Oshawa Times (1958-), 26 Jul 1967, p. 17

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CAUSE F 1 CONFIDENCE! #)- products sold ot Dominibwr, i) ' rozen or Processed are i) NT-INSPECTED! jf TED de! 1867 U 1967 along Simcoe Street North. | dents from Saskatchewan visit- CENTENNIAL EMBLEM FEATURED IN FERNHILL PARK DISPLAY »-- Betty Flontek, 14, Ron Menard, 12, Add Finishing Touches Beauty Contest, Races D:cauestorp' Fall Fair Highlights The 60th Oshawa Fall Fair,|Fifty dollars cash and a silverj;and the chance to win cash which opens in Alexandra Park/tray will go to the winner,|spot prizes. Ay aes od ee es a Oe tee in keeping with centennial year| Thursday has also been desig-| jydging oe 'a oe standards. nated as Children's Day, with|other livestock and the chil-| The estimated attendance of|reduced rates for youngsters on gren's saddle pony class Horse 25,000 is 10 per cent up on pre-|some rides. It will also be onjracing will be on again at 2:30 vious figures. ithe 4-H club activity day for p.m eal Thursday's' saddle classes|junior farmers and in the will be much bigger than be-| afternoon some of the heavy 0 fore, while R. Cecil Bint, presi-| horses will be on display. rowed! Old. Tv: at ars dent of the South Ontario Agri-| Following the beauty contest| Weed ie Neer sb cultural Society, organizers, re-|will be a teen dance with Shes Mle Hy and - callers wis ports several new features|popular and musical group on| dance Sill si A deta | have been added and some/hand to provide the entertain-|)6 par B provided by the activities are on a larger scale|/ment. 0 neh BtOwa Bne. Art Winter. than Yast year. RACING ther special attractions my Park gates will open at 10, Friday's program _ includes ce enlarged Old Mac-| a.m. and all buildings on the the judging of livestock--heavy| 0"? oe an exhibit of] grounds will open by 1 p.m.|horses, light horses, dairy) isle f aero wiring' ani- The official opening by Mayor|cattle and sheep, with horse) per pits ! oie Pius 3 wm Ernest Marks takes place at\racing commencing in the eve-|P€™ of other educational and in- The fair will wind-up with an ld Tyme fiddlers' contest fol- Sandbox Displays Popular Twenty - six city playgrounds participated yesterday in a sandbox display contest organ- ized by the Oshawa recreation department. Glen Stewart Park won first prize for a "map of Canada" display which children designed yesterday. A-plaque will be pre- sented late this summer to the winning park at a_ city-wide ceren.ony to close playgrounds. North Oshawa Park won sec ond prize for its portrayal of a large centennial birthday cake accentuated with red, white and blue powder paint. Children were not asked to base their displays on centennial themes but most of them did. Third prize went to Connaught Park's depiction of a whale. Children concealed a_ hose on the back of the whale to give a sprinkling effect. Valleyview's -- colored competition, The fish low and black stripes. A spokesman for the recrea- be tion gepartment said the sand displays were "extremely well angel © fish won fourth prize in the * was : authentically portrayed with yel- ° ,done" and are the best dis-, |plays seen in Oshawa for the SAYS MP HONEY OTTAWA (Special)--French President Charles de Gaulle | was described last night by Russell Honey, MP for Dur- ham as a "meddling, stupid old man." Mr, Honey made the com- ment at the official opening of the centennial caravan at Port Hope. "The whole affair is made all the more despicable be- cause of the evident delight of the Quebec provincial poli- ticians,"' Mr. Honey declared. "The posturing of de Gaulle is designed to impress the separatist element in Quebec and is repulsive to Canadians including a great majority of Quebecers who want to find their destiny within, the frame- work of confederation." |Past few years. Each playground. leader or- anized the park activity but {the work and the idea were en- tirely the children's, | The recreation department {plans to hold a 'Centennial | Week" in the middle of August for all city parks. The depart-|_ |ment's tentative plans call for group activites and displays. Fernhill Park got off to an early start yesterday and made ja large beaver and emblem de- |signs in the sand but the dis- play was destroyed before noon. About 10 children decided then to.create a centennial symbol {which they completed shortly lafter 1 p.m. 