will finance the club's many projects in the community. In the upper picture is a group of members taking bids over the telephone, From left are Don Ellison, Ivan Parrott, Wes. Piatti and Ted Axini. Another job performed by the PRACTICALLY EVERY MEMBER of the Kiwanis Club of Oshawa, as well as a group of volunteers devoted more than six hours Wednes- day night to the operation of the club's annual Radio Auc- tion. Proceeds from the event members was the posting of | $3,343,080. bids. Seen in the lower pic- ture perfo from left, this Ian rming are duty, McNab, | East Whitby New Duplex Is Approved The committee of adjustment Wednesday night approved the application of M. Bogowicz to have a duplex at 495 Simcoe Sr aa ee ae Pig * She Oshawa Cines SECOND SECTION OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, APRIL 16, 1964 street north, on a lot with in- sufficient frontage. Bogowicz told the committee he would purchase the nine- room house, make the necessary changes to convert it into a du- plex "and improve the property to a better condition than it is now". APPLICATION OPPOSED Opposing the application were 20 petitioners, represented by J. P. Mangan, QC. Mr. Mangan argued that the homes in this Simcoe street north area were among the "better class houses in Oshawa" and were mainiy owner-occupied. He claimed that tenant-occupied duplexes would result in property devaluation. The committee peserved judg- ment on the matfer until after the meeting. It i coe street north would be worth more as prospective duplexes than as single family dwellings. Some bers of the ¢ |tee stressed that the homes in that area were too large for an 'owner to keep his house in good repair. SIGN PERMITTED Application for permission to lerect a Kentucky Fried Chicken isign at 973 Simcoe street north in conjunction. with a non-con- Tax Rate Reduced Ee oe Tropak successfully lapplied for permission to build ; : jon an Oshawa boulevard north East Whitby Township Coun-|igt with insufficient frontage. cil, at its budget meeting this! §, Fudge was granted permis- |week, set its mill rate for 1964)sion by the wage cg to erect lon farm and residential prop-|@ building at 223 King street jerty at 61.36 mills and its rate| West. with snsuiticient froot yard |forming use was granted by the} BIRD HOUSE CONTEST DRAWS MANY ENTRIES The Simcoe Hall Boys' Club fore the judging and the boys shapes and colors. Walt Cole, from left: Leonard Farrow, : | setback. on commercial and property at 66.74 mills. This) lrepresents a decrease of 3.66 industrial; -- Pact Talks was the scene of bird house building contest Week. Building of a recent had the use of the club's woodworking shop available for them. More than 20 bird houses were entered in the contest, featuring a variety of for boys during Boys' Club the bird of the Simcoe Hall Staff, is seen as he points out some details in some of the entries, to four of the boys. They are, 9; Jim Wright, 114; Raymond Campkin, 7 and Wayne Far- row, 11. --Oshawa Times Photo boo in the commercial and in-| dustrial rate and a decrease of 2.94 mills in the farm and resi-| idential rate compared with} 1963. The total commercial assess- ment of the township is now! Conciliation talks deadlocked $462,166; while the total farm|Wednesday between Local 969, and residential assessment is)|Oshawa Typographical Unior and General Printers Limited. The mill rate for commercial) Chairman of the three-man and industrial purposes is as|board, William Dickie of Toron- follows: General Township rate,|to, said the board would prob- 25.91 mills; High School rate,,ably ask that a 'no board' Deadlocked Don Crothers and Jack Moore, |8.89 mills;. Public School Board/tecommendation be forwarded chairman. --Oshawa Times Photo: s Underground Parking rate, 8.86 mills; Public School|to the minister of labor. Debenture rate, 9.04 mills;|, A total of 29 employees are Separate Schoo] rate (same as|involved in the negotiations, ltotal. of Public School and De-|Having received their certifica- houses started two weeks be- Distant Visitors At Auto Museum Lack Of Seat Belts 'mms FaCtor In Fatality -- tion is brought to light as to the| distances travelled by many |visitors to the Canadian Auto- |motive Museum. Monday and Tuesday of this to avoid being struck. They said week visitors to the Canadian the car headed toward the north Automotive Museum were from side of the road where they were walking. The evidence of Constable James Brown, Pickering Town- ship Police