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Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 6 Oct 1955, p. 3

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he rd gs i q | dil iA 7% LOCAL 222 WIVES JOIN PIC WIVES OF STRIKING GN | . WORKERS parade here outside | the north plant of General Mo- | tors of Canada Ltd. on William | KET LINES street. The wives marched carry- | gan their parade from the UAW auditorium on Bond 2 p.m. and proceeded to the north plant. Times-Gazette photos. ing placards for more than one | hour. A section of the house. | wives' picket line is shown in | pictures above. The wives be- | k Five Land Sites, di Home Purchased " cases far in excess of the reserve | enjoy the playing of one Hold Meeting Music Teachers The opening banquet of the Osh-|tolerably dull. She pointed out that| awa Branch of the Ontario Regis-| while many students play correct] ered music teachers was held in|notes and have correct time val-| Simcoe St. Church parlours. ues. They have no style and have The speaker of the evening was no conception of what the music | Miss Margaret Miller Brown, well means. She compared such a stu-| mown concert pianist of Toronto. dent to a young actor reading Mrs. J. P. Mangan in introducing|lines in aa play without knowing the speaker recalled Miss Brown's | whether the play itself is a comedy . purchased by William Boyko, of SR RR NE OSHAWA Combining The Oshowa Times and Whitby Gazette ond Chronicle ii THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE WHITBY VOL. 84--NO. 233 OSHAWA-WHITBY, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1955 PAGE & Report On Cafes Endorsed By ODLC A record crowd for a. City Council land auction yesterday competed strongly for five blocks| of land and a home which were sold by the council because the owners had mot paid their rates. The land sold brought exceed- ingly high prices and in most price set by the council. More than 50 people packed into the council chambers for the auctior, which was conducted by City Treasurer H. E. Tripp. The auction lasted 45 minutes. The first block of land offered) for sale had a reserve price o '41.35, but brought $50. The land s located at Cedar Valley and|®r- measures 40 feet x 70 feet. It was| 107 Simcoe street. Bidding showed a marked im- provement with the sale of the next parcel of land, measuring 30 feet x 95 feet and located on Huron street. It was purchased by John Ford, 304 Pine avenue, for $300. Reserve price was $116.63. HIGHER BIDDING A Jarvis street block measur- ing 38 feet x 101 feet brought $450 and carried a reserve price of $196.48. It was purchased by Frank Byrne of 230 Court street. LOT HAS HOUSE i _ Mrs. Evelyn Fleming, a regular attendant at council land sales, bought a 40 feet x 120 feet parcel of land in Mapelvale street for $290. Reserve price on the lot was sucessful concert tours of Canada|or tragedy. and England, Her latest tour of Miss Brown went on to show England and Europe was made how a teacher can develop the| just three years ago and she was | resources of a student, She em-| received enthusiastically wher-|phasized that a teacher's job is to| ever she played. During the war | draw out the talent in a pupil, not| Miss Brown, a pupil of Mona to keep stuffing information into Bates, was a member of the 10 them. Her advice was to have the| piano team. This talented group of| pupil examine the music; to look| pianists raised a considerable sum first at the composer then at the| for the war effort with their fine] title of the work to get an indica- recitals. | tion of the sound, phrasing etc, GIVES TALK | necessary in playing it. As an ex- Miss Brown, a teacher and exa-| ample she played excerpts from miner at the Royal Conserva-|Bach then from Debussy to show tory of Music in Torontto, gave|the completely different touch and| in her talk her ideas as to why| style necessary for each. | one young pianist is an 80 per-| She gave helpful and practi-| center and another ime just a 70|cal teaching instruction in touch, | percenter in 'examination mark. | phrasing, pedalling and rhythm She analyzed for the teachers, in| She ended by urging the teach- other wards, why it is possible to|ers not to spend a their time in {de in their stu- ng in-'dents, but to "get