'Supported 4 42-member postal workers group in Oshawa voted yester- day in favor of joining a 8.30 p.m., Thursday. jning at 6.15 p.m., complete sicher items. One highli will with betting privileges. ly be the Miss Oshawa Fair| A program of modern square contest starting at 9 p.m.,jdancing has been arranged for Thursday. Contestants between|the evening with the ages of 17 and 21 will pa-|square dancé, callers on hand} rade in outdoor garments, eve-/to keep everybody. moving ning wear and bathing suits./fron: 8.30- p.m, Ree Sa aed' Man, Woman Die to 11,30 na In Auto Mishap etti of Lot 22, Con. 7, Whitby Township. The Bortolussi car was five miles north of Bradford when it collided with the south- bound truck. Police have released no de- tails as to the name or con- dition of the truck driver, The accident took place at s s Construction On Simcoe | An Oshawa man and a f Brooklin area woman were killed Tuesday night on High- Forces Detours To Park when their late model car was involved in a head-on collision : ; x Italo Bortolussi, 33, of Sim- fair Thursday, Friday and Sat-| trance. i 7 ; ; i 5 y ssle 2 Street § i shawa, urday are advised by the city's Coming from Rossland Road) coe reet South, Oshawa tie, McLaughlin and Midland. | passenger was Rose Giovan- ment of a detour leading to the! Access to the south gate can)/~~-- rth entrance of pe ba ohstasiieg Adelaide West and Golf Street. A pedestrian access gate will About 2,000 feet of the streetithe park, but parking in that is closed to traffic fron: Jones area will be limited, says a . Approaching the park. from will be more space available the north, drivers should re-|for parking by the north and way 11 north of Bradford Motorists travelling to the fall| along Midland to the park en-) with a stake truck. : West the entrance is via Chris-} was the driver of the car, His traffic and engineering depart- Alexandra|be gained from Simcoe along Park owing to construction work |also be open on the east side of to near. Aberdeen. department spokesman. There route from Jones to Carnegie,!south efitrances. suffered injuries Tuesday at 'NEWFOUNDLAND TRIP City Students Impressed With Friendly Attitude Many of the 24 Oshawa andjed Oshawa early this. month. | Highway 2 near Solina Road. | The driver of the car, Ken- neth Crawford, 20, in fair condition in |juries and a fractured pelvis. Patrick Donovan, 20, is also reported to be in fair condi- tion in Toronto General Hospi- Five Young People Car Strikes Tree, Spins Five young Oshawa people|Bowmanville Memorial Hospi- |tal with lacerations and. Robert midnight when their car struck|McKedearn, 19, is in the same a tree and went into a spin on | hospital with undetermined in- juries, of Simcoe |for | Street North, is reported to be|from - Bowmanville ji Toronto | Hospital. |General Hospital with head in-| Despite the injuries to the Hurt Robert Ormiston was treated lacerations and released Memorial \five occupants of the vehicle a|three property spokesman for the Bowmanville Ontario Provincial Police de- tachment reported that only|this morning. district students who returned Local groups in each city spon-|1.) with head injuries. 1$300 damage was done to the home yesterday from a_ two-jsored activities for visiting sea Sandra Tompkins, 17, is in'Crawford car. week visit in Grand Falls, New-| dents. mesa che foundland, say they were over- whelmed with the friendliness hel had of their hosts. "The people are so friendly and the territory*so mountain- ous,"' said. Allan Boland, 16, 204 : Hazelwood Dr. Mary Knight, 17, 408 Parry e [T] (T] St., said all the mothers she RS a met in Grand Falls are '"'fan- : : acacia : tastic" cooks and '"'they all cook big meals. They even thake their own bread,"' she said. Allan said- a few of the .stu- dents were sea sick on one of their boat excursions. He said the beaches were different but the people liked all the same kind of beach fun. "Most of the students had never seen a mine," said Wil- liam Trotter, a student escort. Grand Falls' principal indus- try, a large paper mill, became a highlight of the trip but Mr. Trotter said the students were impressed with the friendliness ; and wholesomeness of family life in Grand Falls. Before they left, the province of Newfoundland sponsored a banquet and dance for the visit ing students and some youths of Grand Falls. The Youth Travel Program, initiated in 1954, for outstand- ing students, is jointly sponsor- ed. by the federal and provin- cial governments. Each prov- ince agrees to receive as many groups as it sends to other provinces. A group of high school stu- NEJOLE BUTKEVICIUS, an Oshawa Central Col- legiate student, greeted her mother yesterday when she arrived hon.e after spend- ing two weeks with a family in Grand Falls, Newfound- land. Mrs. Henry Butke- vicius, 123 Gibb St. and Ne- jole's nine-year-old _ sister, Rita, were among a large crowd of relatives and friends who met the stu- dents at the train station. Nejole said highlights of the two-week visit were fine hospitality, scenery and weather. --Oshawa Times Photo F | ceived total damage of $325, All jwalkout to protest against an "unfair' federal government move. Members of the city branch of the Canadian Union of Postal employees)| Municipal Act and the coun- 0 on strike sometime) cil rules. and i |Workers (indoor yoted to shortly after July 31, They will be protesting the fact that some 2,500 of the union's 12,000 mem- | bers were given July 3 off as a jregular weekly off-day. A union spokesman says the | F ' | me to {2,500 employees still put in a 40-hour week, having to work the following Saturday, July 7, while the 9,500 other . indoor Asati OLD, NEW FASHIONS SHOWN IN BATHE