4 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, January 26, 1960 MORE THAN a hundred | officers formed a guard | Pallbearers were 1onor as the late Sergeant | cers who had served A. Bruce was borne | years with the Paul I's 1 United Church fellow of ray St Gives Talk Burial Held On Stores BOWMANVILLE (Staff) requirements of a succe retail merchandisi operation and m the Canadian Tir Stores were defined I ar Club at its F h uncheon meeting by Rotar The casket at the front of Stew McTavish in his class.|church was banked with + tri For Sgt. AJAX United -- The sful car ng capa Staff Church on Sat the funera 1 geant Mu A Provincial Police St field n ty an agemen Assoc for the for Bruce, many ( vish, who opened his t here last yea » Rotary all 183 Canadian. Tire in Ontario, Quebec Maritime Provinces are owned ar d have and other lice of honor as from Pickering of the guard borne I Db a and | | I all nd vidually re ozen police ¢ 'formed a part of th long sion of cars that fol lowed gs plus integri lus a creative ima rifests in the a ther fellows' poin MRS. CHALRES PERRY Matron Agn am Chapter, Osha ned by Blue Order of the E official f By y PORT field put es or PHLY whether business t 238 s en Chapter, er her here rs of t me Indian Woman | Found Bludgeoned ~ QUESNEL, B.C. (CP A 30 old Indian woman was to The meeting was opened on the Worthy Matror guests and chapters, Chapters Sunbeam Laurel Those Presiding Matron Mrs, B Past Helen ; Mabel Chapm » garet Corni ed Gene 28 Ans Whitby connection with ' vere the woman for friends were m house at the time of|l¥ Myrtle Palmer ed Jeffrey n thelwere aid a drinking the woman's death. A ed chair was found beside the body Ifare officials took the chil under care ark part Nottingham; Margaret Georg Jeffrey; Palmer 8 8 ison in Ajax on Saturday afternoon. many late Sergeant Bruce. Foremost in the photo Paul's remains to Pinegrove floral Whitby mem- association ruis pro- District De- es Kem. Ray out visi v the Margaret |, Carnegie welcoming the honored tured members of various Jessie Slater represented hospital and welcomed to the East/lold a rummage sale and tea on Matrons, Colbear: | oH ibis are Sergeant Chas. Heffering | and ' Constable Sol. Holroyd. Others bearing the bronze cas- ket are Corporal Ray Williams, Corporal Norman McCombe, | Ernest Collison, Corporal ffi Cowie, P. C. Gordon McLean. --Photo by John Mill New Officers Bre Installed |By MRS, CHARLES H. REESO | PORT PERRY - Woma Murray Cemetery The services were T. Rex Nor- to Prince Albert conducted by Rev man, pastor of St. Paul's hurch he late Sergeant Bruce was by the preside the first officer in charge of po-|nish, w a New licing Ajax at the end of the Robert lor Second World War. He has re led here with his family since returned from duty with the Canadian Navy ed with the Whitby de tachment OPP, he left Whitby to take up duties as detachment ser geant in Toronto, He had suffer »d previous heart attacks, but to the time of his sudden passi on Wednesday evening appe in n_good health. 1960 of t was opene On- Roy Cc v resen ive the 1 a pia solo Annua 0 3 reports p esented sho work and t statement was declar tisfactory. Devotions were *harge of Mrs. Gordon McDona and her and Rev. E, nstead 1 the install up (Lr ed sition of .9680 officers as follow w Mrs esident, vice - rawford R.A Mrs surer correspo ni wke JPP [he Royal A corporé i year of the the ndue ! Vi sident e-p R M Ie the' Jr; Lov REESOR CANDIDATE RECEIVED Dur cand ng the inspection one received degrees of t order. Officers and staff ca the work and the char ere given by the Worthy Pat Leonard Colbear. Reports were wh ( 1 Y W served a wa as- Group and soc lowed was a good|1 eceived from the various com-|( H( IR OF F ICE es. Sick and Sunshine C rs Adelia White and Mario ViacMaster reported that ick list was diminishing, It w revealed that Associate Conduc t ress Olive Paynter, had frac-|during her leg in an accident.