CANADA'S OLDEST ALLEY BOWLER Allen Shantz, 95, believed to be Canada's oldest alley bowl- er, is seen as he practises in preparation for a forthcoming 'Bowling Festival', a trans Canada event described as the nation's biggest partici- pant sports event. Mr. Shantz resides at 860 Colborne street east. --Oshawa Times Photo She Oshawa Zimes SECOND SECTION SATURDAY, JANUARY 19 , 1963 PAGE NINE Unitarian Fellowship On Sunday The Unitarian Fellowship of Oshawa is pleased to announce that their guest speaker for this Sunday's service will be Mrs. Doris E. Dodds. Mrs. Dodds, wife of Dr. Don- ald J. Dodds, a physician in To- ronto, was born in Newfound- land. She graduated from Cor- nerbrook Public School with a scholarship to Memorial Uni- versity College, St. Johns, New- foundland. She also completed a three year course in General Nursing at the Royal Victoria Hospital in Montreal. The Dodds moved to Toronto in 1958. In that same year Mrs. Dodds was spokesman for a small committee which present- ed a brief on religious educa- tion to the Etobicoke Board of Education. This committee ex- panded to become the Ethical Education Association in April 1959 and Mrs. Dodds was elect- ed president and has continued to serve in this capacity. Mrs. Dodds is a member of South Peel Unitarian Congrega- tion Toronto and is chairman of The Unitarian Council of Metro- politan Toronto. She is also a member of the Elizabeth Fry Society. Mrs. Dodds' subject will be 'The Religion Our Public Talented Artist To Aid Orchestra A talented young artist, Ross Cotton, is to be the guest solo- ist for the concert of Oshawa Symphony Orchestra Saturday, Jan. 26. One of the most popu- lar baritone soloists of the dis- trict Mr. Cotton has achieved considerable success. He was engaged for two re- citals in the music building dur- ing recent Canadian National Exhibitions. At music festivals in Toronto, Peterboro and Lind- say he won first prize in solo tition. A soloist in Sim- ce Street United Church, he is @ student of Reginald Geen and has delighted many Oshawa au- diences with his excellent voice. For his two groups Mr. Cot- ton will sing "Linden Lea" by Vi mn Williams, "I Love Life" by Mana-Zucca, Back to Sorrenta" vd and "Tl Walk With God" by aes from the operetta "The Student Prince". Mrs. William Taylor, of Port Perry, will be his accompanist. STUDENTS INVITED Two hundred music students of Oshawa schools and of pri- vate music teachers have been invited as guests of the orches- tra. To obtain their tickets they meed only to apply to their teachers, The program is to be widely varied to suit a variety of tastes in music, according to Francis J. Francis, the conduc- "Come scintillating dance num- bers will start off the program, "The Masquerade Waltz', by zKatchaturian and the Blue Tango by Anderson. A _ very lively and tuneful overture, 'La Dame Blanche" will be follow- ed by an interesting arrange- ment of ever popular tunes from Gilbert and Sullivan's operas. The Coronation March by Meyerbee will start off the second half of the program and Sch Should Be Teaching". The address will be part of the regular Sunday service of the fellowship to be held at the CRA Building, 100 Gibb street, at 11 a.m. A cordial invitation is extend- ed to all. Following the address there will be a discussion period and fellowship hour. the main presentation will be Mozart's Symphony No. 40. A master at pleasing audiences, Mr. Francis has several more numbers ready to suit the mood of the listeners. COUNTIES MUSICIANS Ten or 12 of the best musi- cians of the United Counties Orchestra of Port Hope and Co- bourg will assist the Oshawa group. David McDuff, - presi- dent, explained that the two or- chestras have a mutual aid agreement so that neither group) has to depend on professional musicians. Expenses are kept to a minimum and in this way the Orchestra Society is able to offer the free tickets to music students. Oshawa Times. "First, we are trying to build a good orches- tra for Oshawa, it is a slow process but we are advancing. We aim to imcrease interest in good music and above all to do all in our power to de- velop young musicians. We are hopeful that many.of the young people will take advantage of our offer of free