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The Oshawa Times, 9 Aug 1961, p. 5

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pong (OR eT NEW SUPERINTENDENT New superintndent at the years. Originally from Kitch- Ontario Hospital, Dr. Walter | ener, Dr. Weber took his medi- H. Weber sits at his desk. He | cal degree from the Univer- An appeal to the church and local business leaders was launched by District Probation Officer, John Mitchell at the Whitby Rotary Club luncheon on Tuesday. On visits to homes, said Mr. Mitchell, the lack of any spiri- tual faith was appalling. Proba- tions could be helped by efforts of the Church working through their homes. Business executives, owners of businesses and persons in au- thority were asked to aid and understand the problems of the probationer. "I feel certain," said the ex- RAF member, "that if the busi- ness world would give a little more understanding to-the pro- bationer's problem of employ- ment, the probationer would get the feeling that society was tak- ing an interest in him." SEEK EMPLOYMENT The problem of employment has greater importance to the probationer than all the finan- cial help that can be given, he said. was superintendent at the | sity of Toronto. Hospital in North Bay for four --Oshawa Times Photo Youth Jailed Month On Consuming Charge In his avowed war on teen-|consuming seven pints of ale at Careful consideration of a pro- basis of authoritative control Officer's aim is to provide a coupled with kindness and understanding, said Mr. Mitchell.., Conditions laid down by the courts are carried out by the probation officer. These condi- tions include curfew, reporting at a specified time, paying restitution and staying away from undesirable characters. The character of the proba- tioner is also assessed by the probation officer. Often, the probationer comes from a poor home environment where there has been no proper parental con- trol. A broken home also crops up in the history of some proba- tioners, he said. During the many talks with the probationer, the officer at- tempts to find a common ground of interest. By getting the pro- bationer to talk, confidence is established. FEW RETURN Few probationers return to the |bationer's application for em- ployment might mean t ference between him going Istraight or becoming a habitual | criminal. Appointed by the Attorney- he dif-' number of parolees who end up 'before a magistrate repeatedly. \courts as compared with high Failures do occur among pro- bationers, said Mr. Mitchell. He set the figure at 30 per cent. A probation officer's motto is "to advise, to help and to be- friend," he said. The officer often must take the role of a doctor, minister, school teacher, psychiatrist, lawyer and busi- ness executive. "We have to remember that the probationer is just another human being like ourselves. We all have our weaknesses but through self-control we are able to adjust ourselves." probation officers. Mr. Mitchell and his colleague, Ken Rose. Each man has a total of 70 pro- bationers to handle per month. Because of this heavy case load, other facets of the work such as marriage counselling, do! not receive the proper amount of time, he said. Marriage and family counsel- ling is heaviest of Monday after a weekend. Since this type of work has increased enormously over the last few years, Mr. Mitchell said he would like to see the work taken over by a Civic Family Council connected with the Welfare Department. Describing his impression of the probationary work, Mr. Mitchell termed it "very illum- inating, but frustrating. It is a vocation that has a humanitar- |ian purpose." The County of Ontario has two Asks Church, Business Aid For Probationers General's office, the Probation, Skin divers are forced out | of the rough waters of Lake Erie today after attempting to recover the bodies of an | of his charges. The bodies of ada nins i i SEL RE THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, August 9, 1961 § "FAIL TO RECOVER BODIES assistant scoutmaster and one Donald Tice, 37, and Larry Bialik, 13, both of North Tona- wanda, N.Y., were later wash- ed ashore. Tice was married with four children. He dove into the water fully clothed when some of the scouts, In swimming, were caught in an undertow. --(CP Wirephoto) | age drinking, Magistrate R. B. Dnieper on Tuesday handed out stiff fines or alternate jail sen tences to