cant lots in Oshawa are sup- posed to be kept "clear and ciean of debris ai--ahi--times, It could cost somedne as someone as much as $300 if -they are not, A seven-year-old city bylaw requires that "The owners and occupants of all grounds, yards and vacant lots in the city shall keep such properties clean and clear of all debris at all times .. ." RAISED AT COUNCIL The debris problem, which has been raised several times this year at city council meet- ings, prompted Ald. Norman Down to ask what action could be taken by the city. In the bylaw, debris includes all rubble, ruins and waste or discarded material of any kind. past, says the building inspec- tor of the city shall inspect or eatise--to--be--inspected_grounds, | yards and vacant lots and in the event that such properties have not been kept clean and clear of debris, the inspector, shall by written notice require that such properties be cleaned and clear- ed of debris. $300 FINE Every person who contra- venes any provisions of the by- law shall be guilty of an of- fence and liable upon conviction to' a penalty of not more than $300, exclusive of costs, for each offence. Fred Crome, city works. com- missioner, says one of the diffi- culties in enforcing the bylaw is convincing property owners and the court that the debris is ac- Bomb Sc 'Teamster Meetin Two Oshawa men have a chance to pick up $150,000 TWO OSHAWA MEN HOLDING Strikers, Welders Quit $150,000 RACE TICKETS | | | O re @D T! O --_ aon as & Building During Search Saturday on the running of the Cambridgeshire at New- market, England. Ray Collins, 35, of 752 Glengrove, has a ticket on Burning Torch. Nikolaj Woytowich, Largess. Favorites are not known yet; odds will be available tomorrow. Mrs. Collins said today she received a telegram con- firming the ticket draw this morning. She has not been able to reach her husband, a 'main- tenance worker at Houdaille Industries Limited. Mrs, Col- lins said her husband buys sweep tickets "all the time'. The couple has three children, the oldest six. The Times was not able to contact Mr. Woytowich, a General Motors employee. The Cambridgeshire, run over a mile and one-eighth course, is worth $150,000 to persons holding winners' tickets, $60,000 to those with second-place horses and $30,000 for third. Drawing a horse, even if it means a payment of around $1,200. A bomb scare drove mem-jafter a hoaxer called there anf bers of Local 938, International|warned of a hidden bomb in Brotherhood of Teamsters, from|the building. > |a special meeting held last night} When the meeting reconvened at the Bond st. United Auto|the six-member management Workers Hall. team answered questions froth Some 200 wildcat strikers,|the floor contract negotia- jmeeting to hash out issues in|tions, said Roya Collacutt, p \dispute, filed out of the building|ident of Woods Transport a while Oshawa police searched|Cartage Ltd. for the bomb. Management rep-| resentatives invited to the meet-| 'PERFECT GENTLEMEN' . ing also left the hall while the| He said that the wildcatters search was underway. |were not hostile to the company jmen. "They behaved like per- WELDERS INTERRUPTED \fect gentlemen," he said. : A get together by city welders| In spite of the polite hearing was also interrupted for 15 min-jno Teamster returned to work utes while the five-man police|this morning, he said. 'I think squad conducted the search. (some of them wanted to." After the police announced! "I wish they would return to \that the building was bomb-free|work and let us get back to the the Teamsters returned to the|bargaining table," said Mr. meeting in a basement room. | Collacutt. * Police Chief Herbert Flintoff; The wildcat strike began here 'Rent Due From Strikers 'csi se Givin' "ae comes ssn Rule Slammed By Labor Glenholme Training Centre The bylaw, which has been|tually "junk". Want To Aid City Youth? Send Brief To Committee The Select Committee on|wider participation by youth in|' Youth of the Ontario Legislature /the life of the community would will be aided by a special Osh-|.1.0 be welcomed awa committee to collect briefs} i: from city groups and organiza-| The Oshawa commitiee will tions. lbe chaired by Stewart Alger. The Select Committee is|Rev. Percy Manuel has been scheduled to meet Noy. 15 atjappointed secretary, Barnard Oshawa City Hall under the|Lewis is in charge of the pro- chairmanship of Sylvanus Apps,|gram and Bernard Muzeen of MPP. The committee seeks|public relations. Other mem- briefs with reference to educa-|bers are Ruth Higgins, Harold tional, cultural, recreational and|.McNeill, Wendell Brewster, employment opportunities as|Gerry Gellette, T. L. Wilson well as health, welfare andjand Rey. Marshall Beriault. sports facilities available to, Briefs may be submitted to Oshawa youth, |the Oshawa Citizens' Committee | Briefs outlining steps whichjon Youth, P.O. Box 321, 'Osh- could be taken to ensure alawa, before