Department, who With Miss Brown at the wheel, the two young women proceeded south on the Altona road and tyrned east on con- cession 2. She estimated they were travelling about 50 miles an hour, A coroner's jury enquiring into the motor-accident death of Beverley Brown, 16, of Altona road, Pickering Township, sug- gested that had seat belts been installed in the vehicle a fatal- as far away as Vancouver, Re- gina, Callander, Hamilton, Islington as well as many other communities closer to Oshawa. jbentures), 17.90 mills; County|tion on Sept. 29. jrate, 14.04 mills, | The mill rate on day that talks broke down be- An ITU spokesman said to-| ity might not have occurred. The girl died on the evening of April 1 last when the auto she When the car came over a rise, Miss Langdon testified, she investigated, was to the effect that he found the car facing farm and} " theatdentinl lcause "the company refuses to was driving went out of controljsaw a group of pedestrians|north west in the south ditch. property He found four skid marks the longest of which was 181 feet. Before turning over the car had uprooted four guard rail posts, said. Sgt. John Pugh of the Picker- ing Towknship Police Depart- ment told the coroner that the township and drafted a bylaw reducing the speed on his sec- tion of road from 50 to 35 miles an hour before the accident oc- curred and was awai the approval of the provincial au- thorities. follows:| accept union shop conditions."" township rate, 23.21) He said the 27 printers and walking on the road. Miss Brown, she said, had to swerve to avoid them and lost control of the vehicle which swerved from side to side on the road before rolling over in the ditch. PEDESTRIANS TESTIFY | William Copping, 16; Miss |/Sherry Morton, 15; Donald Mur- phy and Michael Everett, who were walking west. on Conces- sion 2, testified that the Brown vehicle came over a rise and they had to jump into the ditch To Study Music In West Berlin Alan Heard, son of an Oshawa teacher, has been awarded a Canada Council fellowship to at- due to lack of experience when faced with an emergency. WOULD CUT SPEED It was recommended that the speed limit on Concession . 2, Pickering Township, between the Scarboro Townlip line and Valley Farm Road, be reduced to less than 35 miles an hour and that a dividing line be painted on the road in this sec- tion. Coroner Dr. F. A. Cuddy, of Whitby, conducted the inquest. He was assisted by Crown At- torney Bruce Affleck. Dr. R. Clarke, Oshawa Gen- eral Hospital pathologist, testi- fied he attributed Miss Brown's death to shock and hemorrhage of the right lung. There were also signs of suffocation due to pressure on her chest. The father of the deceased,| Ronald Percy Brown, said his daughter had been driving for No Shadow |clothes dryer would be provided; Mr. Wandless said the city rate (same as total of public) Union demands include | Pp Y and the tenant would pay extra|should require all buildings tojschool and debentures) 16.1l/recognition of a closed. shop: | general mills; high school rate, 8 mills;|two proofreaders at General or cay lian Ss S e |public school board rate, 7.97/Printers have indicated "their |mills; publi¢ school debenture/firm stand to obtain a con- |rate, 8.14 mills; Separate School tract." A developer, who last week proposed building 146 two-storey Keith Kearns, a: member of the city engineering staff, told the Oshawa Planning Board 'Wednesday night that if two pro- posed eight-storey apartment buildings were built, no shadows would be thrown across nearby greenhouses for 11 months a jyear, The matter was referred to Whitby Duplicate Ihirn after Gilbert Murdoch, act- . jing for R. B. Reed and Sons, Bridge Club Scores \Florists Ltd., 163 Bloor street est, to blic hearing last Th The winners and high scores Wrens 0 0 Panne 8 The program for the weekend) of the games played this week maisonettes on 17% acres of|for utilities. |face on a city street 'to facili-|mills; county rate, 14.04 mills.