three district youths. His Worship was presiding in the Whitby police court and in one instance asked an accused if he had read recent newspaper accounts of his attitude towards minors consuming liquor. Frank Vogelson, 19, of Picker- ing village, was sentenced to 30 days in jail, with no option of a fine when he pleaded guilty to consuming liquor while a minor. It was his second offence. The court was told that on Aug. 5 Pickring Township PC David Fleming had checked a car and found the accused seat ed in the passenger's seat with an empty ale bottle. The hotel in West Hill. His Worship asked Vogelson if he had been reading the papers | lately about minors consuming. The accused said he had not. His Worship said that he] would then have to tell him the| bad news himself and gave him the 30-day sentence Walter Zarowny, 18, of 24 Rosehill boulevard, Oshawa, was fined $100 and costs or, in default of immediate payment, five days in jail for consuming while a minor. Allan Patrick O'Donnell, 18, of 333 Kendalwood road, Oshawa, | was also fined $100 and costs or| 15 days for consuming as aj minor. PC Arnold Summers, of the Whitby Detachment of the OPP, | said that he had laid the] charges following investigation into an accidnt in Whitby Town- accused smelled of alcohol, the int court was told, and admitted!ship on August 5. Fergus Thistles Nip Wings 29-12 JUST TALKING .. . We chat- ted with manager Davie after the game and he informs us that he will have to check with the "By CLIFF GORDON 'Whitby Red Wings battled for a couple of points in Feraus last night but came out on the short 3 i end of a 29-12 score. The game| OLA in Tegand > Fd Seorme Ba mae win oahon | LLL ECF for morrow igh' Fron : Yipaper. . . . It seems there are Davis battilng > win = SCOT| not too good records kept of the g C amp ons Ip an 3 €rgus| yr scoring championships and it with their key man Johnny|pay he some time before it is Roberts as their ace marker. |y own just how much of a rec- Well the Wings did fair out notord has been set if any. Don't too badly in this department.iforget the big game here on Davis got four goals and three| Thursday night when the Wings assists Wille Hoberts managed will host the St. Catharines Jrs. ree an our assists, but|in the final league game. It| Davie. had he Jeng Sune jus promises lobe 2 Sandy as Davi ast night's y v eeps up wi is dazzling scor-| have to wait now for the officialling pace in an effort to set some word from the OLA on who is|kind of record. Also the rest of| who in the scoring race. the team has been playing real] There appears to be some heads up lacrosse and deserve difference in the official totals/all the support they can get.| of the OLA and the club data. | Remember game time for to- The club data has the goals morrow night is 9.00 p.m. balancing with those officially credited to the local team, but the goals for Davis appear one shy on the OLA records. So we WHITBY wait and see now what hap-| pens DAY-BY-DAY Other goal scorers for the | Wings were Elmer Tran, Ron-! a | nie + Bd and Ken Ross with JAILED SEVEN DAYS } two each with single counters, Earl Claus, 50, of 174 McGill to Ron Skack and Geo. Tran. street, Toronto, was jailed seven For the winners it was Spicer|days by Magistrate R. B.| with five, Denney with six, Lan- Dnieper in Whitby police court donoi and Jamieson with four/Tuesday when he pleaded guilty each. McKenzie and Johnny|to having the care and ccrtrol Roberts had a trio each./of a motor vehicle while intoxi-| Mitchell fired two and single goals to Clay and Mulvey. It was a real scoring night- mare for the scorekeepers as no less than 41 goals were reg istered: The Fergus team led 144 at the end of the first period, 25-7 at the end of the second and then 29-12 at the end of the game CRITICIZES BOARD KITCHENER (CP) -- An an- gry Kitchener alderman, Joseph cated. The charge was laid Aug. | 5 after police observed Claus driving on Highway 401 near Oshawa. HEMANDED WEEK Clavin Cruikshanks, 57, of Owen Sound, was remanded in custody for one week when he | pleaded guilty to vagrancy. He! was picked up by Provincial Police near Brechin when he very nearly was struck by a car while he was hitch-hiking. The remand was given to enable | police to contact relatives to take him home. Mattson, criticized the Ontario Municipal Board Tuesday night for rejerting this city's plan to erect a $350,000 recreation cen- tre