to while finding anothe's playi the music!" only $32.70. ORDER HUBBY TO FIRE NURSE The California District Court of Appeals once directed a husband to fire his petty nurse after regaining his health, "You promised your wife at the altar to let HER take care of you in sickness and in heaith," the judge gently re- minded. i But if you need a nurse in your home or office, or an- other type of employee, Classi- fied ads are the solution. Call RA 3-3492. | | | Mission due were taken as the rese | price. street at | Horse R ider, 18, Injures Her Hip wo Meet Set viet Nam, Indo-China, wil! arrive the|. The only lot with a house on it offered for sale carried a re-| serve price of $255.83. It sold for $1,160. The purchaser was Frank De Vries of Whitby, The land on which the house stands meas- ures 26 feet x 99 feet. The land was auctioned by the| council because the owners had| not paid their rates for three years. In each case the arrears| Tve| Money paid by the purchaser ¢| over and above the arrears will be paid to the original land own-|that on the morning of September However, the original owner | is given 12 months after the sale of land to redeem it by paying] |the arrears due, plus 10 per cent ghape.' 1 interest. Council Is Forwarded Report Of Dr. Mackay THe secretary of the Oshawa District Labor Council, Mr. Keith Ross, said today that the execu-| tive of the council is satisfied] with the report of Dr. A. F. Mac- kay on the sanitary conveniences in Oshawa cafes. For some time the Labor Coun- cit has been corresponding with the City Council in an effort to have the city officials regularly inspect conveniences at cafes. Dr. Mackay, medical officer of health to the city, submitted a report to City Council on the cafe's conveniences, and this was forwarded to the Labor Council, In his report, Dr. Mackay said 22 he had inspected 12 downtown cafes and with one exception he| found all the washrooms in 'fair "All but three could have been improved if fulltime supervision was provided," said Dr. Mackay. Dr. Mackay said that cafe man- agers had told him that the pub- lic did not co-operate in maintain- ng a high quality. In some cases the customers using the conveni- ences were 'frankly destructive." Dr. Macky assured the Labor Council that the cafes are subject to 'periodic inspection," but add- |ed that the {washrooms may alter very quick- "sanitary status. of y." In its regiiest to City Council for a statement on the position, the Labor Council said that it wanted to ensure that the "locals and vis- itors will have proper and clean ( dation at their disposal." Mr. Ross said today that the re- port would go before the delegate. meeting. of the District Labor Council to be held next Tuesday. « When her horse was struck by a] The horse ran away but was in Oshawa on Saturday oor [skidding car at the bridge over located again by Miss Tilling not | annual foreign missionary conven-|g Oshawa Creek on Thornton Rd./far from the accident scene. {tion of The Christian And Mission- last night, rider Eleanor Tilling,| After treatment at Oshawa Gen- ary Alliance. 18, received a bruised right hip eral Hospital, Miss Tilling was al-| The program, "Foreign Mis- commences PICKETS GATHER AROUND FIRE Four members of Local 222, | south plant of General Motors | Church, Charles Peters and Joe Earn $6 Month As Pay By ELMA FARROW How would you manage to live, has a fine program for improvingnow been conquered by modern|iwo stitches. ¥ the breadwinner in your family brought home pay amounting to $6.00 a month? To Canadians, it seems to be a ridicylous question. But to many| people in the world it is a vital tion which means their sur- val, Dr. Walter Strangway of| United Church mission at samba, Angola, in west cen- tral Africa, stated that 90 per cent/number one problem, malnutri-that many persons.' of the people of Angola are un-| skilled laborers who earn no more than $6 a month. Angola is a Portuguese "over- seas province" and is governed from Lisbon. All able-bodied men| y a head tax of $5 a year which | aed for local administration, education and a small medical Jropran. At present there is one Tuberculosis is the greatest prob- Asphalt has been found in An-| for every 40,000 which is] eomparable to one doctor in Osh-| awa. The country