|improvement in salaries and Dean avenue, will have to pro-| If accepted it would be thejtate fire protection and gar-|------ --------~ |working conditions; security vide "underground parking forjfirst group housing project in|bage collection and allow full| clauses and improved vaca- each unit and have eachithe city. and lawful police access at all] Rochester Scouts tions. '"'group" building fronting on a) ae bins tae el ik ' If the 'no board' decision is city street, watched slides taken in group} (Arin proposes several pri-| accepted by the minister of Oshawa Planning Board, in|housing projects in Metropoli-/vate Janes, that branch off Here On Weekend j;;;? the union can take strike considering the Arin Holdings |tan Toronto before discussing} from a central service road This coming weekend, April action seven days after receiv- proposal Wednesday night, ap-|the matter. Sanat deeded 17-19, the Seventh Oshawa Boy] the department of labor proved group housing "in prin-isurfABLE FOR CHILDREN |\" °\*"? Scout Troop is entertaining 45| Prt. Scouts and their leaders from} which would be to ciple" -- F nm ape ik Board Chairman Kenneth|SUGGEST PUBLIC HEARING gael -- ne pe: a |Crone observed that "'children) Mr, Wandless suggested that|/Rochester, New York. The poe Fi Tin officials 10 GISCUSS),an be accommodated in these|a public hearing be held be-|Scouts are from Rochester etails. (maisonettes) while they can't\cause "there are some pretty|Troops No. 141 and 65 and will! ance in many apartment buildings."'/nice homes down there." \stay in the homes of our Oshawa THREE TYPES Ald. Cliff Pilkey said group| Acting Mayor Ald. Hayward|Scouts for the weekend. In the proposal heard last|/housing "can become the slums|Murdoch suggested that "we go week that shadows from the week Arin proposed buildingjof the future if we're not care- along with it. includes bowling at Motor City|by the members of the Whitby|two buildings would "threaten three types of three and four- ful. If we get into trouble with\tanes on Saturday morning. | pai oye : bedroom maisonettes at rents : §-| Duplicate Bridge Club were: ; : lients' livelihood'"' "The city will have to make/any phase of this than we canip; al. ae : 4 neal : between $115 and $125 a month. sure its Dinner at Hotel .Genosha at North and South Mrs. interests are protect- After hearing the engineer's Stove, refrigerator andied,"' he added. | Accused Prefers turn ¢ posa |Latin, 471 $20, improper Bernard McDonell, 421 Nipigon down any similar left tu __|tesy of Matt Kotelko, of Motor/and Mrs. Wells, 67; Mrs. Love \City Bowling Lanes, eight tro-land Mrs. f Brentwood avenue,|phies will be presented to high|Hunter and Mrs. MacGillivray,| and|scorers. , rn; street, $10, defective brakes. Speed, Smoking An Oshawa police officer testi-ja-half-years he had driven with)avenue, (Josef Magistrate's his foot to the mat." that after fied in Oshawa Court Wednesday Charges against the following,2%4 the Rochester L were dismissed: Gerald Herard,|be guests of the Seventh Lead-| 25° Grenfell : Frederick J. Porter, 368 Willard| Scarborough. improper Lawriniuk, Flintoff said he visited the|Street, disobeying a traffic sig-| Anglican LaSalle|scouts and at St. Gregory's for|dividual Oshawa bank accounts completely demolishing his car,| police station with his father to|nal; John an 18-year-old youth told him: "There are two things I like in this world, speed and smok- "see what I had said to the|Street, careless driving and fail-|the Roman Catholic boys. ing to produce evyidence of in- Mairman, |the officer', Magistrate H. W. Jermyn surance; ing." fined the youth $100 or 30 days Constable C. W. Gallogley said|for the careless driving conyic-| Douglas Flintoff, 559 Masson|tion. street, also said after the Wil-| The magistrate also. con-| son road north accident March|victed: William D. Babich, RR} 13 in which a hydro pole was/3, Bowmanville, $10, having no| chopped down and a mailbox operator's licence; Donald E.| rammed: Goodfellow, 76 King street FOOT TO MAT west, a total of $135 or 28 days report the purchase of an auto; Park Was Busy 'Frank Kingsland, 588 Devon . Wi During Winter srs *yoncen" es Thomas street, $50, careless past winter. Harry Crouter, 276 Frontenac A lands and forests depart-|avenue, $20, failing to yield to a were kept free of snow andident; Winston Petch, 345 Gibb flooded. U-shaped windbreaks street, $20 fyollowing too clo-| the winter included horseback-|following too closely;. Vaughan riding, horse and cutter outings, 'yomkins, 331% Simcoe street caught. $20, disobeying a traffic signa! Almost 14,000 people in 3,825 Lloyd White, 393 Leslie street, in jail, failing to produce evi- "He said for the last one-han istreet, $20, failing to come to There was skating at Darling-| driving. ment report says that three pedestrian; Gary .Munroe, 77 were put up around. benches sely, Milton Ficye, 350 Elm-| and excursions on lightweight north, $75, having an unsafe ve- cars visited the park. i$50, careless driving; Silvio! d-|dence of insurance, having no nee -- operator's licence and failing to stop; Mary Poulter, 95 Warren avenue, $20, failing to come to a ton Provincial Park near Osh-| 4). 