this year. He said that the] ON WAY TO WORK board's reasoning was "utter| Stanley Jeffery, 35, of no fix- hogwash" and it deserved to beled abode, stopped off in Whitby "severely criticized" for its de-|long enough to be charged with cision. He said nine elected city common intoxication on Aug. 4. representatives had favored the He told police he was on his proposal while the main oppon- way to London to pick tobacco. ents was Armin Bitzer, a for [Magistrate Dnieper fined him mer alderman. $10 and costs or two days. BROCK Evening Shows ot 6:55 & 9:20 WHITBY Feature Starts ot 6:55 & 9:30 Best Actor of the Year Adult Entertainmeni ' 5 WHITBY SPORTS WHITBY PERSONALS | PARADE By GERRY BLAIR Whitby Abner's Esso host Pickering Merchants tonight (wednesday) at the Town Park in their third and deciding game of the best-of-three quarter-finals of South Ontario County Softball league play-offs. Game time is 8:15 p.m. Whitby battled back to square the set at 1-1 with a 5-1 decision right in Pickering on Friday night. Bill Giddings the sling- shot member of the Abner's pitching staff limited the Merchants to eight scattered singles, while striking out 12. He had much better control than on Wednes- day night in Whitby, when Pickering claimed an 11-9 win from Abners. The winner of this series tangles with either Mount Zion or Brooklin in the semi- finals. The third game of the Mount Zion-Brooklin best-of-three set goes also tomorrow night in Brook- lin. The next series could possibly get underway this week-end. Whitby hope to have Wally Sam- anski on the mound for their sudden-death affair tomorrow evening against Pickering, Wally strained #2 muscle in his back two weeks ago, and has been troubled by it since. He tried twice to overcome the handicap, once in an exhibition tilt against Oshawa Heffering's Imperials, and in the first play-off game against the Merchants. Both times he had to retire because of the pain when he completed his follow- through, OASA softball play-offs are just around the corner and are scheduled to start in this vicinity much sooner than expected. Whitby open their initial series with Heffering's of the Oshawa, City and District softball league next Wednesday night, August 16, at the Whitby Town Park, with the second game at Oshawa's Alexandra Park on Saturday, Aug- ust 19. Both games are floodlight affairs with start- ing time called for 8:15 p.m. Despite the one-sided exhibition victory by Heffering's over Abner's a few days back, this series could go the limit. Once again, Whitby's chance hinges on the seriousness of Saman- ski"s back injury. MacLean's Esso Fuels, also mem- bers of the Oshawa Association, have drawn Brooklin Stevenson's Motors for their first round opposition. The OASA just recently stepped in and ordered Brook- lin to compete in Intermediate "A" competition instead of "C" as originally planned. Stevenson's have sign- ed Murray Woods from Lindsay to bolster their pitch- ing staff, which is the basic reason behind the move by the Ontario softball body. Woods was a member of the Port Perry squad last season, and is rated one of the top hurlers in this area. Cec Hall a veteran of baseball and softball in Brooklin and Oshawa has lined up with Stevenson's to give them some added hitting and fielding strength. It.appears that Brooklin will be a strong contender with these recent acquisi- tions. The MacLean's-Brooklin series will start next weekend. TOWN AND COUNTRY . .. Wren Blair, man- ager-coach of the Kingston Frontenacs is providing the Kingston hockey fans with three extra-special exhibition attractions prior to the opening of the Eastern Professional Hockey League's 1961-62 sea- son. Three NHL clubs, Chicago, New York and Bos- ton are coming to Kingston's Community Centre in September. The Frontenacs are also scheduled to meet the Quebec Aces of the American Hockey League in Quebec, along with the special arranged contest in Whitby against the Rochester Americans on September 27. Oshawa General fans will have the opportunity on that night of seeing Dick Gamble in action with the Americans, who was recently traded from Buffalo . : » . The Boston Bruins are supplying the new entry from San Francisco into the Western Hockey League with eight players, mostly from the Winnipeg War- riors who have ceased operations for the coming year. Four or five Boston owned players will be placed in Portland. Providence Reds