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The Oshawa Times, 28 Aug 1961, p. 3

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SHIP CHRISTENED AT PORT WELLER PORT WELLER, Ont. Bottle of champagne hits hull of motor vessel Federal Palm after it was swung by Immi- gration Minister - Fairclough. Mrs. Fairclough broke bottle | Saturday but refused to break | on third try to Christen ship, | CAPSULE NEWS _ First Toronto . Mayor Honored "a 217431 L STIR 119 TORONTO (CP) -- The Tor- onto Historical Board will hold open house today at the home of Toronto's first mayor, Wil- liam Lyon Mackenzie, to mark the 100th anniversary of the fiery politician's death. Among the guests will be Mrs. May Birchard, whose grandfather hid Mackenzie after he led the un- successful rebellion of 1837. MAKING PROGRESS QUEBEC (CP) -- Quebec jufed in a train crash in north- east Moravia Sunday. BUYS RUSSIAN BOATS ACCRA (Reuters) -- Ghana has signed an agreement with Russia for the purchase of 10 fishing boats worth $4,700,000. 4,500 GO TO JAIL SAN QUENTIN, Calif. (AP) More than 4,500 people flocked to the San Quentin state prison art show Saturday and spent Lieutenant - Governor Onesime pe ery isfactory recovery" from a heart attack he suffered a week ago, his aide-de-camp said Sun- day. He said Mr. Gagnon, 72, is conscious and his doctors are "yery hopeful" on his chances of recovery. TROOPS FOR KUWAIT AMMAN (Reuters) -- Jordan has agreed to send a contingent to join the Arab League forces replacing British troops in Ku- wait, it was reported here Sun- day. The British troops moved into Kuwait late in June after Iraq claimed the oil-rich Per- sian Gulf sheikdom as part of its territory. DANCERS VISIT CANADA LONDON (Reuters) -- More than 100 dancers of the Lenin- grad Opera and Ballet Theatre will leave Russia Sept. 3 for guest performances in the United States and Canada, the Soviet news agency Tass said Saturday. CRASH KILLS 50 TIRCHUR (Reuters)--At least 50 persons were killed and sev- eral others injured Saturday when a bus ran into a water- logged paddy field at Chetuphu, five miles from this town in In- dia's Kerala province. DIPLOMATS WIFE HURT WASHINGTON (AP) -- Mrs. Manuel Escalante, wife of Costa Rica's ambassador, and her sis- were mauled by a robber who invaded the Embassy residence early Saturday and escaped with jewelry valued at $5,000 and $85 | in cash. The Embassy said both women were under selation. SUKARNO TO VISIT LONDON (AP) -- President Sukarno of Indonesia has ac- cepted the Queen's invitation to pay a state visit to London in the second half of 1962, it was announced today. CRASH CLAIMS 18 PRAGUE (AP) -- Eighteen persons were killed and 10 in- nearly $8,000 for the paintings, wood carvings, other ob- wood , and jects of art. The prisoner artists receive 80 per cent of the money their work sells for, but only at the maximum rate of $20 a month, SIGN TWO AGREEMENTS JERUSALEM (AP) A friendship treaty between Is- rael and the Malagasy Repub- lic was signed Sunday at the end of an eight-day state visit of Malagasy President Phili- bert Tsirana. Another agree- ment, specifying ways and means of Israel-Malagasy mu- tual technical aid was also signed. | a gift from Canada to West | Indies Federation, in Port Weller, Ont. (CP Wirephoto) 'Man Dies In Hospital Carl Pandoff, 31, RR 1 New- tonville, died Sunday night in Oshawa General Hospital of in-| juries received hours earlier in a Newtonville traffic mishap. Unconfirmed reports were that| |Mr. Pandoff was knocked from |a stationary motorcycle