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The Oshawa Times, 30 Dec 1959, p. 5

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BE eR a LS - far behind aA Be Hosted by their executive this | vary, coach, Bob Adams, Gary week were members of Whitby's | Mitchell, Ronnie Moore, Jopie two lacrosse teams. In the photo | Koster, Elmer Tran, Lorne above are shown members of | Campbell, and Les. Moore, Whitby Merchants Juvenile La- | coach. Absent were Gord Luke, crosse Club. Left to right, seat- | Butch Kadwell, Tom Tushing- ed, are Mike Morison, Denton | ham and Gord Holliday. Rendell, Herbie Gray, Mike In the lower photo, the most Gray, Bill Biggs; standing are | honored member of the Junior Jerry Gray, manager, Jerry Ra- | Lacrosse Club, the Millers, is | 4 i 1 : % - i iwi Terry Davis, holding his two awards, The large trophy was presented by Whitby jeweller Charles Mesher to the most valuable player on the team. he small trophy is the one which he retains. Centre is the wrist watch, presented by an- | other Whitby jeweller, Frank McCullough. At Rifle Club The leading teams in Whitby Rifle Club League to date are Nos. 2, 8 and 6 each tied with 4 points, and the highest team score| Magistrate F. 8, Ebbs, in Whit- is No. 8 with 1149, Max Bache, by police court on Tuesday, was captain. The lowest score is 1106 told that the safe in the Pickering by team No. 5, which is not too District' High School had been| after three weeks burned open with wel g equip- shooting me belonging to the school, There will be no shooting this|V *h had been hauled from the week but will resume on Wednes. school's machine shop to the prin-| day, Jan. 6 cipal's office for that job. Cpl.| Two more ladies are required to Dok Matheson, of Pickering Twp | bolster this group which is show. Police Department, was testifying | ing to good advantage against the against Ronald Foote and Everett men of the club. {Hugh Black, both 26, both of Tor- onto, charged with breaking and Teams Are Close | |entering the school. They wereland found him wearing a wrist| FOG HAZARD | committed for MILAN (AP) -- Official name|judge. of Italy's new Milan-Rome super-| Cpl. Matheson said that duringione of the $200 worth of watches! son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. B. Good. the East which resulted in adighway is '"'Autostrada del Sol," |a routine check of the school, on or auto-way of the sun. On one the morning of Nov. 22, he noticed weekend there were 40 accidents/a window broken out of the ma- caused by fog on 2 stretch near|chine shop and two windows brok-| Milan, en in the principal's office. Inside BRQOC Phone MO 8-3618 Now Playing SvENbie shows 7 & £2¢ Last Complete Show at 8:25 3 RRR DED The Management and Staff extend to all "A HAPPY NEW YEAR" Sy 0 0 ERA SHOWN AT... 7 & 10 P.M. mene ¥ STRING ™ DRIES C. V. WHITNEY resem | | PAT YVONNE DENNIS DAN w--WAYNE - GRAIG - HOPPER - O'HERLIHY THE PICTURE THAT LEAPS AHEAD OF THE HEADLINES! MGM: es INTO SPACE ; i Sting MARSHALL THOMPSON sn¢ MARLA LANDI AN AMALGAMATED PRODUCTION School Welder Used To Open School Safe the office, he said, he noticed that the safe had been burned open. Closer examination, he said, re- vealed that an 18-inch by 24-inch hole burned out of the safe door. He said that a welding outfit from the machine shop had been brought in to do the burning At the school, he said, he found a broken button and a wax match. WEARING WATCH On Dec. 2, he said, with a war- rant he searched Foote's home trial before a watch. This was taken from him,|Green St., entertained at Christ he said, and later identified as missing from the school safe. Found in drawer at Foote's home, he said, was a scribbler, containing two drawings of safe locations. One of these was mark- led Ajax Lumber Co., he said, and 8raves, of Perry St. | the other was possibly a drawing of the high school safe. The serib- bler, he said, had started out to be the accused's wife's cook hook. Two days later, he said, he searched a truck driven by Black and found a coat, belonging to Black, with a button broken off. BROKEN BUTTON A. V. Sharpe, of the Aftorney- General's Laboratory staff, said |he had examined the two pieces|and Miss K. Wendel, of Toronto. of broken button submitted by Pickering Police and found that they matched exactly. Wax matches submitted, he said, were melting point, David Keene, a Pickering Dis- trict