tickets and that many of their parents will turn out too and support us." The concert is to be staged in the auditorium of the new R. S. McLaughlin Collegiate and Vo- cational Institute. HOPES FOR TALKS TOKYO (AP)--Foreign Minis- ter Chen Yi of Red China said Friday Chinese troops have completed withdrawal on ie Himalayan frontier and ex- pressed hope that India "will re. turn to the conference table at an early date." The withdrawal leaves the Chinese in control of about 12,000 square miles in the Ladakh area of Kashmir claimed by India. WORLD'S FAIR DEPUTY +. F. Carsiey, 51, ed deputy commissioner of the 1967 World's Fair at a geremony in Montreal's. City was Hall. Mr. Carsley, a Mon- trealer, is president of Lion Vinegar Company Limited. --CP Wirephote "We have three main objec-iporal William Warner, Curtis|tives," Mr. Duff informed The| Whitby detachment, the classes To Stress Safety Rules At Clinic The first traffic clinic of the year will be held Tuesday, Jan. 22 and 29, at 7.30 p.m. in the courtroom at the Oshawa Police Building. Conducted by Sergeant John Norman Smyth, of the Oshawa Police Department and ie P will teach safety rules of the road and highway traffic act as well as safe and economic driv- ing. The course will be completed in four hours which will be broken into two nights. High school students who are taught driving in their curricu- jum, are expected to attend the January and February clinics. Sergeant Smyth urges all Osh- awa drivers to attend. "A number of people operat- ing motor vehicles are not aware of certain road man- oeuvres required by law," he said. "They are driving under misapprehensions as regards the rules of the road." OCVI NEWS By JANIE OCAVITA The BAA dance was held Fri- day, Jan. 11. First there were three basketball games against MCVI. The scores were as fol- lows: Bantam Game -- MCVI 50, OCVI 17; Junior game -- MCVI 42, OCVI 23; Senior game MCVI 30, OCVI 32. The total receipts of the dance' were $255. Expenses amounted to $99, leaving the BAA with a balance of $156, which will go towards buying some new gym equipment. The boys' gymnastic team is shaping up well, now with a varied attendance at each prac- tice. Football players are again re- minded to pick up their pic- tures from the team represen- tatives, Tom Reed (junior) and Tim Gilmor (senior). Any boy interested in track and field should contact Mr. Banks. CHALLENGE GAME Of interest to basketball en- thusiasts was the game held Fri- day, Jan. 18, in which the sen- ior team challenged the gradu- ates of up to 15 years ago. This is a big weekend for our school's boy curling champions who have gone to Renfrew for the Ontario cometition. Every- one wished them the best of luck in the form of a broom decorated with pages and pages of signatures of the students. The members are Phil Bradley (skip), Bill Lloyd, Jim Minett and Tom Reed. YEARBOOK UNDER WAY Acta Ludi, the school year- book, is getting under way. The editor this year is Ken Bunner. If anyone has any con- tributions for literary, humor or scatter page sections, these should be put in the boxes on the stage as soon as possible. Sales close Saturday, Jan. 31. Success In Law Exam Is Marked Dick Brimmell, assistant busi- ness administrator of the Guelph' board of education has been honored by the Ontario Associ- ation of School Business Offi- cials for taking first place in a province-wide examination. At the association's annual conference at Niagara Falls, Mr. Brimmell was presented with an inscribed certificate and mounted desk set. The law examination was written by 65 business officials across Ontario. It was the first course set by the University of Toronto working with the association and the department of education in a four-year pr- gram covering law, accountan- cy, school law, secretarial pro- cedures and other courses. Before moving to Guelph, Mr. Brimmell was a member of the Oshawa Times editorial staff. SUDBURY (CP)--An agree- ment was signed Friday creat- ing the Laurentian University of Sudbury federation--the first non - denominational, bilingual university in Canada. The agreement was signed be- tween Laurentian and the Angli- can Church's Thorneloe Univer- sity. Thorneloe joins the' Roman Catholic