of the American League have first grabs at the top minor-pro Bruin players this year because of their dismal showing last season. This may mean, that one or two top performers from last season's Kingston club will end up in Providence. The limit of players supplied to Providence is eight, with the Reds having the option of buying them. In other words, none of the eight supplied to Provi- dence are destined for a NHL future with Boston. Kingston Frontenacs are the only club in the Bruins minor-pro chain to employ the younger prospects slated for possible NHL duty with Boston. Kingston may have as many as five rookies in their starting roster this season, with some of them coming from Niagara Falls Flyers of the OHA Junior circuit, plus one or two ovar-age juniors from Western Canada. . . |year. Mr. and Mrs. Matt Bowman, | 105 Mary street east, are spend-| {ing a week at Paington House| {in Muskoka District. While there |Mr. Bowman celebrated his 78th | birthday. He cut his birthday | {cake and thanked all for lovely gifts. They went sightseeing up {the lovely lakes on the Lady jigin on Tuesday and Wednes-| |day. | At 80, He Still Hits Bullsevyes CONNAUGHT RANGES, Ont. (CP)--The First World War vet- eran sat on his army cot and|battle of Ypres. | rolled back the years to the late 1920s when he was in his hey- day as one of Canada's top ri- flemen. Scottish-born Alex Parnell, 80, of Montreal, is the oldest com- petitor in the Dominion of Can- Lloyd, son of Mr. and Mrs. W.|ada Rifle Association's annual Bosgraaf, is celebrating his|championships. He attended his eighth birthday today. His first DCRA meet in 1905. friends wish him many happy| In 1926 the infantry sergeant returns of the day. |was already a three-time me- : : .__ (ber of Canada's Bisley team, Miss Marion Brown and Miss| eo of the highest honors for a {Barbara Hicks are spending one| ifieman, He was to represent week at the United Church| i i i CGIT Camp Pretoria, [Gatiada eight more times in the | Mr. and Mrs. Reid Cook, | Whitby, and Mr. and Mrs. John | Bray, of Brooklin, spent a few| days on a motor trip in Northern | Ontario and the states of Wis-| consin and Michigan. Miss Carol Anderson has re- turned to her home in Peter: borough after spending most of her summer vacation with her sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Gary Corner, Dundas street east, while her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Len Anderson, visited in England. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Corrigan and children have returned from a two weeks vacation spent in Frankford as the guests of Mr. Dennis Corrigan. Mrs. Norman Corner and Mrs. M. Matthews have recently re- turned from a week spent at Greenwich, New York, the| guests of Mrs. William Sharp) {and Mr. and Mrs. L. Safford. | Mr. and Mrs. Herve Carriere| |spent the holiday weekend in| |London as the guests of Mr.| {Jean Guy Noel. Mr. and Mrs. (Wish) Saunders | of Cardinal, were holiday week-| end guests at the home of Mr. | base. ] Wigston, |obligingly loaned him 3000 troops) The newspaper quotes McFar- Sunday | and 12 destroyers for this $5,000,- land as saying in an interview {and Mrs. |Centre street Arthur north. Behind him was a four-year! stint in the Canadian army where he was wounded in the He now competes in only two, matches, including the tough] governor-general's event at 200, 300, 600 and 900 yards. | "It's more of a holiday than anything else these days," he] says | To Alex, it would be unthink-| able not to set up a tent with {his old regiment and live the rugged life for the week-long matches. "I sleep better here and have a real good appetite." While he complains about his eyesight, he can still shoot bulls-| eyes from 900 yards. | "But not as regularly as the| old days," he says, sadly. Highest Paid | Screen Writer | By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK (AP)--Carl Fore- man doesn't write on a solid gold typewriter. But he could if he chose to. At 47 Carl, who once was a sideshow barker, is reputed to be the highest paid screen writer in moviedom--and modestly de- clines to deny it. Over a 22-year career his out- put has been relatively small. "I've turned out fewer than 50 Football Star Accident Victim ANN ARBOR, Mich: (AP)--A 19 - year - old University of Michigan football tackle smoth- ered to death' under his over- {turned sports car near here | Tuesday. Dead is