High School student, said that he had identified a watch shown to him following the break- in which was his. The pair were committed for trial. Bail was set at $1,000. WHITBY DAY-BY-DAY OUT FOR NEW YEAR James Lewis, of Whitby, was Day by Magistrate F. S. Ebbs in Whitby police court on Tuesday | He was fined $10 and costs or four days in jail for being intoxicated ud . | i 2 i RST . MAN and was allowed to leave the court his four days having been spent in jail while awaiting trial. He {had been charged as a second| offender but His Worship decided that the next visit to court on a similar charge could net him three months in jail. PneSENTS AWARDS TO LACROSSE TEAMS we | | | | { excellent service from the mail- | men. Although they have been omy moved into high gear in 1958 Christmas mail to the community | with great gusto and enthusiasm. This has resulted in a great suc-|iging that federal economists are Clear Snow | THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, December 30, 1959 § ToAsit Big Trade Deficit rosmen Incurred In 1959 Postmen |the letter carrier delivery service By ALAN DONNELLY Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP)--Canada's econ in Whitby we have all enjoyed| delivering mail for little more with a vigor that overloaded the than two months, our postmen set country's financial resources and to the hectic task of delivering Produced a whopping trade defi. .|eit. Signs of a continued growth next year are already so prom- concerned that the nation may de- velop some inflationary head- aches This year's expansion--a sharp The mailman is harrassed by: upswing following the 1957-58 re- Snow and hail and wind and rain, cession -- got rolling 0 Quickly h ter. that it created some pinches as by gd dogs aud. ough ter demands for credit squeezed the : os Li f A by icy sidewalks and tropic heat, banks' supplies of funds by corns and callouses on his feet, BIG RISE IN IMPORTS by chaffed shoulders which make cess but the postmen are not resting on their laurels. The work must go on. and consumer goods to fuel the him sag i ansi L 8 1-per- because of his heavy stuffed mail SXpansion caused 3 stoep ] yer bag ' cent increase in imports in the year's first 10 months, and more At the present time, when our than doubled the commodity sidewalks are snow covered, we trade deficit to $523,300,000. can aid our postmen by keeping But despite the credit strains, our pathways and sidewalks free and the dislocations caused by from this hazardous carpet that we are forced to endure seemed certain the economy WHITBY and DISTRICT Wuitby Bureau Office: 111 Manager: Lloyd Robertson the United States steel strike, it| would fulfill the government fore:| Total labor income was more cast of a seven-per-cent rise in|than doubled, from $8,000,000,000 gross national production -- totallin 1949 to around $17,700,000,000 value of all goods and services by mid-1959. produced. | y : This would bring the total to TRADE FIGURES de bok $34,500,000,000, with the gain due| Big 3 Sxport a youn almost entirely to real physical V8 Ane. $4.929,000,000 while growth. The consumer price in | "* t 5 Wy i er from dex in the first 10 months aver-| Ee 00 Pog oe aged one per cent above year. $2 ar yh Ys earlier levels. Throughout the period national For next year Governor Jams development attracted huge E. Coyne of the Bank of Canada amounts of foreign capital; the has forecast a buyer demand amount of foreign long-term Sap. strong enough to produce possibly | tal invested in Canada rose from another seven « per - cent rise in|$8,000,000,000 to $19,100,000,000 at gross national production. the end of last year. One of the biggest question TEMPERS FORECAST marks on the horizon is the prob- But he qualified the prediction jem of financing future capital with the phrase "if such is physi- growth -- new factories, mines Mushrooming needs for capital cally possible." And he expressed oipolineg, roads and the like. concern that demands by busi: | ness, consumers and govern- ments may exceed the supply of physical resources. If this happens, he told a Tor. | onto audience Dec. 14, "one would hope that the decision on the part of some to withdraw a reduce their requirements would a be made before the competition|time and post-war years. becomes fierce enough to pro-| In Canada this year, the spot- duce a significant rise in prices|light was