Nov. 2. ntown Brighter | 155 Huron, holds a ducat on Canadian Press says " is scratched, usually The Ontario Housing Author-|collect rents from striking steel- Make Dow To Live In, Says Planner ingrained in contemporary plan-| ning thought. BOTTOMS UP 'N OVER It was.a battle of the against Millbrook High little high school giants yes- School with a school popu- terday at the _ bi-school lation of 125. The over-all Gets Official Nod, Oct. 23 its rental regulations at the) "Apparently the regulations) e 5 ICla 0 . ct. oe tee toh of oa a Say that the rent must be col-| The new Glenholme Traininga large trade in Christmas a i ee ves a lected on the day due, during/Centre is to be officially openedjcards. Lon for Leal i817, United eoicicl Sian eocs on October 23, at Cee om. . Glenholme has recently been : ih . ? sic, Ue, " Key, © presi-| The centre, which is run byjadded to the list of agencies b In every instance of down eigen coatat ee dent, said that the OHA catches|the Oshawa and District Asso-|the Greater Oshawa Comeau side aches ts, Onttiln 'te ltr inited the OC Sad t0 the tenant both ways. "During a|ciation for Retarded Children, is|Chest. june 2 , strike, when the striker has a|on Wellington st. e. Millbrook's 29944 points. In the above picture, Dave Bal- lingall of CHS vaults high emphasis has been almost ex- clusively on improvement as a place of business -- but nothing has been done to make it an attractive place to live. J. R. Bousfield, a Toronto. con- sulting engineer and town plan- ner, told more than 400 persons last night at the sixth annual civic dinner of the Oshawa and District Real Estate Board that "this is the missing objective". He said this serious omission derives. from an_atti- tude towards cities which is peculiarly North American. "The tidy-mindedness in our approach to zoning, the insist- ence that commercial shall be here and residential shall be games in Blackstock. It pit- ted Cartwright High School with a total enrolment of 87 in the air in the pole vault competition. --Oshawa Times Photo championship and_ trophy was copped by CHS which amassed 311% points to there and never the twain shall meet, especially if we can find a nice greenbelt to separate them, has contributed to the sterility of our urban environment more than any single factor. The speaker said "downtown liveability will not be achieved without costs. "These costs will be in terms of stringent air pollution control, a much greater provision of| CAMPAIGN HQ ROUNDUP Liberals To Grit Judy LaMarsh, Canada's. health and welfare minister, will|ple -- and as far as the Lib- Judy La Marsh Teeth Tonight? He cited one of the goals as a $4,500 a year income for farm- ers, which is comparable to a fact seems to bother some peo- "HERE and THERE The Cannington - Sunderland Association of Fellowship Baptist Churches held their Annual Fall Rally on October 6 in Meadowcrest Baptist Church, Brooklin. Thirty-one of the 34 Fellowship Baptist Churches in this area were represented. In the afternoon session, the Rev. Robert Lytle of Calvary Baptist Church, Oshawa, was the speaker, and in the evening session, the Rev. Tom greatly reduced income there is no reduction on rent--then when a contract is signed and he has | accordance with ability to pay. 'SHOULD PROTEST' "We should protest this double standard in the OHA," mentary unemployment fits, then his rent is reduced, | The ceremony will be attend-/SEEKS EXPANSION ed by representatives of city) Miss Ann Jones, director Of council and the local 'clergy. |the centre, is aiming for an more money his rent is hiked. Rents in low rental housing in the city range from about|At sas ; $37 to $140 --. graduated in|USing the building's facil the tenants'|NEEDS USE The centre has been in oper- ation since May 1 of this year. At present some 16 children are ities. The building is capable of jhandling many more pupils iSlight disappointment has been expansion of the building's facil- ities. She is hoping sometime soon to introduce a domestie class for girls. The centre is also hoping to jwin contract work from local jindustry. At present all ap- proaches have been turned yy hygiene "When a guy|tarded children -- who must be aid off, and has no supple-|over 18--are not making greater bene-'use of the centre. | expressed by district association) epee officials that parents with | Stolen Car Found (In Municipal Lot One of the main occupations be in Oshawa today in support|erals are concerned, the scan- of Ontario Riding Liberal candi-|dals of people in high places has date, Dr. Claude Vipond. left the people of this riding She will arrive at 5 p.m., tour aghast." the Liberal committee rooms in| Today, Mr. Starr met with his the city, have dinner at the'campaign executive where de- Vipond residence, then addressitails of a hard-hitting final Canadian industrial worker. | Delaney of Bethel Baptist | "We should tell city counciljat the centre revolves around aj A car b FEED PROMISE GOOD owned by Gordon G, Church, Orillia, spoke. Both |to protest to the Ontario Legis-|small printing business. 