University of Sudbury and the United Church's Hunt- Aga University in the federa- n. Ralph D. Parker, chairman of Laurentian's board of governors and senior vice-president of In- ternational Nickel Company of Canada, signed for Laurentian while Archbishop W. L. Wright of Algoma, Metropolitan of On- Lenox T. Lane of Thorneloe signed on behalf of the Anglli- cans. 3 Accidents Probed Here Police investigated an acci- dent early this morning on Olive avenue, near Ritson road south which caused $85 damage to the two vehicles involved. Wilfred Hubbard, 371 Olive avenue, found damage to his car was estimated at $70 while Heber John McLean, of Black- stock, sustained $15 damage by his car. Police this morning also re. ported an accident Friday morning on Bloor street east, near house number 279, caused an estimated $50 damage. Estimated damage of $10 was sustained by a car driven by Michael Falzon, 307 Ballard street, after it was involved in a collision with a vehicle driven by Ross Clark, 120 High street, Bowmanville. Clark's vehicle sustained $40 damage. Bilingual College Will Be First Non-Denominational Laurentian President Dr. Harold Bennett said the joining of the University of Sudbury aad Huntington University has "already demonstrated that mutual goodwill and common loyalties are greater than doc- trinal differences, and I feel sure that the active participa- tion of Thorneloe University will still further enhance 'the ecumenical character of Lau- rentian University." Laurentian University, au- thorized by the Ontario legisia- ture in 1960, is non-denomina- tional but each of its church- related partners will furnish a college with the right to give instruction in such subjects as philosophy and religious knowl- e, tario, and president pro tem,|edg Laurentian expects to open new buildings on its now-vacant campus near Ramsey Lake in oe Sudbury by late i - CELEBRATING BIRTHDAYS Congratulations and best wishes to the following resi- dents of Oshawa and district who are celebrating their birthdays this weekend: Among those celebrating on Sunday is Stephen Nicholson, 86 Church Street, Bowmanville | SOME NEVER LEARN WARSAW (AP) -- A Pole con- |victed of fraud 16 times has been caught at it again, this time from prison, reports the Warsaw Evening Express. It said Henryk Fijolek, serving a nine-year sentence, wrote let- ters to France asking for par- cels and claimed he was the son of Raymond Moufrais, a French journalist who died in Guiana. Dance Realizes Nice Balance If enough subscriptions have not been sold by then, all. plans for a yearbook will have to be cancelled. You may buy one any day from 12.40 t0 1.20 p.m., price is only $1.00, so support your school spirit: buy Acta Ludi. Parliament sat Thursday, Jan. 17. It was reported that the picture of Don Jackson has finally arrived, and will be hung after it is engraved. An- other report stated that a ski club might be yet set up, if it can obain a charter from par- liament. The financial report concluded by saying that we have a balance of $728.12. Tim Slocombe stated that the supreme court has met to look into the matter of the poll-tax charged last September, which some think is undemocratic. A decision regarding this has not yet been reached. SCARVES TOO EXPENSIVE Gene Clarke reported that school scarves would be too ex- pensive to buy. The committee for club crests has decided that bars with a gold background and green lettering would be mere appropriate and less ex- pensive than crests. The sum of $25 was donated to John Elwood, the Toronto boy who has been in a coma for two years, as the result of a football accident. Valentine Dance and Junior Prom committees were nomin- ated. The band is having a dance Feb. 1. The Valentine Dance will be Feb. 15. PLAN DIRECTORY This year another school di- rectory is being planned. All those who want their names, addresses and phone numbers must have their parents' per- mission. The required form for parental approval may be ob- tained from the class represen- tatives. These must be return- ed by Monday. These director- ies are sold daily at the back of the auditorium for 35 cents. Sales close Monday, at moon. The girls' basketball teams have been busy. The seniors played