VETERAN OSHAWA LETTER CARRIER HO William Merchant is shown being presented with a fare- well gift by Postmaster N. J. | Moran, after 32 years of ser- vice to the Oshawa post office. His fellow postmen, some shown | above, bade him farewell Fri. | Jan. 16, 1928, He was off duty day at a ceremony at the post | for three days, several years office prior to his last mail de- | ago, when he cut his foot. The | other two days were accounted for by a "touch of the flu". As a postman he has walked more | livery. Mr, Merchant has been | off duty only five days since | joining the post office staff on | Y 7 than 117,600 miles on his "trip". This mileage is roughly estab- lished by calculating three miles per hour; five hours per day; five days per week; 49 weeks per year for 32 years. Mr, Mer- chant is a native of England Y POSTAL STAFF CITY AND, ® DISTRICT * TO SPEAK AT ROTARY William A. Holland, superinten- dent 'of the Oshawa General Hos- pital, will be the speaker at the luncheon meeting of the Rotary Ciub of Oshawa, at Hotel Gen- osha. Next Monday, he will tell the service club of serious need for additional accommodation at tie. Oshawa General Hospital. YEAR IN JAIL Frank F. Le Blanc, 24, of 176 Roxborough avenue, was sentenc- ed to a year in jail by Magistrate C. W. Guest Friday after he pleaded guilty to indecently as- saulting an Oshawa woman, COMMITTED, FOR TRIAL Stephen Aldred, 22, of 53 Park crescent, Fairport Beach, was committed for trial Friday on a charge of raping a 16-year-old girl, ; 'Lana's Daughter (Runs Away Again | SYLMAR, Calif. (AP) -- Lana | Turner's 16 - year - old daughter, | Cheryl, who two years ago stabbed her actress mother's hoodlum lover, escaped Friday night from a county - operated home for girls. The statuesque teen-ager had been committed to the El Retiro | home for girls six weeks ago for {what her mother termed psychi- |atric therapy. Cheryl and two other girls {climbed over a chain-link fence May 11 to visit a brother and |and faded into the residential sister whom he has not seen [neighborhood in the San Fer- for 38 years. {nando Valley community of Syl- --Oshawa Times Photo | mar. and a veteran of the First World War, He is returning to England for several months Work Is Recalled By NES Manager Eighteen years in the National Employment Service came to an end Friday for Norman Hodgson, the manager of the Oshawa branch of the service. It was in 1942 when the Osh | improved tremendously, too, he said, and workers did not have las long to wait as they would have in the early years of the service, "I would like to express my awa branch of the service was appreciation for the co-operation only a few months old, the Un- given by all employees of man- employment Insurance Act hav-lagement and labor organiza- lng come into force during the tone." Mr. Hodgson said Friday, y : iad S00 "Without such co-operation 1 Joined the staff as a senior place: | would have been much more dif- Ment officer, Previously Je had ficult to operate." een a member of the city wel-| fare department for 12 years. a. Seago gave his staff a In 1042, the staff was only half ug . its present size, Mr, Hodgson re-| "I have only one regret on calls, and most of its time was|leaving and that is I am saying spent transferring people from [goodbye to what I consider the non-essential industry to essential finest staff of any National, Em- work for the duration of the war. ployment Service office in Can- QUITE A PROBLEM ada." "It was quite a problem," Mr. Mr, Hodgson is resigning for Hodgson says, "because you had health reasons. He was specially to disturb people who had been|asked to stay until the end doing one job for 10, 15 and 20|of April to see the local branch of ears." |the service into its mew building Juniors Set Dates For Farm Events UXBRIDGE (Special) A county tour and picnic, field days, judging competitions, rifle shoots and square dances, and church services are all included in the summer program of the Ontario County Junior Farmer's Association. The executive and directors met at the agricultural