is mainly agri-| enltural with about five percent of the population employed in the few industries. Weaving of clot! The Portuguese the lot of the Angolian natives. Itmedical skill and a year's treat- has undertaken the distribution of ment will "burn out" all signs of seed grain and vegetables, the in-it, if the patient is not in the most troduction of better livestock andadvanced stages when he comes the distribution of poultry to thefor treatment. There are leper farmers. Ploughs have been putclinics outside Chissamba with out on loan to the farmers in anabout 1,500 persons having treat- effort to increase the variety ofment. Fortunately, drugs to treat produce raised. This has done aleprosy, are very inexpensive and great deal to alleviate Angola'sthe mission is able to care for tion. In an average morning, Dr. HAVE TWO DOCTORS Strangway performs operations Af the Mission hospital at Chis-which would net him anywhere amba (a village of 500 inhabl-from $800 to $1,000 according to tants) there are two doctors, twethc standard of surgical fees nurses and one nutritonist. Theyhere in Canada. The hospital see an average of 100 patients acharges the patient the equiva- day in the clinics, besides treatinglent of $1.50 for the operation those in the hospital or at home, and hospitalization. S lem and has reached epidemicgola and the country now proudly | proportions in the central andpossesses an asphalt road 100 southern part of Africa. The pa- miles long. This is a real advan-| tients have to be treated at hometage to the 4,000,000 inhabitants of | because there could never bethe country, and a yearly grant accommodation for all those af-has been authorized for the build- and the pressing of vegetable oils|ficted. Leprosy is prevalent iming of more "black roads." The horse received a cyt eight inches long on its left hip and| there was $550 damage to the 1950 sedan driven by Vojislav Carapio, | 42, of 18 Charles . St., Oshawa. | It was wet, but not raining, at| 7 p.m. when the accident happen-| ed, said Miss Tilling. She lives| at 1122 Hortop ave., Oshawa. She! said she was carrying a flashlight. | The horse shied away from the| bridge and was giving trouble when the car approached. When Car- apio applied his brakes, the ve- hicle skidded on the wet pavement, | struck the horse and then bounced | off the side of the bridge. ~ BIRTHDAYS Congratulations are extend- ed from the Times-Gazette, to Elaine Logeman, 217 Hillside avenue, who is celebrating her birthday today Oct.. 6 are the important industries, but even they are on a small scale. | MUD HUTS Angolian villages consist of to 100 inhabitants, and are two or three miles apart. | se still used for King s but many people have built larger houses of sun-dried brick, due to the combined efforts of the missionaries and the gov- ernment to usher into Angola better living conditions. There are still witch doctors in the villages, | but their position has changed and|C their influence has greatly dimin- fshed. Now, when a witch doctor ill he goes to the Mission|F. R.Jones Construction Ltd., 167 m-| Central Park Blvd., dwelling, $10,- hospital to get treatment. The fa ily is a unit with the oldest mem-|500; : Per being head of the family. The(wood Ave, new dwelling, older a man or woman is, the] more he or. she There are some native is venerated. dwellings, $20,000; Chas, Tucker, dances |Celina St., new dwelling, $9,500; Building Permits Issued R. Brown, 340 Olive ave., new dwelling, $10,000; K. Morrow, Fox rd., double garage $600; M. Fil, 280 Conart st, new dwelling, $9,000; Gordon Crawford, 17 Que- bec st, new dwelling $10,000; Canadian Corps Associafion,, 30 Richmond st. West club. room al- terations, $600; William Meridith, 585 Grierson st., new dwelling, $11,000; Chapman Auto Electric, 16 Church st., addition to shop, The following is a list of building| permits issued by the Oshawa City ouncil during September. ; Peacock Lumber Co., 328 Ritson Rd. South, alterations to mill, $700; Waseliszuak, 232 Green- $9,000; Rosslynn Estates, 640 Mary St., which can be danced only by the/L. F. Stire, 188 Valencia St., re- $4,000; M. Collis, 90 LaSalle ave. apartment alterations, $600. ON KING ST. J. Victor, 34 King st. West, ad- ditional storage, $2,800; Samuels and Jolund, Box 371, new dwell- venerable ones who are over alpair§ to dwelling, $1,500; A. J. certain age: If one of the family Parkhill, 1012 Simcoe St., new has been fortunate enough to get dwelling, $14,000; Roy Slute, Sen- an education, his potential earn-'eca St., to complete dwelling, $7, ing power is up to $100 a month. 