by a car. Mr. Pandoff lived alone on a farm at Starkville, about four miles from Newtonville. He had been with General Motors for five and a half years. Born in Port Hope, son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Andre Pan- doff, Carl Pandoff lived all his life in the Starkville district. | Surviving relatives include, brothers Alex, RR 1 Newton- ville, Boris, RR 1 Port Hope, and Peter of Toronto. A sister, Mrs. S. Duke (Kathleen) lives in Toronto. It is believed the funeral will take place at the W. C. Ross Funeral Chapel in Port Hope. MOVIE VAMP DIES NEW YORK (AP) -- Vera Michelena, 77, a famous stage and screen vamp of the 1920s died Sunday. She was a singing and acting star of motion pic- tures, musical comedy and vaudeville for 20 years. MILLION ACRES BURNED By JOE DUPUIS Canadian Press Staff Writer ST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP)--Re- sources Minister W. J. Keough of Newfoundland said Sunday | his province's hopes of attract- ing a third paper mill are prac- tically doomed by the stagger- ing blows dealt the woods by forest fires He said if the fires continue at their present destructive rate there won't be enough raw ma- terial left tv supply the existing | mills Bowaters Newfound- {land Pulp and Paper Mills Lim- lited and Anglo - Newfoundland Development Company. For some time the province| has been attempting to interest) capital in establishing a third mill, but in the background has always been the question of whteher the woods could sup- port it. 2 Premier Joseph Smallwood | says 1,000,000 acres of prime timber have been destroyed 50 far in a 1,500-square-mile area, COMING EVENTS BINGO ST. GERTRUDE'S AUDITORIUM EVERY MONDAY NIGHT 690 KING EAST AT FAREWELL GOOD PRIZES KINSMEN BINGO TUESDAY, AUG. 8th FREE ADMISSION EXTRA BUSES Jackpot Nos. 53 and 51 EAM 2 T JUBILEE PAVILION WOODVIEW COMMUNITY CENTRE BINGO 52-53 TONIGHT--8 P.M. EXTRA BUSES RED BARN three-quarters the size of Prince Edward Island At the rate of 10 cords to an acre, the loss to the two paper companies is 10 years' potential supply, at their current con- sumption of 1,000,000 cords a year. BIG AID TO ECONOMY | The two companies add $24,- 000,000 a year to the provincial economy in direct wages alone. Both say enough cut lumber is on hand for this year's produc- tior but they and the govern- ment are worried by the long- range effect Stuart Peters, deputy re-| sources minister, says the fires in some places have crossed| and recrossed burned areas so| many times that, particularly on the Bonavista Peninsula, bedrock is all that is left, and reforestation is impossible. In many ways nature has suf- taken each year by hunters, New Mill Hope Up In Smoke "The loss to the economy is appalling, shocking, just para-| lyzing," Premier Smallwood has! said | The provincial welfare depart-| ment so far has been unable tol compile an accurate picture of | the personal losses suffered by individual Newfoundlanders. An estimate is that 60 buildings, including 35 homes, have been lost, with the victims salvaging little but the clothes they wore. An estimated 25 communities have been evacuated--some of them several times--in the al- most three months since the fires reached critical propor- tions. Close to 20,000 people have had to leave their homes. Mr, Keough estimates the ac- tual cost to the province of fighting the fires has been $1,- 000,000. » TALLY-HO ROOM AIR CONDITIONED A Good Place to Meet HOTEL LANCASTER 'Two-Car Crash | greatest jobs of real-life crime During Wé&ekend her