Philip Garrison of Wyandotte, a sophomore and leading contender for a regular | berth as a tackle on the Mich- igan football squad. Washtenaw County medical examiner Dr. John Floyd said Garrison apparently was as- phyxiated when pinned under the car after it missed a curve. scripts," he remarked. "Some of the fellows out there have writ-| ten 500." But among his films have| been such notables as High! Noon, Bridge on the River Kwai, | Champion, Home of the Brave, | The Key, and The Mouse that red. | He recently wroet and pro-| {duced Guns of Navarone, which|@ company tells of a suicidal commando raid against a German gun The Greek government] Arena Planned In Belleville KINGSTON (CP)--The Whig- Standard says Mayor Harvey McFarland of Picton will form to build a new arena in Belleville capable of housing a team in the Eastern Professional Hockey League. |guests were Mr. and Mrs. Ger-|000 venture, filmed largely onthe team may be affiliated with |ald Ross of Brighton. Mrs. J. Brown and family, of| Windsor, were guests for two| weeks at the home of Mr. and| Mrs. Norman Bonn, of Gilbert! street west. | Mr. and Mrs. Harry Weather- up and children, Barbara and| Ronnie, are now home after spending their two weeks vaca- tion at a cottage at Percy Boom on Trent River. | | Mr. and Mrs. Greg Carter and children, Joey and Jud§, spent the holiday weekend in Ren- frew, visiting Mr. and Mrs. Ted Leeney. Nickel, Silver Production Up OTTAWA (CP) -- Nickel and silver production increased in May compared with the same month in 1960 but copper, lead and zinc output in Canada was down, the Dominion Bureau of. Statistics said today. May production totals with corresponding 1960 figure brack- eted: nickel 19,710 tons (17,207); silver 2,472,876 fine ounces (2,- 354,657); copper 36,851 tons (37, 561); lead 14,812 tons (16,558); zinc 31,651 tons (33,362). Canadian producers shipped 5,206,000 tons of crude gypsum in 1960, a decline of 11.5 per| cent from the 1959 record ton-| nage of 5,879,000. Mediterranean. Foreman's own life story] chronicles the rise of the writer from low-paid serf to the role of| tycoon in the industry. After| years of odd jobs ranging from carnival press agent and side show barker to laboratory tech- nician, the Chicago-born author| finally sold his first film script in 1939 for $180. {the Island of Rhodes in the Chicago Black Hawks of the National League. McFarland, millionaire con- tractor, says the rink will be a miniature Maple Leaf Gardens and will have a seating capacity of between 5,000 and 6,000 per- sons. The Gardens, home of the NHL Toronto Maple Leafs, can seat 12,586. McFarland said it will take 600 Children YESTERDAY'S STARS Beg In Streets By JAMES C. DEWEY BOGOTA, Colombia w)ap)-- Every morning at dawn, seven disheveled children, their hair matted, their clothes in tatters, crawl from a tiny makeshift shack, climb over a high brick wall and drop into a downtown Bogota street to begin a new day of begging and pilfering. They are among perhaps 600 boys and girls from eight to 16 years old who roam the city. Pitching: Steve Barber, Bal- timore Orioles, blanked Kansas City Athletics, 3-0 on three sin- gles for his sixth shutout of the season, tops in the major leagues. Hitting: Smoky Burgess, Pitts- burgh Pirates, went 5-for-5 and drove in four runs with four singles and a homer in the first game of a 10-2 and 3-2 sweep over Philadelphia Phillies. four months to build the arena, WRITERS ON TOP [too late for the 1961-62 season Since those days, the writer|hyt time for the following cam- in risen to the upper status paign. He also said he - will class, as |sponsor a senior B team at The absolute minimum for a pajjayijle this season for the script today would be $3,500," 5 A " ', proposed new Ontario Hockey said Foreman. "And some writ [association eastern groip, "Look, fellow," said 11-year- old Gaston Santos, leader of the seven, "everybody hates us." "Nobody helps us, nobody wants to take care of us. The only thing we can look forward to is begging . . . and being bothersome The children, called gamines by the people of Bogota, are vic- tims of the country's recent era of violence, parental cruelty and an outdated social welfare code. A survey showed 36 per cent driven from their homes by par- ents' cruelty. Another 27 per cent were either thrown out of their home, abandoned or left homeless by their parents' death. Some, after losing