500; L. Ripley, 206 Monash Ave. He is then able to help his family, financially. 1 COMING EVENTS | RUMMAGE SALE, ST. ANDREW'S Church, on Friday, October 7 at 1 p.m 3 ' 233a HARMAN mght 8 Simcoe PARK BINGO ~~ FRIDAY p.m. St. John's Hall, corner] and Bloor streets. n BINGO THURSDAY OCTOBER 6 AT St. George's Hall, Albert and Jackson streets 2 p.m. 5-340 Jackpots 233a RUCHR® IN SCOUT WALL CORNER of Buena Vista and Gibbons St., Friday night, October 7 at 8 p.m. Admission 80c. and lunch served. Bi, Church, 261 Bloor St., new dwell- ing $9,500; Harman Park Associa- $10,000; Reid and Hann, 278 Beatty | » new dwelling, $9,800 a total of 18] lof these dwellings will be built by d dwelling, $9,000 ;eight of these will new dwelling, $10,500. Bob Hoy, 1154 Nelson St., moving dwelling, $1,000; Bob Hoy, erec- tion after moving, $7,000; St. Mary's Ukranian Orthodox ing, $9,500: Samuels and Jolund, 1128 Hybernia st., storage tanks, $4,000; Gospel Hall, 40 Nassau st., alterations to church, $500; Leo Cugarenlea, 839 Sulvia st., tion, 804 Douglas St., new club-| £oW SWEDE F10.000: fing Wig toon Ta. south, new. aweiling, $500; He Kassinger, 00. Colborne Curran and Briggs Ready "Mix| td., 991 Simcoe St. South, stor- {age shed, $2,500. Reid and Haun, U. 'Tusre, 525 ouble garage, $500; Samuels and|ling alterations $500; Box 471, Oshawa, new| 622 Bloor st. East dwelli 'low J. Lipiec, Jolund, addition to he erected. st, new dwelling $10,000; In September Listed Wright Construction, 11 Davidson ave., Toronto, new dwelling $9,800 ; Jim Armstrong, 52 Fernhill Blvd. | addition to dwelling $1,000; Ger- ald Hodges, 174 Sherwood ave., |new dwelling $11,000. | G. P. and D. G. Cooper, | Bruce st., gasoline pumps, $500; {Margaret Puckrin, Oshawa, new| | dwelling, $10,000; Russell Dionne, |467 Rossland rd., East, addition [to dwelling $1,500; E. C. Warne, 364 Park rd. South, double garage, $500; C. S. Jordon, 120 Arlington |ave., new dwelling, $10,000; S. J.| | Spurreil and Son, 213 Pellatt ave.,| | Weston, Ont., new dwelling, $11,-| {000; five similar units will be built by this organization; | J. new dwelling, $9,500; Sun Oil Co.,| Hruska, Celina st., new dwelling | /$11,000; D. Gorrie, 114 Ontario ist., |Readman Construction, 88 cia ave., new dwelling, |Don Cranfield, 21 | Blvd., service station, 3 McCullough Construction, Simcoe gt. North; new dwelling, $9,000.! Canadian Petrofina, 21 (mond &t. West, Toronto, { house, $11,000; Canadian atri McLaughlin $17,000 Petro- Stanley Martin, RR 1, Oshawa,| new dwelling, $8,000; J. age, $500; Christ Memorial 1361 Gib | $900; {new garage, $1,500; H. A. Cole, 56 new dwelling $11,000; H. gw Rich-| ware-| during the month is more than! collected b; governmentAngola. This dread disease has|and a knee cut which required/lowed to return home. Outside of|sions |the cut which the 'horse received, Sunday morning and continues un- it seemed alright today. The accident was investigated by Constables A. Savoie and A. F. Dowdall. In another accident on the wet pavement of King street East last night, a westbound car driven by Allan Alronowitz, 31, of 264 Fare- well Ave., Oshawa, skidded into the opposite lane and struck an eastbound car driven by James Sidman, RR No. 3 Bowmanville. " The accident happened opposite house no. 389 on King st. E. there was $275 damage to the Al- ronowitz car and $150 to Sidman's car. Church, 81 Hillcroft st.,. addition to church, $80,000; L. Beaupre, bons st., dwelling addition, Geo. Ewen, 17 Elena st., {110 Frederick st, new dwelling, 1$10,800: L. Thompson, Rossland rd. West, new dwelling, $15,000; A. W. Banfield Construction, Osh- awa, new dwelling, $10,000. J. G. Geikie, 317, Simcoe St. north, addition to dwelling, $68, 000; B.A.J. Brown; 1110 Simcoe St. south, new dwelling, $12,000; N. Johnson and Sons, 202 Rosedale Ave., new dwelling $12,000; N. Johnson and Sons, new dwelling, $13,000; N. Johnson and Sons, new dwelling, $17,000; Dr. W. H. Gif- ford, 412 Simcoe