Clarkson home Saturday when struck by a freight train. By THE CANADIAN PRESS Quebec and Ontario accounted for more than half of Canada's accidental deaths during the weekend. Of the national toll of 37, Que- bec listed 16--11 in traffic and five drownings. Ontario followed with 13 with six traffic, four drownings, a fire death, a woman who was killed by a train and a child who died when struck by a flying lawnmower blade. A Canadian Press survey from 6 p.m. Friday to midnight Sun- day showed a country-wide total of 24 highway ° fatalities, 10 drownings and one fire death, plus the train and lawnmower mishaps. Alberta and New Brunswick had two traffic deaths each. British Columbia, Saskatchewan and Prince Edward Island each had one traffic death. There was one drowning in Newfound- land. Nova Scotia and Manitoba were free of accidental deaths. Natural deaths, known sui- cides and industrial accidents are not included in the count. Ontario dead: Mrs. Lydia Neal, 42, Toronto, when a car collided with a truck on Highway 18 near Blind River Saturday. James Douglas Waters, 14, when his go-cart, a birthday present, collided with a truck near Harrow, Friday. Walter Woodwards, 71, Catharines, following a two-car crash near Cobourg Sunday. Delmer Schelp, 40, Russell, Sunday when his car missed a turn on a sideroad near Corn- wall. Albert Pols, 50, Leo Bgis, 50, land Edmonton Ozols, about 60, 'all of Hamilton, drowned Satur- day when their small boat cap- sized during a storm on Mohawk Bay, about 30 miles south of { Hamilton. William Marshall, Macmillan | Montgomery, 52, Toronto, struck |by a car Saturday night at Port | Bolster on the southeast shore of Lake Simcoe. Mrs. Susan Nanbush, 61, near CITY AND DISTRICT CITY COLLISION A car driven by Paul Chody, Ritson road south, struck the rear of a car driven by Edgar Hughes, Marquette street, Saturday afternoon at the King street-Simcoe street intersection. Total estimated damage to both cars was $105. BRIDGE SCORES Duplicate bridge winners and high scores at the Fernhill Park clubhouse were, last week: Mrs, G. A. Rundle and Mrs. M. R. Clarke 48 points; Mrs. Timmins and Mrs. Sheridan 47 points; J. Miller and J. Patterson 45% points. The next session will be held tonight at 7:45 p.m. Kills Two Men NORTH BAY (CP)--Donald Stoddart, 22, of South Porcupine and Yvon Lauzon of Moonbeam were killed Sunday night in a two car collision on Highway 11, just south of Timagami, 65 miles north of here. Four people from South Porcu- pine and two from Moonbeam 60 miles west of Cochrane, were injured in the accident. Mazella Girouard and Giles Germaine, both of Moonbeam, and Clau- dette Lalone and Brian Stod- dart, both of South Porcupine, | are in hospital here in Satisf~~ | tory condition. Brian i- | brother of Donald Stoddart In hospital at Haileybury, be- | lieved not in serious condition, Harold Davis and Hans Beichmann, both of South Porcupine. Further details of the accident were not immediately available. KIDNAP, The Untold Sto Of The Lindbergh On the windy night of March ~ Sunday on Highway 31 near Ot- tawa. when fire destroyed her home in Smiths Falls. her Ottawa home. son ¢f Mr. and Mrs. Robert Sin- gleton of Islington, Ont., Sunday after being struck in the head|at the Oshawa General Hospital. by the broken blade of a power|She became ill on Saturday lawnmower. FIRST RACE Maidens, Roslod in Canada. a Purse 5 ree-year-o | lies, 6% Furlongs. |5.Have Gun, NB 110 1 St. Malcolm Bernard, 23, Ottawa, Mrs. Laura Gould, 35, Sunday Barbar= Bennett, three-year- old daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Reginald F. Bennett, drowned Sunday in a water-filled pit near Robert Singleton, two-year-old OBITUARIES THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, August 28, 1961 3 MRS. HAZEL 0. BROOKING The funeral of Mrs. Hazel Brooking who died at the Osh- awa General Hospital on Wed- nesday, Aug. 23, was held on Saturday, Aug. 26, at 2 p.m. She was in her 72nd year. The service was held at the family residence, West Whitby Township, and was conducted by Rev. George Telford. Inter- ment followed in Groveside Ce- metery: 'Brooklin. Pallbearers were Jack Bond, William Wilson, William Ash- ton, Howard Richardson, Art Blanchard and William Croxall. MRS. AGNES JEAN HENRY Mrs. Agnes Jean Henry died suddenly on Sunday, Aug. 27, evening. FORT ERIE ENTRIES TUESDAY, August 29, 1961 ] | 1. Paid Holiday, McComb 118| . Windy Fay, Rogers 118 . Snow Pac, Gonzales, XI113 . Jamaica Belle, Dittfach 118 Pearl Bingo, Parnell X113 2 3 4 5 6. 7 8 9. Chins Jet, Borgemenke 118 10.1Saugeen Linda, Morreale 18 11. Joy's Runner, Simpson XXX 108 12. Tiny's Gem, Dittfach 118 ALSO ELIGIBLE: Winter Garden, Fitzsimmons 118; Ne- koda Chris, NB 118. (12 and 2) SECOND RACE Canadian foaled Four-yearolds and ups 6 Furlongs . Wildshore, NB 114 2. Miss Lotus, NB 111 . Whispering Wind, Parnell X111 . Royal Page, Wright 116 . Ark Ator, NB 122 . Spurline, Borgemenke 116 . Rube's Ace, Smith 116 . VonRich, Fitzsimmons 116 . Klated's Pal, NB 111 . Bonreen, Morreale 111 11. Wind Wave, Robinson 111 2. Delightful Gal, Dittfach 111 ALSO ELIGIBLE: Lauralene, NB 111; Hash Boy, Harrison X111; Hickory-Bill, NB 116; Bright Page, NB 116; Wind- lady, NB 111; Alpine Pete, rown, 116. (12 and 6) THIRD RACE Claiming all $5000, Purse $2000 Two-year-olds, 6 Furlongs 1. Buzzin, Gomez 109 2. Yannina, Gonzales (A) X108 Airco War, NB 119 AKessava, Remillard 119 Burnt Roman, Gonzales (A) Xiil Sardonyx, Harrison XX 105 Clare Belle, Remillard 113 Bull Blaze, Parnell X 107 9. Big Brown Eyes, Dittfach 9) (A) . M. Holtsinger and D. M. Davis Jr. entry 3. 4. 5. 6. y 8. FOURTH RACE Claiming all $3500, Purse $1900 Four-year-olds and up, 6 Fur- longs. Harrison 1. Admiral . Hogan, X112 2. Flying Robert, NB 119 . Tenaga, Robinson 118 | . Blue Gardenia, Brown 118 | . Personality Kidd, NB 118 | 3. Time Marches, 6. Doc. Schaeffer, Dittfach 115 | 7. Switch Off, Rogers 110 8. Dottie's Girl: Brown 112 FIFTH RACE ... Claiming all $5,000 |of the third | 1. Wafrerd, Smith, 109 | 2. Aunt Rae, Gonzales, X111 | 3. Ballydown. Remillard, 113 | 4. Dutchy, NB, 112 | 5. Fancy Frog, Robinson, 116 | 6. Stan's Ace, NB, 112 7. Dahema, Adams, 119 8. Prince Sadi: Gomez, 119 | | SIXTH RACE "Buffalo Transportaion Club" {claiming all $10,000, | mile and 1-16, turf course | 1. Eltoro the Great, Gomez, 113 2. War Bang, Coy, 110 3. Delhi 3rd, Rogers, 115 4. Hooker, Rogers, 118 5. Vogel's Victor, Dittfach, 115 {QUINELLA BE {SEVENTH RACE | Allowance, purse $2,800, Cana- dian foaled: 3- and 4-year-olds, 6 furlongs 1. Painted Post, Dittfach, (A)115 2. Dr. Fred, Behrens, 115 3. Yancy, Potts, 110 4. Soul of Honor, Dittfach, 123 5. Dutch Miss, Remillard, 108 6. Acroonu, McComb, 115 7. Sweet Dish, NB, 108 8. My Page, Fitzsimmons, (B)118 9. Golden Turkey, Despirito, XX106 10. Daisy Page, Fitzsimmons, (B)115 Fighting Rocket. Borge- menke, 113 (A) Lanson Farms entry {(B) J. E. F. Seagram entry |EIGHTH RACE | Claiming all $3,500, purse $1,900, 4.year-olds and up, 6 furlongs, division of the fourth 1. Janet Yates, Coy, 105 2. Georgia Q., Rogers, 109 . Lord