money given them to buy food, feared to return home. A few are vaga- bonds by choice. FUNDS LIMITED Bogota has both private and public orphanages. However, the public institutions are already jammed and funds for their up- keep are limited. Then, too, there are legal problems of de- partmental jurisdiction stem- ming from the way the coun try's social welfare laws are made up. There are also private institu- tions such as the children's shel- ter operated by Rev. Luis Al- berto Castillo. Father Castillo, who has 690 children in his shelter, says most of the gam- ines would rather be free and starving than submit to the rou- tine of institutional life. The gamines make their way as best they can. Half-naked and shivering in the night rain, they beg outside a theatre in the certain know- ledge their abject appearance will move the moviegoer. At night they are liable to turn up at the back door of an apart- ment, pleading for the dinner scraps, old clothing, or newspa- pers to wrap around themselves while they sleep huddled in door- ways in Bogota's 40-degree tem- peratures. Remember the STARR - DYMOND PICNIC SATURDAY AUG. 12, 2 P.M. GREENWOOD PARK (5 miles west of Brooklin) DODD & SOUTER PAINT end WALLPAPER STORE 107 BYRON ST. §., WHITBY MO 8-5231 C.I.L. Paint Dealer YOUR Painting 4 Decarating Gyptex, Paperhanging Full Wall Murels If You Have a Car, A Home, A Family One man can solve all of your insurance problems. He is your friendly State Farm agent. See him soon. WM. H. (BILL) MIDDLETON MAKES RANGER DEBUT NEW YORK (AP) -- New York's hockey fans will get their first look at player-coach Doug Harvey in a Ranger om (JNDDLETON form Thursday, Oct. 12 when rock St. the National League team opens or i, Sm. Mo bin its home schedule against Bos-|State Farm Mutual Autom Insurance ton Bruins. Harvey, an all-star 320 Farm Life nsoranes bompres defenceman, was obtained from Head Office--T: Sop Montreal Canadiens in May. . sare save nsveanes ers have received from $175,000 y i to $200,000, plus a percentage of There are six teams in the the picture." |EPHL, Hull-Ottawa Canadiens, | More and more top writers Kingston Frontenacs, Kitchener-| have become triple-threat men.| Waterloo Beavers, Sault Ste. | They write the film, then direct| Marie Thunderbirds, Sudbury | and produce it. Carl feels this is| Wolves and North Bay Trap-| the trend of the future and is a|pers. | great factor in improving the) The Hawks now sponsor the quality of motion pictures. | Thunderbirds but are said to be "After all, a picture is just alunhappy with arrangements story told on film," he said. |there. "It's a big strain, and you| McFarland has been out of have to be able to make de-|pockey since he disbanded Belle- cisions. That's why the coronary | inj McFarlands, in the OHA rate is higher among motion pic-| : ; |senior A eastern seri ture executives and producers es, at the I fen In ary other industry--| beginning of last season. there are so many pressures. ARNOLD'S 115 BROCK ST. NORTH, WHITBY Just North of the Four Corners I OPEN THURS. 'TIL 8 -- FRI. 'TIL 9 -- WED. 'TIL 6 P.M. SLICED "But there are compensations --if the picture comes off. And you don't have to listen to some other producer tell you, as one once told me, 'You're writing for a 12-year-old mind, and don't ever forget it'!" NEWSPRINT 4Y>-1b. pkg. approximately 630 Production of sawn lumber, | excluding ties, in sawmills east] of the Rockies in June declined | {9.2 per cent to 207,551,000 feet | {board measure from 327,657,000! in the same month in 1960 | Value of department store sales rose in the first six months of 1961 by three per cent to | $646,206,000 from $627,272,000 in {the same period in 1960. June sales were up five per cent to $118,466,000 from $112,861,000 in sheets for -- $1.00 Also Available in b. pkgs. IDEAL FOR TYPING, PADS, CARBON COPIES Family Monuments fy ae/ Created \i/4 Individual Requirements STAFFORD BROS. LTD. MONUMENTS 318 DUNDAS EAST MO 8-3552 MEMOS, ETC. On Sale at . . . WHITBY OFFICE & CIRCULATION DEPT. Oshawa Times the corresponding month last| WHITE |, | I | " INNER OFFICE i | 1 | Breakfast BACON | | COOKED HAM _ * aw FRESH CUT FROM GOVERNMENT INSPECTED BEEF ROUND STEAK i ib. §9: BONELESS MEALED RIB STEAK I RUMP ROAST " COTTAGE ROLLS "4° ) rer 3 100 LB. 59+ A Fresh HAMBURG STEAK Fresh BULK WIENERS . . FRESH CUT RINDLESS i

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