the nurses of the Osh- awa General Hospital Tuesday and both junior and_ senior we played McLaughlin Fri- lay. In interform basketball the first two games were won by default. Please check the schedule to be sure of game time. Fifteen gymnasts are needed for the COSSA gym meet in February. Anyone interested and qualified should see Mrs. Turnbull as soon as possible. The 24-voice ensemble from the Eastern Pentecostal Bible College, Peterborough, will be singing in two Oshawa churches this Sunday. Under the direction of Mrs. C. B. Smith they will be heard in the 11 a.m. service at the Simcoe Street Pentecostal Church where Rev. R. A. Bombay is the pastor. At 7 p.m. they will be in the King Street Pentecostal Church where Rev. James MacKnight is pastor. The young people who comprise BIBLE COLLEGE CHOIR TO VISIT OSHAWA the choir are studying for ' the Christian ministry. They come from Ontario, Quebec, . Nova Scotia, Newfoundland, - and the United States. Starr Sees Fewer Out Of Work OTTAWA (Special) -- Labor Minister Michael Starr today expressed confidence that the over-all unemployment figures this winter will be lower than those of a year ago. In an interview with the. Otta- wa Bureau of The Oshawa Times, Mr. Starr explained the reason why the latest unem- ployment figures released this week showed an increase over last year. He pointed out that the De- cember 1962 figure of 414,000 as compared to the December 1961 figure of only 413,000 was the result of taking the samples at two different dates. The 1962 figure was of Dec, 15 and the 1961 figure almost a week earl- ier on Dec. 9. "IT am confident that the De- cember 1962 figure of un- employed would have been 30,- Many Oshawa and district music and speech students will take part in the Peterborough Kiwanis Music Festival Feb. 28 to Mar. 9, Competitions will be held im three Peterborough halls, St. Peter's Auditorium, St. Andrew's Hall, and Trinity Hall. Judges for music classes will be Dr. Denis Wright, Dr. Sidney Northcote, and Mantle Childe, all of England. Speech judge will be Mrs. Barbara Meikle- john, of Ottawa. Following is a list of area entrants: OSHAWA Rosalind Coe, Lynn Barclay, Beverly Gibson, Pamela Martin, Carol Stewart. Patricia Fisher; Hampton; Carolyn Faint, Stuart Guy, Carol Weir, Frances Maroosis, Beverly Sutherland, Louise Wil- son, David Milroy, Diane Eliza- beth Turton, John Mercer. Archer Guy, Maureen Grant, David McLaren, Bette Weir, Gail MclIlveen, Maria Drygala, Jeannette Taves, Catherine Bateson, Sharon Watson, Susan Murdoch. Bette Lynn Osborne, Stephen Powell, Sally MacDonald ,Ruth Young, Charles E. Watson, Joy Cinnamon, Susan Kelly, Susan Neal, Patricia Neal. Alexandra Galbraith, Cath- erine Neal, Richard Skoreyko, Hampton, Mimi Wiatzyk, Eliz- abeth Dyer, Judith Amn Kashul, David Knowlton, Lawrence Mc- Avoy, James Tomlinson, Dr. F. J. Donevan Collegiate Or- chestra. NEWTONVILLE Starkville School, SS No. 2 Hope, SS No. 9 Clarke, SS No. r Clarke Twp., Clark TSA No. BOWMANVILLE Pauline Lacroix, Elizabeth Johnson, Cindy Lou Ayre, Kathy Lovekin, Carole Wight, Brian Many Area Contestants In Peterborough Festival Ellis, Bernhard Koll, Wayne Coulle, Dayid Chumbley. Donald Burgess, James. Rob- inson, John Bowman, Dianne Hoar, Bonnie Buck, Mitchell's Corners School; Hampton's School Chorus, Maple Grove School, Susan Riznik, Lynn Bowler. Jane Gay, Jane Pollard, Shar- ron Graham, Janice Adaire, John. Sikora, Keith Keatley, Geoffrey Taylor, Lakeshore School, Stephanie Prazienka, Lois Down. Neil Sweetman, Sandra Janye MacGregor, Linda Jean Parker, Victoria Schneider, Louise Budd, Esther Cryderman, Lynda Coul- ter, David Zchanowich, Wayne Taylor, Christopher Newell, John McGuirk. ' NEWCASTLE Micahel J. MacGregor, Bruce Alldred, Douglas Perrin. ORONO Orono Public School, Leskard School. 