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The Oshawa Times, 2 Sep 1961, p. 3

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Asks Closer Relationship Canada should have a closer relationship with neutral pow- ers to establish a middle of the road group, but we should not contract out our responsibili- ties to the US This was the opinion of a dis- cussion group held Thursday, led by Rev. Dr. J. R. Muchmor, secretary of the board of evan- gelism and social service of the United Church of Canada. Dr. Muchmor was presiding over a three-day conference on evangelism at the Ontario La- dies' College in Whitby. The conference ends today. The group was discussing whether Canada should favor unilateral renunciation of nu- clear warfare or whether we should follow a policy of dis- peace - loving nations." Public opinion is divided on whether Canada should have nuclear weapons, the group Japanese Protest New Bomb Tests TOKYO (Reuters)--Japan to- day told Russia its decision to resume nuclear testing "mer- cilessly tramples' on the world's hopes for peace. The protest was contained in a note handed over in Moscow by Japanese Ambassador Hisa- nari Yamada. The foreign ministry here said Yamada has instructions to ask the Soviet government if a nu- clear test actually took place over Asia as reported from Washington and, if it was con- firmed, to lodge a strong verbal protest. felt. It was brought out that al- though the United Church fa- vored bomarc missile sites in Canada in an announcement last year, the council reversed its stand this past April. It was felt that Rs Aom- curity obsolete, no gov- ri can promise security to their people. COMING EVENTS WILL START HERE OCTOBER 1 Airline Roland G. Lefrancois, executive vice . president of Nordair Airline Limited an- nounced Friday that Nordair has now decided to start oper- ating air service to Oshawa on October 1 next. The announcement was made in Oshawa by Douglas Fisher, general manager, of the Osh- awa C of C, who said that the information was contained in a letter from Lefrancois. Nordair representatives will spend some time in Oshawa next week in order to proceed with the necessary arrange- ments. Mayor Christine Thomas was unavailable for comment, but Deputy Mayor Gordon Atters- OSHAWA DUPLICATE BRIDGE CLUB OPENS Tues., Sept. 5 - 7:30 at WOODVIEW CLUBHOUSE REGULAR MEETINGS RETIREES CLUB will commence on SEPT. 6th at U.AW. Hall Bond E. at 2 o.m. Senior Citizens Meeting Sept. 8 -- 2 p.m. BINGO, Bathe Park Eulalie Avenue Thursday 2 p.m. Saturday and Monday 8 p.m. ley said he was "elated" to hear the news, which means that Oshawa will be linked by air with such points as King- ston, Montreal, Toronto, Sarnia and Windsor. "This. announcement is most encouraging", said Mr. Atters- ley because it shows what can be achieved locally when sev- eral groups co-operate for the good of the community as they did in this instance. It would be unfair to single out any one person or group on this occa- sion because many people had a hand in this thing, the City Council, the Oshawa Chamber of Commerce, and many pri- vate citizens, especially those who went to Ottawa and ap- peared before the Air Trans- port hearings last January". A Toronto spokesman for the Board of Transport Commis- sioners: in Toronto expressed several weeks ago that Oshawa would ever be included on the Nordair stop-over itinerary, but pT Ty Nordair To Operate Oshawa Air Service this statement was later criti. cized by the chairman of the Air Transpor Board and Labor Minister Michael Starr. The Air Transport Board re- commended that Oshawa be in- cluded in Nordair's itinerary, but the Oshawa delegation had requested that the local stop- over