office here Thursday evening fo set dates and approve plans for the various events. Sunday, May 15, the associa- tion will hold a county tour and picnic, The tour will begin in Uxbridge and will take in several points of interest in the Uxbridge and Beaverton areas. tour, by car, will conclude with a icnic supper. P A county "Junior Farmer Play Party" and get-together will be held in the Township Hall, Brook- lin, Saturday, May 21, at 8:30 .m. The committee in charge is Frank Barkey, Claremont, Jeanne Pearson, Uxbridge, and Cloyne Stearman, Uxbridge. JUDGING CONTEST The annual Ontario County competition will be held in the Sunderland area Saturday, May 28, with registration in the Town- ship Hall, Sunderland at 9 a.m. The Ontario County Junior Farmer Field Day will be held at the Port Perry High Schoo Saturday, June 18, A rifle shoo' and square dance competition will be held in conjunction with the Field Day. Field Day committee members are John Somerville, Greenbank: Alan Ross, Beaverton; Grant Carson, Brooklin; and Grant Parrott, Ashburn, The annual picnic and vesper service will be held Sunday. August 7. The committee in charge is Alan Ross, Beaverton: Juniok Farmer livestock judging|2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Seturday, April 30, 1960 3 WEATHER FORECAST Cloud, Showers During Sunday TORONTO -(CP)--Official fore-| Northern White River, Western casts issued at 5 a.m.: T Synopsis: Skies were cloudy over all the forecast regions this morning. Showers were occurring over Southwestern Ontario where temperatures are near 50. Cold air covers Northwestern Ontario while milder air covers the re- mainder of the province. A band of rain and snow stretches from Eastern Lake Superior northeast- ward across James Bay. A low pressure area over Mis- souri was expected to move northeastward, passing across Central Ontario Sunday morning. This will be followed by strong northwest winds and colder weather. Regional forecasts valid until midnight Sunday: Si Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Wind- . sor, London: Cloudy today and Kapuskasing . Sunday. Occasional rain with White River scattered thunderstorms chang- Moosonee .... ing to showers Sunday morning. Mild b cooler Sunday. Winds southeasterly 20-35, shift d ing early Sunday to northwesterly f/ on Mother! o Niagasa, Lake Sate, Hali-| urton, Georgian Bay, Hamilton, | Toronto: ihe boyy pas id Is your child irritable, restless day. Occasional rain with scat.|j 9nd picky with f If so, the couse may be WORMS. tered thunderstorms changing to Wi il t with showers Sunday afternoon. Mild, rons, e Sommen a wi ed becoming cooler late Sunday. (§ fen Son De easily des Ioy Winds southeasterly 20-25, shift. | ond expelled with Millers Worm 1 owaer, r jug 10 nor thwesterly 25-35 Sunday |} ,,, Canadian mothers. At your Kirkland Lake, Southern White Dre Counter, River, Eastern James Bay, East- At Your Drug Counter ern Timmins-Kapuskasing, North| / Bay, Sudbury: Cloudy today and Wome Powders sional snow clearing Sunday evening. . Winds northerly 20-25, increasing late tonight to Forecast Temperatures Lows tonight, Highs Sunday: Windsor ..... suvrs St. Thomas London ..... Wingham Toronto .. Trenton St. Catharines Hamilton Muskoka . &8 RR8LLLLLLLLTLG BROSBRURRERTREES | Sunday, Rain with risk of scat- tered thunderstorms changing to snowflurries Sunday. afternoon. Mild, becoming much colder Sun- day afternoon. Winds southeast- | erly 20-25, shifting Sunday morn- | ing to northwesterly 25-35. ! Joan Marshall, C ;- and Amne Dryden, Brooklin. Sunday, September 25, has been set as the date for the annual Junior Farmer church service to be held in the Ux- bridge district. The committee in charge is' Barbara Phair, Sea- grave; Fred Taber, Brooklin; and Carl Shier, Cannington. SALK EFFECTIVE SARNIA (CP)--Recently com- piled studies by the federal de- partment of health and welfare show Salk vaccine produced in Canada is 97.5 per cent effective in preventing paralytic polio, Dr. Leone Farrell of Connaught Med- jcal Research Laboratories in Toronto, said