000 to 40,000 lower than shown if the sampling had been done the same week as in 1961," Mr. Starr said. "The figure would have been 384,000 or less, in- stead of the 414,000 that was shown on the Dec. 15 date." He said the Christmas em- ployment would not materially affect the situation in either year as most of this temporary help was hired early in Decem- the results were given for either! year. "The next report and succeed- ing reports this winter will show a_ general over-all de- crease in our umemployment levels compared to last winter," Mr. Starr predicted. BOWMANVILLE -- A four- year plan of Liberal action that would restore a sense of na. tional purpose to the Canadian way of life and alleviate the present atmosphere' of doubt and indecision that has been created by the Conservative ad- ministration, was outlined by Russell C. Honey, in a speech to the executive of the Bow- manville Liberal Party in Bow- manville Friday night. SIX-POINT PROGRAM Stressing the need for a na- tional plan at all levels of gov- ernment to create full employ- ment, Mr. Honey called for a country-wide solution to achieve this goal and increase the in. comes of all Canadians. Mod. ern industrial growth in Canada must be encouraged in such a way that we can truly own our industries and cut down our deficit payments to other na- tions. Municipalities need, and are asking for, federal assistance to further their industrial pro- grams. A Liberal government will provide the loans and grants necessary to bring about this essential development with- payer. The second aim of this pro- gram, said Mr. Honey, would be the encouraging of new in- dustry. Tax incentives, credit extensions, adjustment grants, and if necessary, the assistance of public capital, would be in- troduced in a planned series of measures, industry by industry, Hortop No Longer Through Street On Monday, residential Hor- top street, in the city's north jend, will no longer be a through \street between Beatrice street jand Switzer drive. The city engineer's depart- ment said today two traffic ar- teries intersecting Hortop, Sun- set drive and Switzer drive, will become through streets. Thus, there will be no "Stop" signs for east and westbound traffic on Beatrice, Pontiac, Sherwood, Sunset, Church. ill and Switzer drive. New "'Stop"' signs will be put up for north and. southbound traffic on Hortop at Beatrice street and Switzer drive. Law street's north end, a Switzer drive, will also require a "Stop" sign. Candidate Cites Four-Year Plan to develop new means of pro- duction in Canada. JOB TRAINING Thirdly, Mr. Honey outlined the need for a vigorous agency to be established for job train- ing. This organization would not only retrain the unemployed but provide adequate educational facilities for unskilled workers enabling them to better their positions. It is absolutely essential that farm families share fully in na- tional progress stated Mr. Honey. Not in subsidies and sea. sonal or occasional government hand-outs but in continuous im- provements in the fields of pro. duction, processing, and mar- keting. Individually and co-opp eratively, the Liberal program would include crop insurance, long term credit for co-opera- tives, and planned assistance in land use and water conserva- tion. The fifth and sixth points of the Liberal. policy included a sensible health plan for every Canadian family when it was required and a new, and imagin. ative effort in dealing with the needs of senior citizens. Special efforts*in providing housing for our older Canadians and provid- ing adequate and portable pen. sions for all Canadians on a contributory basis, was stressed by Mr. Honey, MINORITY PARTIES The Social Credit and NDP parties have made sorry spec- tacles of themselves in this last parliamentary session, said Mr. Honey. Their appeal to the voters: was that new policies were needed. But their conduct in parliament has been govern- ed by their desperate efforts to avoid the defeat of the govern. ment. They have criticized the government and threatened it with defeat but they have not dared to act. Calling for a new election Mr. Honey said that the ineffective- ness of this parliament was now apparent to everyone. Recent election results and polls across the country have indicated a large movement of public opinion towards the Liberal party and this is the party that will give the Canadian people t| constructive, effective, and dy. jnamic government, concluded ber, before the dates on which) ROTARY SPEAKER H. G. Kettle, director of Public Relations, Massey-Fer- guson Limited, who will speak at the Monday luncheon meet- ing of the Rotary Club