rights be granted to Que- bed-Air, one of the unsuccessful applicants for the franchise in this area. George A. Slocombe, secre- tary-manager of the Ontario County Flying Club and man- ger of the Oshawa airport said, when informed of the announce- ment: "This is wonderful news. I am sure tha! the new set-up will be a decided asset to the City. We have worked for years towards this goal and this makes everything done seem worthwhile." GORDON ATTERSLEY "Where Old Friends Meet" ORONO FAIR SEPT. 7-8-9 WATCH FOR OUR AD > ON WED. SEPT. 6 Entries may be received up to Tues. Sept, 5 OSHAWA BINGO CORONATION ORANGE TEMPLE SATURDAY, TIMES WANT ADS Offshore Oil Fight Hotter | Stolen Car \ Found AJAX (Staff) -- A 90-mile-per- VICTORIA (CP) -- A dispute] over jurisdiction over British Columbia's offshore lands was| Vine) to companies to | this morning, resulted in the re- search for oil in identical under- covery of a stolen car and an water areas as given a com-|Ajdx man being charged with pany by a federal permit. theft of the auto. The duplication came as the serve on the offshore lands and |Police Department constables 12 companies applied for per-| Robert Joel and Eric Place ob- mits covering 1,680,000 acres of [served a strange car in the land beneath the sea. | vicinity of the Monarch Knitting Search for new oil fields will|Company. They proceeded to be concentrated in Georgia|stop the vehicle by using the Strait, off the west coast of cruiser's siren and red flasher, Vancouver Island, and in He-|but it sped south on Harwood cate Strait which separates the avenue and east on the Base SEPT. 2nd. 7:30 P.M. 20 Gomes -- $8 Share the Wealth 4--3$40 Jackpots to go. 1--$150 Jackpot to go. WHITBY BRASS BAND BINGO CLUB BAYVIEW, BYRON SOUTH, WHITBY Wednesday, Sept. 6th, 8 p.m. Bus Leaves Oshawa Terminal -- 25¢ Return SPECIAL GAME OF $200 MUST GO $20 each horizontal line -- $100 a full card $25 ADD SELL IMOST ANYTHING ED EACH WEEK, NOW WORTH $250. IF WON IN 56 NUMBERS Church Bus | 4 comers 7:30 p.m. 5 GAMES AT $30 -- 20 GAMES AT $20 TWO $250 JACKPOT GAMES 1st--No. 51, 2nd--No. 59, $30 Consolation $1.00 ADMISSION INCLUDES ONE CARD Door Prizes -- Proceeds go to Building Fund Children under 16 not admitted. WOODVIEW COMMUNITY CENTRE BINGO -- MON., SEPT. 4 2--%$250 Jackpots Nos. 53 - 54 1--$150 Jackpot (Must Go) Queen Charlotte Islands and the B.C. coast. representatives were on hand to apply for acreage. B.C. says that under terms of Confederation it has sole juris- diction over off-shore lands. but the federal government states it has jurisdiction. Shell Oil Company holds fed- eral permits over a total 1,000,- 000 acres of offshore land. MINOR BLAZE Firefighters from the Oshawa| Fire Department were called to] extinguish a minor blaze in a Verdun road duplex home Fri- day night. A cigaret butt was blamed for a $50 chesterfield fire. Ambulance crews respond- ed to seven routine calls during the day and evening. IS REMANDED Timothy John McLaughlin, 35, of 276 Saguenay avenue, Oshawa, charged with attempt- ed carnal knowledge, was re- manded in custody until Sept. Uockpots Pay Double in 52 Nos. or Less) 20 GAMES--$20 AND 5 SPECIAL GAMES AT $30 REGULAR GAMES PAY DOUBLE IN 17 Nos, OR LESS $100.00 DOOR PRIZES ADMISSION $1.00 -- EXTRA BUSES Admission Ticket Gives You Free Chance on Door Prizes. RED BARN NORTH OSHAWA BINGO EVERY MONDAY, 8 P.M. ST. GERTRUDE'S AUDITORIUM 690 KING ST. E. AT FAREWELL 55 NUMBERS $100.00 JACKPOT CONSOLATION $20 20 GAMES -- 16 PRIZES OF $10 1 EACH OF $20, $30, $40, $50 SHARE THE WEALTH SNOWBALL JACKPOT $190 IN 56 NUMBERS CONSOLATION $20, $10 EACH HORIZONTAL LINE ADMISSION CARDS 50 CENTS GOOD PARKING -- EXTRA BUS SERVICE CHILDREN UNDER 16 NOT ADMITTED 