'orres Mr. Honey said that Mr, Pear-| sessions were well attended, |lature, and to send their views! Dance and show tickets flow an cine ee Tout toe son's announcement last week! and approximately 300 were |to the Ontario Municipal Associ-/from the centre's small print-|/Adams furniture store on King that of a livestock feed board. present at the closing rally. ation," he said. jing presses. The children learnist. e. last night. will ensure feed grains will be| On Thanksgiving Day a group | Council voted to put the rele-|to set type and ready it for the} The car was_later recovered open space and landscaping, de- voting more area to récreational and cultural pursuits as well as in building ornamentation and street furniture." WANTED EXPERIENCE Mr. Bousfield said that last summer he decided to stay in Toronto for his vacation in- stead of packing the family off from this to Muskoka -- just to experience the city and go to those dozens of places he and his wife had been promising themselves they would do someday. "We had a wonderful time," he said. "However, most of my friends think I had a bad year in business after all, we weren't adding a room over the garage or anything like that, so why else would anyone stay in the city on vacation?" He said that when his mother head of his plans, "well son, maybe we'll all cut down a little this Christmas'. He said if people lived down- town, streets and utilities now used 10 to 12 hours a day would be used about 18 hours a day. 'REDUCES COSTS' "It is the peak hour problem that skyrockets the costs of| providing transit and vehicular| access to the downtown area.| Everyone who lives downtown! diminishes that problem and re- {duces these costs. | | "The--critical problem-in she saiireaching this objective will not! Michael 'be one of cost but in overcom- jing the inertia of our thinking; in substituting an experiménta! homes in the a party rally at 8 p.m. in Cen-|three-week campaign were dis- tral Collegiate ausitorium. Last night, Dr. Vipond ad- Ajax industrial plants. He lunch- ed at noon today with the Young will canvas new subdivisions in|Durham County, will. officially) Liberal Association in Oshawa. the Oshawa area and Friday|open the Conservative commit-| The Liberal candidate will be at the General Motors' north jadies and chairmen that com-jday. He spent most of the day|------ plant at 6 a.m. tomorrow and then at the Dunlop plant in paign in Pickering Township Starr, ._ Progressive Conservative candidate in On- tario riding, canvassed 350 Ajax area yes- Mr. Bousfield said he firmly,and imaginative approach, not|terday and has-come-to- several believes our downtowns can and should be made liveable. "To achieve this, we first must overcome the fears about mixing land uses which are so'our cities. only in government, but with planners, architects, developers, lenders and the public at large. "This is the real challenge of didate conclusions after analyzing his talks with constituents. "It would seem to me,"' said Mr. Starr, "that the NDP can- is a political unknown from outside the riding and this ' in public storage when, where and in the quantities needed. cussed. At noon today he ad- dressed a nominating conven-| dressed a workers' rally in Bay tion of the Hastings-Frontenac|TO OPEN ROOMS Ridges and this morning toured riding in Marmora. | Garnet B. Rickard, Progres- Tomorrow, the PC candidate|sive Conservative candidate: for evening will talk to the chair-|tee rooms in Bowmanville to- prise "the backbone" of the knocking on doors and talking Conservative organization in|to constituents in Bowmanville |Whitby at 8 a.m. He will then Whitby and Oshawa prior to at-|and tonight is scheduled to ad- conduct a house-to-house Cam-jtending a Young Progressive |dress the annual meeting of the Conservative Association dance|Manvers Township Progressive in the Whitby arena auditorium.| Conservative Association in Be- The NDP hopeful, Oliver|thany Hodges, will address a meeting) Anthony Ketchum, the New at 1.30 p.m. and 7.30 p.m. today| Democratic Party candidate in to explain that they are the con-/Durham, spoke toa meeting-of tact between the union and the the Civitan Club in Port Hope men of the plant. last night where, according to a Mr. Hodges went to the Gen-|press release, he .said all the eral Motors gates this morning) millions of dollars used for the and attended a coffee party in)making of war weapons should Oshawa this afternoon, Tomor-|pbe better used for free education row he will attend a founding| for elementary, high school and jconference at the Centre for In-|university levels. dustrial Relations at the Uni-) lversity of Toronto, a previous INCENTIVE TO FARM commitment to becoming a can- He said children who live