Lyric, Gomez, 115 . Amber Atom, Harrison, XX110 . Adolph W., Gonzales, X110 . Sun Drift, Gibb, 112 . Paulpolly, Borgemenke: 112 . Suggest, Gomez, 110 9. Phantom Boy, NB, 110 POST TIME 2 P.M. CLOUDY AND FAST AAC--X-5, XX-7, XXX- 10 Ibs 1. Nov. 19, 1873 in Drumbo, Ont. Previous to her four-years in Oshawa, Mrs, Henry lived for 30 years in Hamilton, in Guelph before that. She was a Church on Thursday, 9:30 a.m. with Rev. J. C, ma officiating. Interment will follow in St. Gregory's Cemetery. Levi Ward died at Hillsdale Manor, Saturday, Aug. 26, fol- May 24 1880, son of the late Mr. and Mrs, William Ward. He was married in Prospect, Ont., Dec. Mr. Ward 31 at Perey-| LEVI WARD 10, 1902. lived all his life in Harrison 2-year-olds. 6 furlongs, division| purse Claiming all $2500, Purse $1800,|$2,400, 3-year-olds and up, one TTING member of the Delta Tabernacle in Hamilton and the Missionary Alliance Church in Oshawa. She was predeceased by her husband, George M. Henry, in 1950. Mrs. Henry, the last of her family, is survived by two daughters, Mrs. Len Corn (Peg- gy), Burlington, and Mrs. Ben Bailey (Irma), Oshawa. There are four grandchildren and five great-grandchildren. The body is res at the Armstrong Funeral Home Mon- day, Aug. 28 and then at the Delta branch of the Truscott Funeral Home: Hamilton. Serv- ice will be held Wednesday, Aug. 30 at 1.30 p.m. and will be the Oshawa and East Whitby district. He is survived by his wife, the former Mary Edith Taylor, 53 and by one son, Aylmer, of Osh- awa, He was ased by a son, Elgin, in 1927 and a sis- ter, Mrs. Jane Cook, Columbus. Mr. Ward was also predeceased by a brother, the late William Ward, also of Columbus, There are three surviving dren, Elwood, John and Cather- ine Ward, all of Oshawa. The body is resting at the Armstrong Funeral Home. Me- morial service will be held on Tuesday, Aug. 29, at 2 p.m. In- terment will follow in Groveside conducted by Rev. R. Uhiinger of Delta Tabernacle. Interment will follow in the Hespeler Ceme- tery. MRS. ALBERT D. JONES Memorial service for Mrs. |Albert D. Jones, who died in Whitby Thursday, Aug. 24, was held Saturday, Aug. 26 at 3.30 p.m. She was in her 85th year. The funeral was held from the Armstrong Funeral Home and was taken by Rev. H. D. G. Richey. Interment followed in the Oshawa Union Cemetery. Pallbearers were K. Harvey, J. Bellingham, M. Rockert, W. Anthony, A. Porter and P. Smith WASYL OSTAFICHUK Wasyl Ostafichuk died sudden- ly of a heart attack, Friday, Aug. 25. He was visiting in Edmonton, Alta., at the time of his death, and had been there for the past. three months. Mr. Ostafichuk resided at 17 John street west, Oshawa. He was born in the Western Ukraine, Mar. 13, 1890, son of {the late Mr. and Mrs. Gregory Ostafichuk, and was married} there in 1918. He lived in Oshawa for the past three years, and in Edmon. | ton for several years before that. He was a member of St. George's Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church. Mr. Ostafichuk was predeceas- ed by his wife, the former Anna Semeniuk on Dec. 12, 1958. He is survived by a son, Dr. Nich- olas Ostafichuk of Oshawa, and grandchildren, Gregory, Nicholas, Stephen and Leda Ann, all of Oshawa. * The body will be resting at the Armstrong Funeral Home| on the evening of Aug. 30. Mass|| will be held at. St. George's|| Ukrainian Greek Catholic four HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL 313 ALBERT ST. 723-4663 Cliff Mills 48 Hour CLIFF MILLS MOTORS LTD. 230 KING ST. 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