8 in Magistrate's Court Fri- More than 40 oil company | (Line, During the chase the officers |said that they lost sight of the car several times as they sped through thick fog patches. | The car raced the cruiser to {Whitby, crossed Brock street, {sped north over a field and {lurched to a halt on a dead-end street immediately south of Highway 401. Meanwhile, officers of the Whitby OPP Detachment had a grandstand view of the chase {from their station and sped a cruiser to the scene. Constables Joel and Place ar- rived at the scene to see the car try to climb a steep bank and get onto the highway with no success. They apprehended the driver as he attempted to escape on foot. He was taken to the Ajax Police Department and later transferred to Metro Police. The 1957 Chevrolet was report- ed stolen earlier from the car lot of Fred Henwood Motors of Scarboro. William McKinley Smearer, 21 of 133 Exeter road, Ajax, has day. been charged with car theft. Thursday, Sept. 7, marks the Shell by the Band of the On- tario Regiment. The concert is in honor of Col. R. S. McLaugh- lin whe donated the band shell for the City of Oshawa. This special feature of the band promises to be one of the finest heard here in many years. The outstanding part of the program is that special in- struments will include the chimes, played by musician Ken Wooster; a post horn solo "Post Horn Gallop" by Frank Heaton. Fanfare trumpets will also be KINSMEN BINGO 20-$20 GAMES $150 Jackpot $20 each line plus $50 Full Card 5--$30 Games; 2--$250 Jackpots JACKPOT NUMBERS 53 and 51 TEAM 1 JUBILEE PAVILION FREE ADMISSION -- TUESDAY, SEPT. 5 Children under 16 not admitted Monster Bingo 16 PRIZES OF $10 1 EACH OF $20, $30, $40, $50 SHARE THE WEALTH SATURDAY, SEPT. 2nd AT 8:00 P.M. ST. GREGORY'S AUDITORIUM SIMCOE STREET NORTH ADMISSION 50 CENTS 2 EXTRA GAMES AT $25 $100 SPECIAL -- TICKETS 25¢c or 5 for $1.00 . CHILDREN UNDER 16 NOT ADMITTED heard at the concert. KEN WOOSTER demon- strates the use of the chimes that will be a highlight dur- ing next Thursday's band con- cert at the McLaughlin Band Mrs: Ed Storie will be guest(8.30 Band Prepares For Anniversary [ 300th concert anniversary to be| held in the McLaughlin Band) soloist of the evening. Mrs. Storie is one of the city's finest SOpranos. The 35-piece band is renown- ed throughout Ontario and has won the dominion band com- petition, held at the Canadian National Exhibition, seven times. WO 1 Bil! Whitstitt, sargeant and librarian, WO 2 George Hood, band sargeant major, and Reg Martyn, staff sargeant and secretary, have been on the administration com- mittee for over 20 years. The concert on Thursday evening will begin 7.30 p.m. rather than the usual time of staff Shell. This will be a part of a display of various instru- ments that are rarely seen at band concerts. Mr. Wooster be heard in a work that | OBITUARY 'Renovate | MRS. MARY N. NORMOYLE General Hospital, following a week-long serious illness, Fri- | |day, Sept. 1, of Mrs. Mary brought to a head Friday when chase through dense fog patches Noreen Normoyle. The deceased lobby and an enlargement of mines department east along the Base Line, early|jived with her daughter and son-|the OGH 'Womens' inlaw, Mr. and Mrs. [Nicholls, 485 Fernhill boulevard. Born at Marysville, Ont., the former Mary Noreen Callaghan, While on night cruiser patrolishe was a daughter of the late trance in the Syke's Memorial B.C. government lifted the re-|in the Ajax industrial zone, Ajax|Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Callaghan. | wine She was married at Deseronto, Nov. 25, 1912. Mrs. Normoyle came to Osh- awa from Deseronto in 1910 and in recent years was a devout member of St. Mary's Of