on the efforts of policy- and other undesirable develop. makers to keep the economic ex ments." {pansion from touching off new in- On the trade front, Canada flationary pressures. could thank the economic boom FIRM POLICY Officials here expect a long per- iod of world capital shortage {And this year's rise in interest rates is not seen as a temporary phenomenon, Mr. Coyne has pre- {dicted a long period of interest rates higher than those prevail. ing through the depression, war Dundas St. West . Tel. MO. 8-3708 Review Year At Rotary Club Meet | In lieu of having a guest speak-| He said that he hoped a return er at the weekly Rotary Club|invitation would be arranged for {luncheon, president Herb Cole and [thr Barry Rotary Club to visit the his directors presented a resume Whitby club, and that interchange of this year's activities, and a|visits should be set up for the forecast of things to come in the{Ajax and Pickering Clubs. He con- | [following year. As usual, the|cluded by thanking his directors|SeVen day 4 luncheon was held in the Whitby | for assisting him in the involved| Aron Auditorium. {work of keeping the Rotary wheel In speaking of the Rotary's ac-|in running order : ; complishments for 1959, president In the absence of vice-president {Herb said that it were not out-|Terry Moore, Ivor Lawrence |standing as compared with other|spoke on the Rotary's work in |years but the major activities/ supporting the Society for Crip-| |were the Rotary float in the Whit-|pled Children and the Easter by Santa Claus Parade, the|Seal Campaign. |Christmas party and the visit of SHOU : ars, Aur |SHOULD BE IN RED {Governor of District 77, J. D.| Art Crawford, the Chairman of Kennedy. _ _ |the program committee, said that | He said that the Rotary Club Rotary bank balance was far too {had completed the payment of the| good, "in the blue, and that in { Whitby Arena ice mortgage and order for the Rotary to be effi that Ted Sims had been instru- cient jt must be in the red. He {mental in arrangement of this|eypressed the need for the Rotary |great achievement, {to adopt another fund raising pro- In speaking of the future Herb ject such as a recreation centre, Cole said that he would like to see/or a teen town or senior eitizen more fellowship exercised in thelclub in which the club could |that they might feel that they funds. |are a part of the club during their| The final speaker was Rev. | visit. {Stanley Armstrong who spoke on lhe coming of the new year. He isaid thal we should accept the WHITBY anges that are introduced by |the new year and offer no resist- ance to them and not face today's | PERSONALS {problems with yesterday's ideas. | Rev. Armstrong said that we Mr. George Rene, organist at|should face the new year by keep- |St. John The 'Evangelist Church,|ing the following points in mind: |is leaving today from Malton air- |The ever increasing population of port for London, England, where the world, the "shrinkage of the he will study for a year under world" in which all of the old ex- {Sir Thomas Beecham, isting fences had been made fic- | ticious." | Miss E. Virgin entertained the| He said, "we must realize the {members of Vimy Ridge Lodge|great expansion of man's reach No. 639 at her home at a Christ-|{ better things, and man's quest mas party. Games were played ty pioneer outer space when he and prizes awarded to lucky win-| has not yet grasped the implica- ners. A penny bingo took place, |tions of making this important profits to go to the building fund. |gtep * A sing song was enjoyed. At the| He said that it was not possible close of a most enjoyable even-|tsday with the development of ing, the hostess, assisted by her peyclear weapons, to kill whole- sister, Mrs. D. Anderson, served zz without being killed whole- a hot turkey dinner. Dr. and Mrs. H. T. Fallaise, of sale |sale In his final point he said, "'we must realize that supreme power was returning from the West to the rise of the coloured races who {were no longer second class citi- He said that these points mas dinner their daughter and fellow, of Toronto, | Mrs. R. J. Graves, of Toronto, zens'. |was a Christmas dinner guest at the home of Mr. and Mrs. C. Sea-|0f thought by all in the great changes of the world in which Christmas dinner guests at the accelerating pace of the changes." {home of Mr. and Mrs. David Fal. = cist |low, of Palace St., were, Mr. and friend i Tailed 3 Mos. 