of Osh- awa, He will spcak on "The Common Market". Organist To Give Recital Music lovers in the Oshawa district will have the pleasure, this coming Wednesday night, hearing one of Canada's leading organists. The recital, which is being presented by the Oshawa branch of the Canadian Concert Association, will be given by Frederick Geoghegan in the auditorium of the McLaughlin Collegiate and Vocational Insti- tute at 8.30 p.m. Before coming to Canada from England in 1953, Mr, Geo- ghegan was organist and choir- master .of All Souls Church, Langham Place, London and sub-professor of organ in the Royal Academy of Music. He also directed to choral societies and was visiting lecturer in music appreciation and English church music in one of the colleges of London University. He was one of the three organ- ists chosen to give official Festival of Britain recitals in the Westminster Central Hall in 1951. For the Oshawa recital an electric organ is being installed in the school auditorium. Gave Girl Liquor Man Fined $100 BRECHIN--Magistrate James Rennicks dismissed a charge of contributing to juvenile delin- quency against Frederick Wel- ler, 26, of Oshawa in Brechin Magistrate's court Wednesday. The charge had involved a 14-year-old girl. Weller was fined $100 for supplying liquor to a minor. The offence occurred late in August at the Lakeview Hotel, in Ath- erley. Early this week the hotel's licence was suspended for two Mer Oshawa a nd patties quarium Society meet- ing Wednesday evening, Jan. 16, at the CRA. Due to the cold' there was a rather poor iurn- out for this, the fourth annual meeting amd election of officers: for the coming year. During a_ short business period it was decided that the entertainment part of the pro- gram, speakers, films and auc- tions should take place immedi- ately after the opening to allow the younger members to leave earlier, The draws would also take place earlier. It is hoped this will bring out more of our juniors. PLAN BIG SHOW The secretary N. Usherwood gave a report on the inter-club aquarium show to be held in Bowmanville during the early part of May. This will be ar- ranged by three clubs jointly, and Oshawa clubs. A very good show is expected with between 60 and 70 tanks including a class for Rare fish. A slide program with taped commentary, provided by CAOAC was enjoyed. This con- sisted. of 40 slides in color of ROYAL TIPPLE Queen Elizabeth 1 had a drink in a London dockside pub after reviewing the fleet before it sailed to fight the Spanish Ar- Aquarium Society Elects Officers fish varieties donated to the CAOA zation by members of different societies and were arranged and the commentary by members of the Oshawa club. OFFICERS ELECTED After a short intermission the election of officers for the come ing year was held with the fol- lowing results: Past president, Don Hambly, Oshawa; presi- dent, Norm Usherwood, Stouff- ville; vice - president, Roy Wil- son, Uxbridge; secretary, Mrs. J. S. Paterson, Whitby; treas- urer, J. H. Dyas, Oshawa; show chairman and advertising, Don Hambly; librarian, Doug Reeson, Oshawa; membership, Mrs. Ruby Wilson, Uxbridge. A junior representative was left to be elected at a later date. Jim Paterson was re turned as program director and publisher of the club bulletin, be assisted by the presi- lent. Don Hambly then thanked John Steffen and Alex Ark- wright for doing a good job as nominating committee. Door prizes were won by: Danny Wil- liamson, John Dyas, Richard VandenWildenburg and John Switzer. Next meeting will be held Feb. 20. Everyone interested in tropical fish is made welcome mada. at these meetings. BISHOP TO SPEAK HERE Most Rev. Charles Leo Nel- ligan, DD, titular Bishop of Fenice, will guest speaker a Communion Breakfast in Oshawa Sunday, Jan. 27, at 11 a.m. at Hotel Genosha. The breakfast will be sponsored by the Oshawa weeks by the liquor licence Mr. Honey. board. Council of the Knights of Columbus. A native of Tig- nish, Prince Edward Island, Bishop Nelligan took up his professional duties at what is now Assumption University of Windsor in Janwary, 1047. He is still carrying on his work as professor of theology and history at the university. He is seen here with His Holiness Pope John XX™"