PARK SANDBOX : «+-Some Children Dressed In Paper Centennial Costumes Ghe Oshawa Zimes OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, JULY 26, 1967 Union, GM Read Start Bargainin REGULATIONS | When Ald. Gilbert Murdoch | attends city council meetings he is heavily burdened with reference books, a copy of the ON CITY ALDERMAN MURDOCH) _ |planned Canadian-wide one-day! WEIGH HEAVY Negotiators Reluctant ion tai we ve, LO Predict Developments "I see there is a lock fitted Contract negotiators for the|with past contract negotiations and it might be an idea to \United Auto Workers union andl express no pessimism Or Op- provide keys to these desks." |four major Ontario industries|timism about. an early settle- Ald. William Paynter, in |will come face to face Monday! ment. ' Reason is he can't leave them behind in his desk in the | council chamber because of "petty pilfering." "It makes it necessary for take these things home," he complained to city council last night. 'I have left stuff in this desk and next © debate over bylaws, raised a jon a new contract for about ter agreem Taugh when he _ observed: {23,000 workers in the province. heteeen i peg and the to an earlier heated jin Toronto to begin bargaining) But the grade to signing a Canada "There is a bylaw covering r In Oshawa alone some 12,000;}UAW is obviously steeper than that. GM-employed members of/ever before. The UAW's big de- Mayor Ernest Marks /Local 222, UAW will anxiously|mand is Canadian wage parity promised to have the question | await developments of negotia- with auto workers in the United of petty pilfering of alder- | tions. States and with this in men's desks investigated, and | he pig industrial powers| Mind officials admit it will take also the possibility of provid- seeking to reach a new maste$/More than a Ifash of a sor- ing keys. agreement with the UAW and ajCerer's wand to achieve a quick jworkers had July 3 off as a |public service holiday declared by Prime Minister Pearson. | the 9,500 employees only work-} ed a 32-hour week after observ- ing July 3 under Dominion Day celebrations. The union is seek- ing compensation in time-off or} overtime payments for the 2,500 jemployees who worked July 3.) 'Steel Falls On Highway | WHITBY (Staff) -- A New- imarket truck-transport driver has been charged with having a dislodged load as the result of damage acci- dents on the Macdonald-Cartier | Freeway east of Whitby early oe can. sae'elsee Civic Reception Arranged For Officers Of Kootenay | Sullivan, 38, blocking Highway 1401, eastbound. | Three cars following the trans- port ran onto the stee| and re-| |three had to be towed from the} | Scene. The charge was laid jagainst Sullivan following an | investigation by Constable John |Harris of the Whitby Ontario | Provincial Police detachment. | Boys Greeted tion in the armories tonight. _ | By Gun Salute "| WHITBY (Staff) -- Paddling |the last mile of their 475-mile Whitby Venturers arrived at Expo's La Ronde at 11.30 a.m. and were welcomed by Expo officials and given a seven-gun salute. Rev. Leo J. Austin, chaplain of the boys and several par- ents were on hand to greet them. Mrs. Peter VanGils, mother of Venturer Tim, when contacted this morning, said "the boys look like real Indians |with their deep tan, and are in the best of health." Following lunch the Mayor of Longueil received the boys at the city hall and presented then: with a flag. All signed the gold book. They were also re- ceived at Montreal Hotel de Ville by Montreal officials, in- vited to sign the guest book jand served refreshments on the terrace. Street Fire Alarm ': System Will Stop City council has cial services and general pur- pose committee that the street fire alarm box system be dis- continued at the earliest pos- sible time. The recommendation followed a report from Fire Chief H. R. Hobbs, that it would cost near- ly $4,500 to make repairs to adopted a; recommendation from the so- jseries of "'local agreements" conclusion. jare General Motors of Canada} When talks open at 2 p.m. at Ltd., McKinnon Industries Ltd.,|the King Edward Hotel several GM subsidiary, Frigidaire)main company and union rep- Products of Canada Ltd., andjresentatives facing each other |General Motors Diesel Limited | will be: The UAW is representing' Arnold G. Stapleton, nine- jworkers at GM plants in Ste.|year personnel director in Oshe Therese, Que., St. Catharines,tawa for GM.; Albert Taylor, London, Windsor -- as well as'president of Local 222; Gordon few actual alar'! were re-| ' i ceived over the Sein aly the | Oshawa. It will also speak for|Lambert, union chairman of the department was constantly | °™Ployees of Frigidaire in To- National General Motors Inter- ironto Corporation Council; George plagued by false alarms. The city is to continue withi, ~" F the Edwards system which pro-\'#tives in Talks On Wage Parity nue to the city. A fire depart-| | E Union and company represen-|Burt, Canadian director of the Oshawa connected! UAW. ment spokesman said the} Edwards system is a method of fire alarm installed by the Edwards the system, plus an additional $400 a year for alarm mainte- nance crew members. Chief Hobbs added that very company mana | offices, stores, supermarkets All B H ld I U S land so on are connected by} May e e n a jdirect line to a panel in the |department's alarm room. Neither 49 - year - old Mr.