Friday. He told the Sarnia section of the Chemical Institute of Canada that apathy was the only explanation for the 997 cases of polio recorded last Doctors' -- Specialists' Surgeons' - Osteopaths' Anaesthetists' Fees Paid "The Ontario Hospital Insurance plan offers pro- tection against the cost of assential HOSPITAL care. IT DOES NOT cover medical or surgical fees." The Transportation Insurance Company now offers to the residents of Ontario a Physician and Surgeon coverage that pays doctors' bills; year in Canada, AT Home - IN HOSPITAL - IN DOCTOR'S OFFICE HIGHLIGHTS 1--Individual Coverage 2--Family coverage. 3--One adult family coverage. 4--No Medical examinations required. 5--A special plan now available for senior citizens WITH NO AGE LIMIT. Also--New Lost Wages Plan Up to $300. a month, even for life, if you we unable to work due to an accident or illness. But the war years brought full op Simcoe street south, The move employment and it was not until/was made last month, 1945 that the office experienced| Asked whether he thought some the'\first heavy load of claims for of Oshawa's nearly 5000 unem- t as war work came to an|pioved were won't-works, Mr, and peacetime production Hodoson smiled. "No comment", haltingly at first. With jhe sald. "The figures are no end of the war the Oshawaljicher than they were this time branch of the service was also|jaci year." faced with returning munition If he has any other views on workers in the shell filling plant}, 0 subject he's going to take at Ajax to their hmes across|y,om into retirement with him. Canada, Mr. Hodgson remem-| bers. TO WATCH CRICKET Mr. Hodgson was promoted to] Mr. Hodgson pans to have a an employment claims officer ing, jet summer, watching the Osh- a higher grade and supervised|awa Cricket team which he used the entire inter office staff, Inlio captain and has umpired for, 1953 he was appointed manager|ynen he can. He is also a chess in Oshawa. player. In September, he and HEAVY HIRING PERIODS {Mrs. Hodgson intend to take a Since the post war years, the|trip through Canada. : staff has been busiest, Mr. Hodg-| They have a son and two, MRS. HARRIET E. BROWN (York City where she did private son says, when there have been Yaugiters, ali aed, living in In falling bealth for the past/ nursing. heav: riods of hiring in indus-|Oshawa. Mr, son came to year Mrs. Harriet Ellen Brown| pn 1916 wis . 26D try roux from all parts|Canada from England in 1924 and (died at the Oshawa General Hos-| seas with Wise Jiautis Weal over, of the country have converged on settled in Oshawa in 1927. He pital Friday, April 20. She was Unit which was stationed at army spent four years in the British in her 7Ist year. headquarters near Chaumont army in the 1014-18 war, and is| A daughter of the late Mr. and prance aNmont, GER ER an retirement as local office man- | ment officer of the Unemploy- office pr ted him ager after completing 18 years | ment Insurance Commission, a | with a standing reading lamp, service with the Unemployment | former manager of the Oshawa | The presentations were made Insurance Commission in Osh- | office. The members of the | at a dinner in his honor in awa. Looking on at left is Leon- | staff presented Mr. Hodgson | Hotel Genosha Friday night. nard Coulson, regional employ- | with a 365-day clock while the | ~Oshawa Times Photo CAPSULE NEWS Hospital Work P. G. JONES, (right), as- sistant regional director of the Unemployment Insurance Com- mission presents Norman Hodg- son (centre), with a Certificate of Meritorious Service on his OBITUARIES For further information, please fill out coupon and mail to your Oshawa representative, MR. G. CAINES, c/o OSHAWA TIMES, BOX 123, Alter the close of the war shel 1920 helped| | Name . Address. . ER RR ps EEE TREE ES f sevens AGC ius, sssssssvensne MARRIED (iusunsevess.l] sessses[J SINGLE ..0 iesseneese..0] serves] WIDOWED (sees evsl] Occupation. css sssedesssesssssvess I | Doctor's Plan Lost Wages Plan . Two people were injured in ac- cidents in Oshawa Friday. Both were taken to the Oshawa Gen- eral