The People Roman Catholic Church. She formerly was a member of St, Gregory's Roman Catholic | Parish. : | She was predeceased by her (husband, the late John Joseph Normoyle, May 1, 1955. She is survived by four daughters, Mrs. F. Genereaux, (Marion), Mrs. A. Nicholls (Elizabeth), Mrs. C. Stovell (Alice), all of Oshawa and Mrs. R. Greene (Ruth), of Rexdale, Ont. Three sons, Rob- ert, Daniel and Gregory, all of Oshawa, also survive. In addition, three sisters, Mrs. H. Vanalstine (Helen), of Nap- anee, Mrs. Agnes Oliver, of To- ronto and Mrs. Bessie Arnold, of Niagara Falls, Ont., and two brothers, Frank, of Toronto and Elgin, of Buffalo, N.Y., also sur- vive. Friends may call at the Arm- strong Funeral Home, com- mencing Sunday, High Requiem Mass will be celebrated at St. Mary's of the People Roman Catholic Church, Tuesday, Sept. 5, at 10 a.m. Interment will fol- low in St. Gregory's Cemetery. Rev. N. J. Gignac will sing the Mass. Oshawa Man Fined $50 Keith John Thompson, of 97 Central Park boulevard north, was fined $50 or 30 days in jail in Magistrate's Court Friday, after being found guilty of per- mitting drunkenness in his home Aug. 26. Magistrate F. S. Ebbs also ruled that the Thompson home be declared a public place for a period of one year. Det.-Sgt. Kenneth Young told the magistrate that a liquor search warrant was procured after Oshawa police had re- ceived complaints that noisy parties and traffic tie-ups were bothering neighbors. On raiding the Thompson home, two detectives found one drunken man, Robert Burrows, of Adelaide street east, eight full bottles of beer, three partly con- sumed beers and 34 empty beer bottles. Thompson told the magistrate that Burrows couldn't leave be- cause he had lost his car keys. is most suitable to the instru- | ment; Albert Ketelby's "Bells | Across the Meadow". --Oshawa Times Photo The death occurred at Oshawa | OGH Lobby | | Full scale renovations to the {Oshawa General Hospital's main Auxiliary are currently underway and visitors are now entering the {hospital by the former en- ! W. A. Holland, hospital super- |intendent said Friday afternoon he expects the renovation work will be complete within the next eight weeks. Both the main lobby and the gift shop will be enlarged to twice their present size, Mr. Holland said. The addition is |extending the main entrance further towards Alma street, but the present hospital drive- way and ambulance entrance will not be affected, the super- intendent said. Visitors are still using the main lobby for a sitting room and volunteer workers of the hospital auxiliary are using a hospital cart to display their merchandise, Auxiliary authorities said this=week that an enlargement to their facilities in the main lobby has long been needed. In a progress report on the new $2,700,000 wing being add- ed to the Alexandra street side of the existing buildings, Mr. Holland said construction is still on schedule or possibly CAPSULE NEWS ._ Red Cross Gets Workers Help TORONTO (CP) -- Two hun- awaiting trial on similar '| dred workers at the John Inglis|charge laid last year after an Company Limited's Strachan|RCMP investigation into wl Avenue plant lined up Friday tc|has been called a million-dollar help the Red Cross get enoughiracket, he pleaded not guilty to blood to meet the Labor Day|charges of helping a Chinese weekend's accident toll. The|enter Canada from Hong Kong! workers had requested the com-|with forged documents. pany to set up a special donor clinic in the plant. MARK ANNIVERSARY PLEADS NOT GUILTY MONTREAL (CP)--Rev. Paul|Scouts who attended the Coro- minister, Friday was arraigned on charges connected with the smuggling of Chinese immi- grants into Canada. Already 