'For Having, Third Offence son. On Boxing Day Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Carrigan, 23, of the Fallow visited Mr, and Mrs. R Neale, of Toronto. |. Mr. and Mrs. Frederic Frisbie, Pickering-Whitby Townline, learn- |of Lyndenhurst, Long Island, are/ed on Tuesday that he will spend | spending the holidays at the home New Year's Day in jail. Carrigan | Holiday guests at the home oi {Mr. and Mrs. T. R. Farndale, of | Centre St. N., were Mrs. M. Webb [made of wax which had the same of their father, Mr. George Ellis| Vas convicted of a third offence Port | tnder the Liquor Control Act and {was jailed three months by Ma- gistrate F. S. Ebbs, in Whitby Mr. and Mrs, James Charters police court. and Mr. Bill Charters spent' Carrigan had pleaded guilty to Christmas day in Woodville where having liquor in a place other they visited their daughter and than his residence. He also plead- son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd ed guilty to obstructing a police Lillico, and family. officer and was sentenced to one Miss Cheryl Ferguson is spend.|PO0ih in jail, the sentences to ing a week in Toronto visiting ran Soneurtently, and Mrs. Norman McCon.| PC Kenneth Edwards, of the {Whitby Police Department, said |that at 1 a.m. on Dec. 4, he and Mr. and Mrs. Omer Edgeley, of | PC Ernest Stoneman had checked Euclid St., spent Christmas day a car parked at the rear of a in Halloway as the guests of Mr. hotel in Whitby. In the car, he | Fax, of 1736 Duffrin St., | Whitby. |ah. |given a "break" for New Year's and Mrs. Ralph Sills, sister and{said, was Carrigan who refused brother-in-law of Mrs. Edgeley. 1 Mr. and Mrs. K. J. Craddock | of Hamilton, and Mr. Joseph, 4 t il |Craddock, of Galt, were Christ-| ae county jal |mas holiday guests at the home| Found in the car, he said, were |ot Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Finan, of {ive bottles of beer. | Hallett St. | Crown Attorney Alex C. Hall, QC, told the court that it appear- | Mr. and Mrs. Paul Desjardins, ed the accused did not like police to get out He said that Carrigan fought with PC Stoneman all the way to {to reduce the charge but warned|of Giffard St., celebrated their|officers. He said that his record (Sth wedding anniversary on Tues-|included two charges of resisting day. Best wishes are offered. to|arrest, and one of assaulting a Jur. and Mrs. Desjardins. ipolice officer. club towards visitors and guests spearhead the attack to raise Control Production Back | Bfter Explosion | NIAGARA FALLS, Ont. (CP)-- The Norton Company electro- chemical plant in nearby Chip- Count Nets > Driver Week: i'm mci | A Toronto man who pleaded furnace exolosion which killed a | guilty to having the care and worker and injured 12 Monday |control of a motor vehicle while night |intoxicated was Tuesday jailed for Charles H Care, Strasser, manu- court costs or serve an additionalicent of the plant's electrical seven davs. Mathew Northover Power has been restored. He es- (appeared 'before Magistrate F. S. timated it will he several weeks Ebbs in Whitby police court. PC Jack Mason, of the Whitby Plant Police Department, said that at Paired 18:50 p.m. on Dec. 26 he had found can be completely |Northover's car with two wheels being investigated, he said. in a ditch on Walnut St, He said that accused was behind the wheel | |in an intoxicated condition In addition to the jail New Westminster term, |Northover's car was impounded] Centre On Way Up above 1949 levels. |for three months and his licence] {to drive suspended for six months, | ADJOURNED WEEK ; : | After hearing part of the|With New Crown's case, an intoxicated driv-|before they dropped from ing charge against a Whitby driv-| Western liockey League, er was adjourned one week in Work out order that two other econstables|ucks and may in the U.S. for keeping its trade| : |balance from going deeper inthe] Ine Bank o Canada, Solel {red. The whole of a modest three. [FoRCtary at or wih 3 ow big resolute policy agains y |per-cent gain in exports was due : : ; 3 : growth in money supply. The io _ingrenseq shipments 1 the} country's money stocks at the | But looking ahead, Trade Min. start of December were one per [ister Churchill is hopeful. Basing|<eRt below the level a year ear (his optimism on a business up-| . [surge in the United Kingdom and| Chartered banks, pressed for |western Europe, which trailed| commercial loans t roug rag |that in the U.S., he has predicted fil s¥8 I oF, Sipandey Weir | "substantial increases" in ex-| ould go and them imposed firm ris on a wide front. Future ex. {Po inns . : credit restrictions in mid-August {port business would rise more ie generally. ore i ..