Hospital, Mrs. Ann Jacklin, avenue, sustained shock and a bang on the head. She was a pas- senger in a car driven by her husband, Benjamin Jacklin, | which was involved in a collision] at the corner of William street and Ritson road, with a truck driven by Edmond Sequin, 418 Dove Dale street, Whitby. At 5.10 p.m. Friday, Lorne St Denis, 15 Maitland street, To- ronto, was injured when a car driven by his sen, Thomas Charles St. Denis, collided with Mr. Caines will accept enrolment in this area until May 13th. || parties involved in a dispute hold-| TOURIST DEFICIT P 1 H vi employed as a housekeeper by| Service in Oshawa and was the|, Two eopie Inu { 1300 SIMCOE ST. N. During the Second World War, 1 embers of Local 813, Plumbers reported Friday. Canadian tour- Mrs. Brown is survivied by a/ worker in the local Red Cross So- Fox Plumbing and Heating Com-|000,000 and American tourists] 375 Olive 254 Stevenson road north, and/W- F. Huntington (Joyce) and|en's missionary society of the grove avenue, Oshawa, was sit-|Rev. 8. C. H. Atkinson, minister|js Miss Evelyn Everson |seaway. The ling reported a '"pro-| driven by Donald L. Wilkinson, pp Miss Alberta Harris, 18 Street United Church, will con. d who defened German General : Tender EAT'N FOR THE LARGEST { [] [] Oshawa, and also when there Disp ute Aired have been sudden periods of un- now a member of Branch 43 of Mrs. Ambrose Lewis, the de- Methods of handling have been|the Canadian Legion. |ceased was born Jan. 6, 1890 in PETERBOROUGH (CP) -- Alljtion today. Oshawa for three years, she was|°rBanize the public health nursing ing up work on a civic hospital] OTTAWA (CP) -- Canadian vitv's firs |addition have agreed to attend a|tourists spent m-ve in tha T= =4 Alonzo Ledgett, 13 Athol street|Clty's first public health nurse. | iliati sti | States i west. She had also lived at Glen She jotted from this position | onc on le Sh Anetta visitors i g Tehp 1 0, | has hs i Major, Toronto and Uxbridge. pute over wages Is between sources Minister Alvin Hamilton PHONE RA 3-71922 In Street Crashes worker n the local Tuo Cros Sp. 004 Eipeiers Union and E, .|ls, spent an, estimated, Ho4.| OSHAWA |sister, Mrs, Rose Brown, of ciety in which she held an ex- y = | \ os . : AL A ] , his hh pany of Welland, plumbing sub.|about $357,000,000, up almost $50,- was removed to hospital with Stouffville; four nieces, Mrs, J.|& utive position. : contractors on the $2,152,260 pro-|000,000 from 1958. Both totals are | head and leg lacerations and a|Winch (Dorothea), Mrs. Thomas| She was a member of Simcoe ject | records Cars driven by Eileen Collins, | Deverill (Marjorie), and Mrs. woman's association and wom- WASHINGTON (AP) The! h \ £ e [Thomas Mark Gladman, Jr., Lot|!Wo nephews, Ambrose J. Brown | church. She was also very inter- United States maritime board 31. Concession. 3, Darlington, and Daniel J. Linton, ested in gardening and was a|friday denied a request by Grace collided at the corner of Church] The memorial service will be member of the Oshawa Horticul-|Lin® for permission to discontinue Reginald E. Gutsole, 286 Elm-|Home at 2 p.m. Monday, May 2.| Her closest surviving relative |2Kes and the Caribbean via the - 4 | with |, 55 2 ting In a parked car near the Of Albert Street United Church,|whom she shared the home, |nibitive loss" last year. The railway spur line bridge on Bloor | Will Sondust Pe, Serviess. Inter- board agreed to permit Grace to street west, at 8.10 a.m. Satur- ment will be in Salem Cemetery 3 { + t the McIntos} 3 p at the ntosh Funeral Home at DEFENDED MYER back of it. The second car WAS| oghawa's first public health|K. Moffat, minister of Simeoe| = tETORD (ot) = N } e W. Andrew, the lawyer 18 Queen's road, RR 1, Whitby. |e, a ; servi " ral ro OV: Cadillac avenue north, died at duct the services. Interment will Damage estimated at $350 was ¥ o rote ria n | Ini 'emetery Kurt Meyer on war crime one driven by Michael McGarry, caused to the Gutsole car and at[the Oshawa General Hospital be in Oshawa Uniou Cemetery. charges, has been appointed frit 230 Eulalie