|which normally arrives by mail Commander William W. P, Rikley, captain of the destroy- er escort, HMCS Kootenay, now in Oshawg harbor on a cen- tennial visit and 16 of the ship's officers will be entertained by city council at a civic recep- Mayor Ernest Marks will present Commander _ Rikley with a commemorative tray plaque from the city to mark the visit. The reception, which will be held in the officer's mess, will canoe trip Tuesday, the Fifth}be attended by council mem- bers and officials with their wives, representatives of the Navy and the Legion and others concerned in centennial activity. Also present will be Lt. Col. L. P. Tiggelers, offi- cer commanding the Ontario Articles Stolen Pickering Home PICKERING (Staff)--Thieves broke into a residence at Lot 9, Concession 5, Pickering Town- ship early Tuesday morning and made off with a wide assort- ment of goods. Among the items reported stolen were power tools, a rug, Stapleton, who joined GM _ 17|Prior to the negotiation kick- ' off. It could be handed in Mon- years ago, nor Mr. Taylor, 40, : can say if the wage parity issue.) The master contract, once will hit the bargaining deck in| settled, would contain general Se eee fer eee eee eed atter > baregaine al'and industry at the six GI all in union-corporation talks ants between: Ste. Therese, : this side of the border which|/Qye, and Windsor, Ont., plus Regiment and seven officers. |are following negotiations that|{he Toronto - based Frigidaire Last night 60 couples from opened in Detroit July 10 for pjant : these groups were entertained United States auto workers. pee at _a_ reception aboard the' Speculation is that if the par- LOCAL ISSUES Kootenay. ity question does crop up in To- But before'a master agree- The Kootenay is scheduled to ronto, talks will move onto au ment is signed, negotiators are leave the harbor at 8 a.m., international level between Can- expected: to work at hammer- Thursday. Hundreds have visit- ada and U.S. officials -- ating out individual agreements ed her during the three' occa-'ljeast on the one issue applied at various plant sites. sions she has been open to the '| presume," says Mr./These contracts are called the public. .The ship will be open Stapleton, "this is largely a} local -seniority, local: wage and from 6.30 p.m, to 8 p.m. to-jquestion for the union to re- local general agreements. --_--_---------- === ithe UAW in .Canada will be ton, "we endeavor to clean up making the same proposals as and resolve all the local issues No Ch in the United States. You can before there is any real effort anges take for granted neither the) made at finally signing the union or company would ac-| master agreement." cept bargaining over the same} Talks on "'local"" and master jissue on two different locations) agreements have in the past No consideration is yet being) He says neither side wants| discussion and Mr. Stapleton given to the extension of the|to be "mouse-trapped"' into this| Says. -- In view of this bing government's GO commuter position. day's meeting will primarily be "y Edward Ingraham, director|cides to bargain over this issue|talk at both jg of -- of information services for gov-of wage parity in the U.S. --| tion. Generally, the ys Lars ernment transit, in a letter to|that is where it will be bargain-|tal agreements are bargaine has not changed since High-|jan interview. |talks a periodically in ways Minister C. S. MacNaugh-| "It was proposed July 10 to| Toronto. ton spoke to the Oshawa Cham-)GM and day. solve. I can't tell you today if; "Normally," says Mr. Staple- | In GO Plan jor on two different levels." been largely subject to separate train system to Oshawa. f the UAW desires or de-|one for scheduling meetings to city council, says the situation/ed for," Mr. Stapleton said in| for at plant sites while master later to Ford andj : ber of Commerce last Novem-|Chrysler that wage parity for) BENCHES DONATED ber. Canadian workers would be} Coronation Orange Temple, The minister said then that bargained for in Detroit," he/216 Burk St., has offered the expansion decisions could not|added. _ {city 10 street benches to be be made within two years of | 'As a chief GM bargainer in|placed in various locations for German Luftwaffe binoculars, an electric typewriter, and a razor. Total value of the goods|two months ago from Pickering not yet stolen was $278. the beginning of operations of|negotiations ranging back tojuse by the public. Council bas the service. It started about|1953, Mr. Stapleton says he has accepted the benches which will | received. the UAW's| be located by the public works to Hamilton. lproposed master agreement --}department.

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