|E. S was reported in|offic ent heir I n the § th retirir s exer rat by Lin the ne re as fol Past Kennth Howard lows: Hallett Hall Reowoh: secretar: Reesor; treasure social convener Marty yn and Mrs t conve ginald Mac. Benevolent Convenor Margaret Mrs Jeffrey, requested permission tol dent, Gordon Mrs. Gordon James Burnett; Saturday, February 13, in the d Masonic Temple and reported c that 12 boxes of cheer were sent out. Several invitations were Je ceived among which was et- Bu and M rne wn an| shi Marion Sand-|from Durham Chapter for Feb. Past|ruary 9, Zenith Chapter for Feb- secrets James| ruary and Leonard 'Colbear, [for February 4 1, and Francis Chapte: The Un ted wit PRESENT CORSAGE TELEVISION LOG CHCH-TV Channel 11--Hamilton CBLT-TV Channel WKBW.TV Channel 7---Buffale WROC-TV Channel WGR-TV Channel 2--Buffalo Toronto 5--Rochester served by WBEN-TV Channel 4--Buffalo iy in charg Annual repc and devotio |Mrs. E dg Mrs The District Deputy Grand Ma |tron, was presented with a cor sage and a gift of money for her project for the year by the Worthy Matron, Margaret Car- negie. A delicious luncheon was the refreshment co convened by Margaret , PM e ar Leask with poen the New Year Sha 50 niiee A letter ceived by Mrs, MONDAY EVENING 5:00 P.M. 8:30 AM, Devotions 9:00 AM. 4:30 P.M. 6:00 P.M Mid 0:00 A. Mn are Jones 10:30 AM. 6:15 P.M av Your 1 2 Hunch : The Go 10 F mM 11:00 AM, a 5:45 P. M. fice Tn Right phi ¢ Wonderful 6:15 P. Hi 7:00 PM 6:30 P. NM. 12: 00 NOON Gur N w r ort 12:15 P.M 00 P.M eof the Hf 30 P.M. 8:00 PY ! 45 PM 3:30 P.M. e Matinee 1:00 Pl it t Face Beat 9:00 P.M i G 2 P Ar mas 0 » >. 4 ¢ b n 2:00 P.M. ar Murray 1:00 P.M us 9:30 Pu. 10:00 P.M. 2» Presents Moore 130 PM. Hammer Allyson 00 P.M, News Sports Confer s eneé 15 P.M. 8 t Midnight 00 P.M, News; Sports PM. dies You ther; 15 . rus hese Roots TUESDAY CI 8:00 AM. on the World 1:00 30 PM Popeye 5-2 day 2 Sigg News: Roundup | & 8:15 AM Captain Kangaroe Theatre 11:45 PM Boxing 5 4-The Brighter 18 Day he draw held by the Regalia {Committee was won by Mrs Minnie Brignall and Mrs. Marior Sandison, P.M. Proceeds realiz ed from this project amounted t« {$11.55. Th» Penny Drill was Be $ Plans are underway for : t al Burns' Night to be held 'unea in the Chapter rooms January _| Divers To Salvage | 'All- Canada | JLost Snowmobile | Ont (CP) sn To Tuesday fo st le I oy ed ugh th into 75 feet ¢ Reyn Miss Reesor, was ew the 1 of t 1 and, fourth char ompson and her grou Serve $5,000 vm t $ix person th sett ice ekend as it » Simcoe hr | Developed (CP) near Ch en turned plant of Limited, ited by of V vo mile | and as en out to th the ope WINNIPEG eady tested ave be Ww nnipeg ries san able radi i all an I and illed The Black Brant, is kn wave both "military and non- tions." said that the with the De Board atte ywn i pl rmen, bel nt wall 'k to a is about i Ket 1s connected ; {fence Research develop gram." 45 miles nort a Main 'purpose rocket is to gain high : data for purely scientific arch and to test rocket fuel ral of the 24-foot projec tiles were built under top-secret c tions th fins bei ng brought in from England due to p of time, the nes said. They were tested '( ase on the shore of Hud re d ure wspape J Be BRISTOL W.M general STATEMENT vice-presiden manager of Bristo Winnipeg, was quoted as sa Hardware for tested in C our rable par he v rried out in Winnipeg.' During firix the rocket inches in diameter--was charge with a new type of solid fuel de veloped by scientists of the Cana |dian Army research and develop- {ment éstablishment at Quebec, the paper CHILDREN DO - HAVE WORMS Ever since Grandmoth Parehis Tare OCs or a oiy Graves" to give relief from worms. Easy and SAFE fe give to children from 1 year up. Quickly effective and con of 'Safe. . Pleasant... Effective "Use ' aves Mather Graves WORME rocket de veloped a thrust of 20,000 pounds {for f 20 seconds, hit speeds of 3,000 miles an hour and (reached an altitude of 60 miles." | period Sergeant J. E, Johnston, P. C. N. was eran by only di hel cers utive or Rev presi pres dent, | rice-presi- abeth onl anley ts were presented, | vestigated. ere conducted by| n opened that beatniks are part of a re- used as ers of the Africa Disturbed." | men ed to be mainland. U.S. Sets Up Nine More Nike Bases WASHINGTON (AP) Nine WHITBY SPORTS SPOTLIGHT By WREN A. BLAIR additional missile master direct ing centres for Nike anti-aircraft .