avenue. Mr. St. Denis Born at Munro. near Mitchell, | LATE DEATH |iff of Perth County. The appoint-| {Ont,, Miss Harris was a daugh- Twaits Hea i his new position in New York the ter of the late George and Sarah will be filled by the appointment young child, after the death Olithe Oshawa General Hospital, on . . lof D. 8. Simmons, general man-| her father, she came with her|Friday, April 20, 1960, George Edward peria 1 {ager of Imperial's manufacturing mother to reside in Oshawa where Merrick, beloved husband of Dorothy | department. she attended public Moran, and dear father of Mrs, | {(Monlca), Margaret, Marie, Berna. Twaits, executive vice-president has been with Imperial since he] She qualified for a business po- gene, George and Ralph, all of Whit. of Imperial Oil Ltd., was elected graduated from the University of ition and was secretary in the of We. Mroun Faroe" Chapel Wath, president and chief executive of- Toronto in 1933. He had been afice of one of the industrial firms for requiem mass in St. John the ficer of the company Friday. [director since 1950, a vice-presi-| In Oshawa for a few years. Later| Evangelist Church, Gifford St. | t " y : y was named chairman, and who| vice-president since 1955. the Roosevelt Hospital in New bridge. Mivister Rev. I. Austin, = has been nominated for election] Mr. White, a native of London | A a PE ET to the board of Standard Oil Ont., joined Imperial at Sarnia,| Company (N.J.) 27 years ago, He became presi- employment. CONCILIATION MEETING |ers-St. Lawrence generating sta- Uxbridge Township. A resident of| "éturned home and in [Mayor Donald Loucks. The dis-|spent in Canaca She was an adherent of the Unit- bump on the head. Coates (Lucille), Mrs. William Street United Church and the REDUCE SERVICE and Richmond street, at 4 p.m, held at the Armstrong Funeral|tural Society. its service between the Great ) C [ b The funeral service will be held | reduce its service immediately. asuq S y day when a car collided into the] aieq AJ BERTA HARRIS 2 p.m. Monday, May 2. Rev. John| 0 doin Sor Pon Nol] eo $75 to the second car. |Friday afternoon, April 29. ' ¢ ard| is. on '§ s AS vacancy on the Imperial board Harris, When she was a very | MERRICK, George E.--Suddenly at| and high | Skinner (Veronica), Mrs. P, Ji TORONTO (CP) -- Wiliam O.| Mr. Twaits, a native of Galt, School. : Mie Bar He succeeds J. R. White, who|dent since 1952, and executive/che graduated as a nurse from | pa: on Tuesday, May 3, 9 p.m When Mr. White leaves to take dent in 1953, To get the results you want on LAWNS & GARDENS | ment is effective May 2. Col. An. drew was born in Kitchener and educated in St onto. EDITORS MEET tives of 32 newspapers attending the Eastern Ontario weekly news- papers association convention Thomas and Tor- | CORNWALL (CP)--Representa- SELECTION IT'S see us now! For lawns we recommend Turf Special «..for the classiest, grassiest lawn in your neighbourhood. For flowers and shrubs, Garden Special will help get the results you dream about. Drop-in soon... we're headquarters for all gardening needs. 26... uy 1.15 TO THE MERCHANTS OF THE CITY OF OSHAWA In view of the fact that children suffer injuries due to the explosion of fireworks, you are respectfully requested by the Oshawa City Council to withhold the sole of fireworks until Wednesday, May 11th, 1960, for safety purposes. L. R. BARRAND, City Clerk. Swan's |.H.A. Hardware | Oshawa Shopping Centre RA 5.751% Notice Re Change of Name In order to eliminate confusion of Local Service Station The Original RAGLAN WELDING WORKS has Changed Trade Name to BOLDUC WELDING WORKS same Phone Number on Private Line OLIVER 5-3181 This change of name is listed in new phone directory JOE BOLDUC, Welder TRUE -TRIMBEEF (( + Meat Specials! Mon. & Tues. FREE! Tues. Special! FREE! Buy 2 1b. PORK SAUSAGE At Regular Price ...... 98¢ AND GET 1 LB. FREE! FREE! MON. ONLY - FREE! Buy 1 lb. BREAKFAST BACON At Regular Price ...... 39¢ AND GET 1 LB. FREE! FREE! Buy S Ibs. Fresh Made * Sausage Meat for 1.00 AND GET 5 LBS. FREE! FRESH MADE VEAL PATTIES 2 .. 69 ="