2 Suffer met here Friday to mark the 50th anniversary of their trip to England. Some of the graduate scouts--now in tieir 60s and early 70s--came from as far away as British Columbia and Ner Jersey. They included Brig. Arthur W. Beament, Ottawa, THE OSHAWA TIMES, , September 2, 1961 3 sey, Haileybury and Walter M. Moore, Simcoe. WARNS SHIPPING LONDON (Reuters)--The Sow jet Union announced Friday i#t will stage naval and rocket exercises off its northern coast during gov OTTAWA (CP)--Former Boy Chan, a Chinese Presbyterian|nation of King George V in 1911 MORE Deputy Premier Frol R. Kozlov will head the Soviet delegatioh to this year's UN General sembly, informed dij sald Friday night. He is some- times called Premier Khrushs Lt. - Col. Malcolm L. Douglas, Brockville, Graham W. Hennes- chev's No. 2 man. - Minor Hurts Two Oshawa children suffer- ed minor injuries and property| damage totalled approximately] $485 in three traffic accidents reported to the Oshawa Police] Department, Friday. { Five-year-old Paul Mackie, of 436 Rossland" road west, was) treated and released at Oshawa General Hospital for lacera-| tions and bruises suffered when! he was struck by a car on Ross-| land road west at 3.30 Friday| afternocn. | Paul suffered a scalp lacer-| ation, a laceration to the right| side of his back and on the| right hand and bruised ribs) when he ran out into the path| \ BUY NOW ! ENJOY CHRISTMAS -- Tn i JOIN THE MARCH TO onl ley of an eastbound car driven by | Fred Freeman, 30, of 58 Brock| street east. | Witnesses said the child was| IN YOUR DREAM HOME playing with a group of other| children, then without looking,| darted across the road into the path of Freeman's car. He was taken to Oshawa General Hos- pital by a passing motorist. Damage to the car was esti- mated at approximately $25. SEE HOW A CAN BE TAILORED TO SUIT YOUR TASTE AND POCKETBOOK Cyclist, June Vandewalker, aged 12, of 214 Mary street suf-, fered abrasions to the right knee when her bicycle collided with a truck door on Bond street east. Her bicycle collided with the door of a truck driven by Doug- las James Stonehouse, 42, of 100 Farewe!l avenue. The door was opened when the girl's bi- cycle struck it. She walked home after the mishap. Dam- age was estimated at $10. Damage was estimated at $450 and no one was injured in a three-car crash at the Athol street east, Albert street inter- section at 8:50 p.m. Friday. Cars driven by Kenneh Gai- ner, 17, of Darlington Township, Frank Garbas, 32, of 231 Ar- thur street and Edward Barry Bassett, 18, of 834 Bessborough drive camo into collision. DREAM HOME ! | 36 PLANS TO SEE! Open Mon. Thru. Sat. From 2 P.M. till Dusk Rossland Rd. East We Are Pleased To Have supplied. READY MIXED CONCRETE for this project. REDY-MIX CONCRETE CO. 1270 SIMCOE N. 725-754) slightly ahead of sched He said the hospital expects to take over the basement with- in the next three weeks, in time for the incoming class of the school of nursing. It is hoped the staff will be able to take over the second floor, which will house 60 pae- diatric beds sometime in early October, Mr. 'Holland said, THREE-CAR COLLISION A three-car collision on Sim- coe street south near Jackson avenue at noon Thursday, caused an estimated total of $1,080 damage to the vehicles. The autos were travelling north when the accident occurred. No- body was injured. The drivers involved were: Kenneth Watson, 61, of 16 Jones avenue; John Perse, a, o 259 Cedar Valley road; . an a Bays, 52, 442 Colborne oii ity " Cliff Mills 48 Hour Special CLIFF MILLS 230 KING ST. WEST VAUXHALL VICTOR SUPER Good economy car. MOTORS LTD. 1958 condition. Tops as an Il \. 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