|weapons will be located in ma- jor metropolitan areas to im- prove U.S. air defences, the army reported Saturday. The first missile master sys- tem is in operation at Fort Meade, Md,, for protection of the Washington-Baltimore area. The additional centres for col lecting and instantly analzing data on both friendly and enemy aircraft will be set up in the areas of New York, Seattle, Bos- ton-Providence, Buffalo - Niagara Falls, Chicago, Pittsburgh, Los Angeles, Detroit and Philadel- phia | The army system is being linked to the North American Air Defence (NORAD) Command, which directs the over-all air- craft and missile defence of the [Paiied States and Canada The missile master centre re- BL long range warning of the approach of planes through the networks of the Distant Early Warning (DEW) line and the SAGE complex, SAGE (meaning semi - automatic ground control environmen!) is used by the air force for directing jet fighters With GERRY BLAIR PINCH-HITTING Whitby Dunlops suffered one of their worst defeats since the formation of. the club, by dropping an 8-3 decision to the hungry Windsor Bulldoys on Saturday night in Whitby. The absence of two top rearguards, Alf Treen and playing-coach Ted O'Connor hurt the club considerably. On the other hand, Windsor could do no wrong--the puck was there when they wanted it. they skated like demons all night, taking advantage of the miscues of the "Dunnies" injury riddled defence, Adding to the already serious problem on defence, was the severe gash Harry Sinden received on his lip and chin late in the third period. Sinden was rushed immediately to Oshawa General Hospital where he received 23 stitches. This leaves the club with only one defenceman, Don McBeth, and he is unable to operate at full efficiency with a sore side. Upon en- tering the Whitby dressing room at the end of the funct Guelph Herald before buy- ing the Gravenhurst newspaper. PUBLISHED WEEKLY GRAVENHURST (CP)--Alfred J. Dass, 77, owner and publicher o of the weekly Gravenhurst Ban- He was an early member of the ner for 40 years, died Wednes-|Canadian Weekly Newspaper As- _ day, Born in Fergus where he|sociation and. a former Graven- learned the printing trade, he|hurst municipal council mem- was associated with the now-de-|ber. Crowding Our Screen With Love and War ! lood: = wi Vind: + 8 ¥ |g: Hoke Bue GR TODAY « rUESDAY a AY TUESDAY 3 Learning to dance is fun at game one could notice an exact difference in the attitude of the players, having suffered a setback by that large margin, Adding also to their woes was whether or not Harry had reinjured his jaw, which seemed possible seeing his blood splattered face. Harry has had his jaw broken 'twice in his hockey years. We were especially pleased with the crowd reaction (except for a critical few) when the Dunlops were Rr and long range m s to inter- ) ception approaching enemy 1's | aircraft, " Detective ' Smashes Beatnik Ring SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- Five nths of life among the beat- at marijuana parties, sex rgies and on robbery raids-- ere over Sunday for Robert stes. He's shaved off his beard. le's taken shower after shower. But the 29-year-old private in- : {Vestigator, credited 'by narcotics |officers with providing the key "| tor a roundup of 30 narcotics sus- pects, still doesn't feel clean. "For my money, they're dirty, » (they're lazy, they're bums and they're crooks," said Estes, a handsome, crewcut army vet- of he no w- he ec d| al als Ss d- r; e. | 10, "For the most part they have| deep inferiority complexes that ppear when they mix to- al| gether. I estimate that 75 per a behind 6-0 at one point, they still had faith, chant- ing the old "Go Dunnies Go", probably realizing the tough chore the club had, with two defenders, Tomorrow night the Whitby Dunlops face an almost impossible task of trying to beat the Belleville Mac- Farlands with only It should prove very interesting, Game time for this one will be the usual 8:00 p.m. The MacF will be at full strength, and that will present enough trouble as it is. Just who will be moved back to help fill the gap is not known, but probably, Bob Hassard and Pete Bab- ando will get the call, Harry is not expected to play until the week-end, if even then. He is scheduled to join the Kitchener-Waterloo Dutchmen this week-end when they embark their Western Canada tour prior to the winter Olympics. Judging from Kitchen- er's week-end performance they could use some help on defence. Saturday night in Kitchener, the Chatham Maroons belted them, 9-5, and yesterday afternoon in the motor city, the Bulldogs made it two trouncings in succession, with a 7-2 thumping over the Dutchies. Sunday's victory for Windsor was worth four valuable points, Added to their two points from Saturday night. it put them right back in the thick of things, and also took the pressure off the Dunlops, keeping the K-W's safely in second place with only two four point games remaining. It is almost impossible for the Dutchmen to end in first place. TOWN and COUNTRY . .. Whitby Hillcrests enter- tain the Penetang Hurons in a regular OHA Junior only one defenceman. arlands on cent of the beatniks on the beach smoke weed at some time or an- other.' Estes said a blonde chick who| wore 1 lack ings helped| ®lhis acceptancé into beatnik life. He faked marijuana d ng tock dreams, | played the harmonica and even wrote beatnik poetry 2 a] liked. | r. 1 Gang Habit + Detriment > To Schools TORONTO (CP)---Dr. Murray h|G. Ross, president of York Uni- versity, says the attitudes of uni- | versity beatniks needs to be in- W | y, He told the Ontario School Trustees Council annual meeting | | a cent North American gang cul-| jp/ture which has caused many talented students to leave school s| prematurely Dr. Ross said gang attitudes | 1. and habits are 'highly incompa {tible with those which find pe school. This inevitably to conflict and an early separation from school." P| up am perturbed that persons of talent and capacity are pass |ing us by," he said. "We must {know far more about these young {people-- how they perceive their | future before we can be helpful [to them | Dr. Ross added: "We in edu- of cation cannot sit idly by and see lan almost negligible portion of om |our youth receive the full bene- sffits of our education system e| Dr, Ross is president.of Can f |ada's newest . university which | | opens here in n September. al R vy 4 NORWAY MOVIES it] Norway's 640 movie theatres | sold 35,000,000 admissions in 1958; lan average of 10 for every inhab- itant Ee dd | for or Julck Sa) Biorting he 4 for Dusk ache | uma Ie sup h ete satisfa Over 900 million Naga YOU WHO NEVER FINISHED "C" league fixture tonight at the local arena. The Hill- crests hav most sive record to date, having i This club has the makings f championship outfit deserve the best pe support. Tor action gets underway at 8:30 p.n Irwin Gross, one of the classiest centres in the OHA Senior "A" circuit played a tremendous game on Saturday night with his Windsor teammates against '8 Two or three times he completely baffled defence with his shift faking a shot tifully and pulling. off a rordie Howe type" ps: behind his back while in full flight It's high time someone calmed down Don Head the fiery Windsor goaltender. We doubt ied to inflict Sinden with such a serious he fainly intended to keep him clear of the crease by ming the stick in his face. Against a club like Whitby it just isn't necessary. They stick strictly to the book. One has only to read the minutes in penalties records and you 'will find nary 'a Whitby member the top twenty, giving proof enough that they don't go out of their way to instigate trouble e a impre € etback ible ght's the ulby iness, that he intenc cut; but we feel Ce ' | Gillis, 38, in their Toronto home last September. McNeil was be- ng tried for murder but Mr, Justice R. I. Ferguson directed REDUCED CHARGE TORONTO (CP)--Eric Jc |McNeil, 25, Wednesday we |victed on a reduced charge manslaughter in the stab {death, during a par of verdict ORGAN MUSIC fhe Poet Of The Hammecnd Organ. Colin Corbett, APPEARING NIGHTLY AT THE GENOSHA HOTEL HIGH SCHOOL are invited to write for FREE booklet and Trial Sample Lesson--Tells how you con earn your High School Di- * AT HOME IN SPARE TIME AMERICAN SCHOOL---100 Dundas St., Deseronto, Ont. Nome plor Address This is e Canadian High School Course in CinemaScope STARTS WiROCOLOR T0 DAY FEATURE SHOWN DAILY AY . 1:30---3:30--5:30--7:35--9:4§ LOVE-AFFAIR WIT H A FRENCH FLAIR! Deborah Kerr Rossano Crazzi -G-M presents Extra! COLOR CARTOON "Cavelleno Droopy" "0 4 FAMOUS PLAYERS THEATRE he jury to return a manslaugh-| Arthur Mornay All students are invited to special parties to give them poise, confidence Yes, it's fun learning to dance the Arthus Murray Way thanks to his Studio par- ties. And it's quick and easy, too, due to his "Magic Step" method of teaching. Your success is guaranteed when you put yourself in the hands of an Arthur Murray expert and learn this key step to all dances. Studios open daily, 10 PM and visitors are always welcome. | Vo hr. #190 trial lesson ! Come in now and have a half-hour $1 trial I lesson, See for yourself why Arthur Murray graduates are olways the popular partners. | ARTHUR ARAN MURRAY 112 SIMCOE S. RA 8-1681 A NEW HIGH IN SCREEN SUSPENSE! | OVERWHELMING PASSION! «..the SHARP, RAW edge of human experience! Lome RICHARD ATTENBOROUGH " ADAMS TIRING MORGAN COLIN Smiley] PETERSON , Poe all that was left after. STARTS TODAY