| Interest rapidly than imports, thus nar 3 [rowing the trade deficit. | throughiont the period. The Bank lof Canada rate reached a peak HIGHLIGHTS OF DECADE {6.41 per cent on Aug. 13, con- If Canada is entering a new|trasting with the record low ef s and ordered to pay facturing manager, sald 40 per|jocade with optimism, it can also|1.12 per cent a year earlier. {look back on the last decade with] As the year progressed, the | satisfaction. federal government showed in. |" Population has risen 30 per cent creasing signs of tightening its before the $30,000 damage to theism 13 477,000 in mid-1949 to 17,-| purse strings after two years of Te-1550,000 last September. |anti - recession spending. A bal Gross national production has|anced budget next year, if it The cause of the explosion Is! ore than doubled in the decade, could be achieved after two years |althongh more than one - quarter|of budgetary deficits totalling of the gain was due to higher|around $1,000,000,000, would re- prices. Living costs in November move a major factor in the com- as measured by the consumer petition for funds on the capital price index were 28.8 per cent market, | Two of the main forces behind Employment rolls were up 21|this year's expansion were capi- VANCOUVER (CP) -- Veteran|per cent and industrial produc-|tal investment and consumer |centre Max McNab, a mainstay|tion was Sroud . i gout |speadiag, Jestminsted Royalsjgreater. e manufacturing] Wesimmhe "the|worker, who in 1949 worked an| RENEWED CONFIDENCE will|average 42.8 hours a week for with Vancouver Can-({98.6 cents an hour, was earning make a comeback|last August an average $1.70 an With increasing business confi. !dence, expenditures on new plant and equipment and general con- struction were expected to show their first increase since 1957. hour for a 41-hour work week. {may be heard. Pleading not guilty|at 35 |to the charge was Archibald] {Knight, 42, of 215 Craydon Rd. | | PC Mason said that on Dec. 12, lat 2:35 a.m. he had followed the (accused's car along Mary St.| {south to Dundas and along Dun-| {the right shoulder then crossed {the centre line, He said Knight! [was intoxicated The case was adjourned to hear] |the evidence of PC's Morley Nich-| B. BILL SCOTT Canadian Press Staff Writer TORONTO (CP) -- Top Disc Jockey main mareisl Gets Many Gifts | Canada's Strength in consumer sales was provided by a steadily - growing labor income, which In August was running 7.7 per cent above a year earlier. Consumer spending was up six per cent. The index of industrial produe- tion through the first nine months of the year averaged 7.5 per ceut above last year's mark, Manu- {and went, but there was no sign/facturers' shipments for the same |of the package period were up 5.7 per cent, | Rawhide went back on the air, Employment reached a record olson and Ron Shepperdson, who .,, disc jockey in the field of|and said somebody down east high of 6,206,000,000 in mid-July. |were absent |offered payola. Max a {Ferguson says "payola just isn't Pair Decide | To Split Cost record companies." And he isn't {interested in the other kind | hide and a score of other char- acters, has A wilful damage charge against| a Whitby woman was withdrawn|; i on Tuesday in Whitby police court|'n8 records complainant's car. Charged was| Joan Heard, of Brock St, § {own Ross Bryant, the complainant, 1, 4e of Palace St., told the court that| from Newfoundlanders from "Marumtiders." him, he said struck the fender | soles." Another "we must keep our eyes on thelof the car then glanced off into|y; pulkv toque, to wear when jm a rile a: the CBC Hali- matically succeeded by the Re-| {the windshield, cracking it The accused asked him if he|fux hockey team. had suggested he would be willing| to share the cost of a new wind-|GAVE BROAD JINTS : "a shield 50-50. Bryant said he would| Max said the gifts warts - agree and Magistrate F. §. Ebbs/ways spontaneous, but ten came in after obvious hints. withdrew the charge handy in my bach. "I will nominate Chief Rankine came in very in m as board of arbitration," he told|elor