St. north, new | dwelling $18,000; J. Abersek, 114 Westmount Ave., garage, $500; "Careless Driver in ew," til Wednesday night. Mr. Braun organized and con- ducted the finst mass Gospel Cru- sades the Congo had ever seen. | As many as 10,000 persons| gathered nightly. The challenge of the Congo will be presented Sunday, 11 a.m., at Thornton's Corners Sunday School Hall, Thornton's road north and in the Masonic Temple Sunday, 7 p.m. and colored . pictures with curios at an 8:30 fireside hour. WILL ALSO .SPEAK Rev. Jean Fune of Indo-China and Mr. Braun will also speak UAW-CIO, warm their hands be- fore a fire while picketing at the | of Canada Ltd. here. They a left to right, Bill Elliott, re Al | Turnbull, re --Times-Gazette Photo Says New Shopping Centre No Detriment To Downtown The new multi-million dollar shopping centre now under. con- struction here became the subject of discussiion at a meeting of the retail section of the Oshawa cham- ber of ce Tuesday and Wednesday e I'd at Westmount United Church sponsored by the C and MA of Oshawa. When the Japanese occupied Indo - China (1941-45), Mr. Fune was taken to Hanoi and served freely to the Feat French Church and also as Chaplain to the French troops interned. Under his direc- tion, millions of pages in various languages were printed and dis- tributed to the aboriginal tribes; tribes people of the mountains and the vast Laotian population. With the eyes of the world fo- cused on Indo - China and Africa; |with the attempts of Communism to control, this convention proves already to be informative, inspir- ational and deeply challenging. | Mandryk, 255 Beatty Ave., new dwelling $11,000; James Beaupre, 306 Pacific Ave., alterations to duplex, $1,000; R. Stone, teven- son Rd. north, addition to dwell- ing, $1,200 T. Monesewski, 534 Cubert St., addition to grocery store, $10,000; James 'Hanson, 191 Park Rd. S, double garage, $500; Sam Jackson and Son, Arthur st.,, new dwellin, $9,500; five of these dwellings wi be erected by Sam Jackson and Son; Goldman Developments 167 Park Rd. north, new dwelling $10, ; Goldman Developments will build 14 of these units; Oshawa Board of Education, Simcoe St., south, addition ta public school, $95,000; Robson Leather Co., Whit- ing Ave:, moving workshop, $1,200; . Bolbas, 303 Pine Ave., new dwelling. $9,000; J. A. Sherriff, Taunton Rd. east, double garage, $850; H. F.- McCann, Herbert St., new dwelling $9,500. With sundry building jobs added, the total value of all construction for which permits were issued $1,292,826. 1 Dunkirk Ave.,! A. Weeks, 222 Nassau st., dwel- fina, five storage tanks, $16,000;| This is well below last monia's record total of %4,952, 797. The : _to|new_ , Kanoza,| total value of permits issued for | ng $500; Bill Haynes, Bigi- 51 Colborne st. East, double gar- the eight months of 1955 is now!excise duty and $1,273 from sun-|1926 so there can be no doubt of Gum Co. bought it for a reporte - her age." ho more than $10,471,316, Draws $2) Fine Pleading guilty to careless driv- ing, Edgar J. Leblanc, 263 Albert st., Oshawa, was fined $25 and costs or 15 days when he appear- ed before William Igel, justice of the peace, in Oshawa police court Wednesday. He was the tenth man to be tried on a careless driving charge in Oshawa in two days. Police said that Leblanc's car had been in collision with another vehicle at & Centre Street intersec- tion on Sept. 22. Damage was light Port Collections 'Are Announced | | Import duties and excise col lected in Oshawa contributed more than $4,476,981 to government rev- enue during September, During the month, excise taxes the Customs Depart- ment in the city totalled more than $3,777,015. Import duties col- lected exceeded $698,246. | dries. on North Africa. Merchants expressed fear that Principal Invstments, responsible for planning the shopping centre, might be able to force downtown retailers to open in self-defence of nights other than Friday. don' store owners summed up their feelings with: 'We "don't" like it Our staff doesn't like it, But the customers love it." Retail merchants asked their comittee: '"Why was not a full day closing 'considered when the Friday night opening bylaw was being passed?" Frank Meagher, of Meagher's Appliances, answered that two sep- arate items were