on ldidate in the Nov. 8 federal/farms should also be exempt l election. s |from educational fees in learn- |. In Durham Riding, Russell ing about better farming me- iMoney, Liberal candidate, spoke|thods at agricultural college, lto a meeting of the Clarke Town-|"to give them an incentive to ship Liberal Association -last|stay and preserve the family night in Orono, He said he has|farms". been chairman of the House} Mr, Ketchum. will address a committee on agriculture for the/meeting of NDP workers and last 24% years. lexecutive in his Bowmanville He said that for the first}committee rooms tonight. To- time in Canada's history, the|day, he greeted workers at the Liberal 'government established| Eldorado atomic energy plant! E of young people | area. attended the Annual | FBYPA Rally which was held in the Shakespearean Festival Theatre in Stratford. More than 2000 young people heard the Rev. R. H. Shelton, pastor of the Historic First Baptist | Church in Pontiac, Mich. No |vent material on the question/presses. into the hands of the ODLC| As well as tickets and pro-jlot on Church st. It was mot executive. grams, the centre also handles parked in the municipal parking damaged. Blame In| 'Area Deaths, | 'Says Jury A Toronto inquest attached no blame to anyone or anything in a hearing last night into. the road accident deaths of a Bay {Ridges woman and her 11- |month-old son, The jury inquest was into the deaths of Mrs. Mary Anne Rose, of Bay Ridges, and her son, Robert. Mrs, Rose was driving east on Sheppard ave. e., Toronto, when ithe accident happened, She had japparently just overtaken a car and pulled back into the correct 'driving lane when she lost. con- trol of the car and smashed into an oncoming car. Her four-year-old son Jeffrey sustained head injuries and two broken legs in the accident. He is now being cared for by an aunt. Constable Kenneth Northern told the inquest. jury that the national goals for the agricultur-|in Port Hope prior to resuming lat was so badly damaged in the accident that police could * \al industry. teaching duties-in Peterborough. |not determine whether anything | MISS OSHAWA CONTEST }was wrong with the steering of Piano Went Missing he sal foreign ear But Show Must Go On tached no blame to the driver | Eleven area lovelies last night;produce an area candidate in of the other car 'involved, Mr. Reginald James Clement, 41. |preened, paraded and won their the Miss Canada contest Some 290 people jammed Zel- |way into the hearts of the five- Hortop Store 'imember judging panel of this|lers store last night to peek at J. R. BOUSFIELD, left, a partner in the firm of Proc- tor, Redfern, Bousfield and Bacon, consulting engineers and town. planners, dis- cusses the topic of his ad- dress, downtown renewal, with Douglas Bullied, presi- dent of the Oshawa and Dis- trict Real Estate Board. Mr. Bousfield than ODREB and guests at sixth spoke 400 members phere civic fo more the the dinner of year's Miss Oshawa contest . . . |but were stalled by a piano. | No piano was available in the }Oshawa Shopping Centre store |so two girls -- musician-entrant: -- will have to make their pre- sentation in the talent portion of ithe judging tomorrow. Miss Oshawa will be chosen from five semi-finalists to be picked at the UAW Hall, Bon jst. e., tomorrow at 8 p.m rala dance follows the crow ing of this year's queer by tt incumbent, Sharon Hurst Oshawa Jaycees are sponso ~UOshawa Times Photo fing this year's event which wil the entrants, during their bath-| ing.suit presentation and talent show. The were judg led in intelligence, charm, tal- ent and bathing suit categories. When all eyes 'weren't on the gals they swung over to the judges' table toward former Miss Canada, Marilyn Reddick who has reversed her role as a 'ompetitor last night. Her opinion after the show o hawa and district girls? They're terrific..1 certain! ouldn't have wanted to be u yainst any one of them in thi ontest."" girls | Hit By Thief A stére owned by -John R.| Miller was broken into in the} Hortop Plaza, Hortop st., last| night. : | Property valued at $250 was| stolen from the store shelves. | The owner also reported that a ortable TV set valued at $139 ind a radio valued at $20 had cen stolen Entry was gained by forcing he front door to the store. 'shawa Police are investigal- ng. | A veteran Oshawa Times: pressman and a sharp car- rier-salesman watch as the papers flick off the press on a trial run. At top speed the machine can print 600 paptrs - a -minute. Franklin NEWS paper-customers in the area of his home and was here to survey the press operation in connection with National Newspaper Week. Branton, (left) who has worked around the presses for nine years, later showed Jimmy Smith, 13, 638 Hor- top st., the press working at full speed and the boy was impressed. Jimmy has 65 .~Oshawa Times Photo

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