days." he said. 1 youd ge the pair. lon the air and say, 'Well, _ |sittin' here with my feet up on {2 chair watching my toes pokin {through the holes and sure {enough, the next would mail | Sportsmen Trounce [or Siaroid? He was a lspider, one of the more off-beat Pies played by Rawhide epen ents lwho got sick one time, and had | [to go to hospital. Fourteen kind | At the opening game of the(ladies promptlv knitted tiny | Whitby "Big Four Mercantile spider suite and sent them in. Hockey League last week, the In| During the last few years Max dependent Sales team were de-|has received about 50 different cisively trounced by Sportsmen caricatures of Rawhide from im- Corner by a score of 10-3. | aginative artists, He has also re- The Sportman's goals were by|ceived many tape recordings H. Tran and Maw with 3 each; J, from individuals and groups in- Tran 2; and Cherry and Foster 1|terested in folk songs. Max says each. Sawdon, Vorvis and P.|these aren't gNts, but a sort of Rousseau each scored 1 goal to| "audition." make Independent t One of Ws fondest memories PE un i u goes back to 1951, Rawhide had left Halifax for Toronto in 1949. Winter was approaching and Max had a yearning for some "Mar- rumtide" cider.. So Rawhide and wert on the Trans- The second game of the double header resulted in a win by one| goal over Ottenbrites by Larry's The final score was 8-7, hia MacDonald scored 4 goals for| the boys Larry's, and he was supported by|Canada B. McKeown, R. Beckman, G.[broad hints. Forrester and D. Harrison who HEARD AT ACADIA each netted one puck. | A few days later a letter ar- The game was very even and|pjved from a group of students at Ottenbrites G. Maclean answered|Acadia University, Wolfville, the four goals scored by Larry's/N.S. They promised to send a MacDonald by scoring 4 goals|jug of cider in time for Christ: himself. The other Ottenbrite/mas. Rawhide read the letter on scorers were A. Rousseau, T.|the air, smacked his lips, and sat Brown and G. Barnes back to wait. Christmas eame folk music says he's never been seemed to be procrastinating | (Rawhide) | Of Wi d hi Id {strange gifts ol Ye a and waited. Then they re-pack-| 1 m S 1€ ling tire 12 years he has been with aged it, with a large amount of \28F Jer the CBC in Toronto and the Mari-| times. He now is in Toronto play-|ot the parcel. It finally reached and doing his usual Rawhide, labelled as a used ra-| pot-pourri of weird characteriza-|dio. when the complainant and the|P oll rork- A . =| tions and satire, as well as worl accused decided to share the $57) ing on CBC television's Tabloid. damage to a windshield on the| ge says most of his gifts have hen he was in Halifax, Rav- often received knitted items One on Dec. 9, the accused had thrown| woman sent him a pair of heavv|Governor Clinton A. Clauson, 84, should give rise to re-orientation a piece of plywood at him as he|ficherman's socks, "to be wornidied in his sleep early today. He| | sat in his car. The board missed|over the shoes, to save the was in his first year of a four-| listener made|year term. {would bring a pair of hand- | a network and Issued some | Unemployment early in the year, Eventually, a quart of cider ar-|instead of hitting its customary rived, and with it a note. The sta-| peak in late winter, began a grad- |a paving proposition for folk-song|tion agent at Wolfville had heard|ya] decline starting in January. Rawhide reading the students'|jt reached a low of 213,000 un. letter, and when they brought employed in mid-September and But Max, impersonator of Raw-|their package in to mail, had re-|, ce to 206,000 in November--4.7 fused to accept it. {per cent of the labor force com- They went away with the cider, | red with 5.9 per cent a year false filling to change the shape| | Family Monuments Maine's Governor | RORY Died In His Sleep {4b AUGUSTA, Me. (AP)--Maine's| Created To Individual Requirements STAFFORD BROS. Monumental Works 318 Dundas East A Democrat, he will be auto-| MO 8-3552 publican president of the state] Senate, John H. Reed of Fort Fairfield. SEZ: IMPROVE YOUR HOME DURING THE WINTER ! It's a very rewarding hob- by, and so much fun that the whole family will want to help you! See us now! We carry all the materials you need ot very low prices! AJAX LUMBER CO. WHITBY - MO 8-4106 PICKERING PH. 366 AJAX PH. 1045 i 3 pi

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