involved and "it was d d advisable to deal with Murray Johnst of Joh Ss Men's Wear, told the meeting: "Let us force the issue and do our part to attract the new dollar that comes to Oshawa," PETITION COUNCIL Later during thc meeting it was decided to petition City Council. requesting that night shopping be restricted to Friday only. Mr. Johnston expressed the opin- jon that "eight out of 10 members of city council like to shop Fri- day night," and added that most one at a time." He said that any change in pres- ent gayworking hours would re- quire a new classified bylaw re- quiring 'a 75-per-cent majority in each classification. \ "It was considered by the com- mittee that it would be better not to change the present Wednesday afternoon closing until after Friday night opening had been in operation sufficiently long to de- the|ture; Archie Dancy, Mr. Meagher explained, To offset the increased hours of shopping which Friday opening in- volved, it was suggested that the majority of stores could open at 9.30 amand close at 5.30 p.m. until some major change is made regarding au all-day closing dering the week. . / Morley - Wyman, manager of Zeller's, explained that '"'classi- fied chairmen' were necessary on the retail merchants ec A because with the number of clas- sified sections in retail business it would be hard to operate as a re- tail organization in any other man- ner. Other classified chairman on the committee were Don Burns, of Burns Shoes; Lee Rolson, of Wards; Don Holden, Holden Furni- Dancy Shoes; Cecil en, and x Hard: ware: and Max Palter, Horwich termine the pattern of shopping," Jewellers. Faure Fires Opponents To Moroccan Policy PARIS (AP) -- Angered by their outspoken opposition to his North African policy, Premier Edgar Faure fired four followers of Gen. Charles de Gaulle from his cabinet oday. A Hit minister from the Gaullist Social Republican party, Public Works Minister Edward Corniglion- However, friends of Faure said he plans to go before the assembly and ask for a vote on the policies of his government as a whole-- not just on North Africa. Besides Koenig, the ministers ousted from the cabinet were Ray- mond Triboulet, veterans affairs minister; Gaston Palewski, min Molinier, remained in the cabinet Gen. Pierre, Koenig, the defence minister, led the dissidents Faure ister with ial powers delegated by the premier; and Maurice Bay- rou, secretary of state in the min- kicked out. The loss of Gaullist support in| the National Assembly appears to| oom Faure's government in the d debate expected to be held soon problem of what to do about re- ! placing Morocco's Sultan Ben Mou- istry for overseas territories. TICKLISH PROBLEM The cabinet meeting this morn- ing had to sort out the ticklish } lay Arafa, who was eased out of office to a retirement in Tangier. Before leaving, however, the sultan delegated his powers to a Cousin. The question now is whether the government can go ahead with its plan for a three-man regency coun- cil, or whether the sultan has blocked such a move by his dele- gation of powers. The De Gaullist ministers who left Faure's cabinet claimed there was no possibility of setting up the three-man council of the throne. However, the sultan was reported to have told a French official that his cousin would not stand in the way of such a move. HAS FILLY AT 30 LONDON (AP)--Horse breeder. Fred Unwin says his old grey mare Frank Fortune Pulver, 84, one of] Stephanie has given bith to a fi - at the unheard-of age of 30. op CHEWING ENRICHED HIM ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP)-- the pioneer developers of chewing gum, died Wednesday. He was 23 SEVEN DIE IN CRASH EUDORA, Ark. (AP) = Seven persons were killed when their auto rammed head-on with a bus as though a human being had a when he became interested in a|returning a college football team baby when 120 years old," Unwin|friend's formula for making chew-|to Little Rock, Ark., Saturday told a reporter. 'But I bought| ing gum. He bought the formula for| night. Seven occupants of the bus ~ i$1 Ofher tollections were $445 from |Stephanie as a yearling myself in!$200, and in 1931; Wrigley Chewing|were injured. The drive: 20 3 {football player are in serious cop. ditfon.

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