5 + 164 Eliott! : Joseph Zarowny, 164 Elliot awa 76 days during the past street $50, careless "ae large areas of Lake Ontario Gibb street, $10, failing to re- covering about 3,000 square feet/main at the scene of an acci- and a bonfire site. turn out to right; Gary W. Ham- Other park activities duringjilton, Glenrush avyenue, $20, snowmobiles. Ice fishing WaS/picle and no operator's licence: popular, but few fish were)joseph Frizzell, Scarborough, a Street, White, 22 nd Hugh left 549 passing; |Port Perry, improper left turn.jafternoon for Rochester. MANY INSURANCE AGENTS ATTEND SEMINAR A two-day seminar for inde- pendent insurance sales agents opened Wednesday at Hotel Gen course in osha. The insurance special sales, pro- noon where, through the cour-|Baker and Mrs. Frost, 74%; Mr.| about 11 months. He consider-|tend an advanced music insti- report, the board recommended to council that a zoning change Baxter, 66%; MTs./he permitted which would allow ed her a good, careful driver and had permitted her to drive to and from Toronto where she tute in West Berlin. Mr. Heard, 22, is now study- turn; 0 Drew church service at St. George's 6414. Saturday. evening there ~ will East and West -- Mrs. P. be swimming at the Boys' Club Spratt and Mrs. Wilson, 7614; veaders will|Mrs. Bovay and Miss Bovay, 75; |Miss Wilson and Mrs, Dorsey, lers at a dinner at the Guild Inn,|69; Mrs. Welsh and Mrs, Odlum, 63. Sunday morning there will be) BANK DEBITS. for the protestanticjation reports debits to in- The Canadian Bankers' Asso-| ing for his Master of Arts de- gree at Princeton University. He will go to the Berlin in- stitute in November and prob- ably stay a year while he stud- ies for his PhD, A son of Mrs. Grace Heard and the late Dr. Donald Heard, Alan was born in the maritimes and educated in Montreal. He took his Bachelor of Music at McGill University, Vo-Kel Investments Ltd., to build on the east side of Oxford street, betwen the CNR tracks and Cordova road. | Mr. Kearns reported that the proposed buildings would be 500 feet from the Reed greenhouses and for 11 months of the year no shadows would reach the greenhouses, He said there would be some attended school. He had confi- dence in her ability to drive, he commented. PINNED UNDER AUTO Dr. F. S. Hertzberg, who ar- rived at the scene shortly after the accident, testified the auto was lying on its side in the ditch. Inside was Miss Merrell Langdon with an injured hand. boys will leave \during March totalled $457,800,- Travelling by chartered bus,|000. This compared with $388,- Sunday!800,000 in February and $320,- shadows across the greenhouses for 26 days each winter, for a maximum of 53 minutes on one Lying partially under the ve- hicle and pinned to the ground was Miss Brown, Miss Langdon, 4 Garden Cir- cle, Toronto, told the jury that i Dr. Heard died in 1957 and n the fall of 1959 Mrs. Heard took a teaching position with |700,000 in March of last year. third from right, co-ordinator, Educational Section, OJAA, chats with some of the agents. They are, from left, Robert Stroud, Harold Roughley and attracted agents. from all points in Ontario. More than 50 attended the first -day's session held in the Picadilly Room of the.hotel. Ken Beal, day in December. McLaughlin Collegiate and Vo- cational Institute. Mrs. Heard has one other son, Kenneth, who is married and working in Ot- tawa. The family resides at 587 Finu- jcane avenue, Oshawa. City Declines =™. 'ts storied Land Offer CELEBRATING Oshawa Planning Board Wed- BIRTHDAYS Congratulations and best purchase of 4.59 acres of CPR- wishes to the following resi- owned land for parks purposes. dents of Oshawa and dis- In a letter received by the trict who are celebrating board, the CPR offered for sale their birthdays today: its right-of-way between Fare-| Carol Halcomb, 585 Wil- well street and Harmony son road north and Marie road. Gooding, 313 Cordova road, The land, assessed at. $2,000 Phone 723-3474. an acre, could be used as a} Pe ine 'Sieestsna. 6! Tobacco Sells At 40.79 Cents Lb. Wandless said the land was "not a proper shape for a park'"' adding that a nearby park "'al- ready serves that neighbor-| TILLSONBURG, Ont. (CP)-- hood", An average price of 40.79 cents a pound was realized Wednes- day on 1,415,683 pounds of to- bacco auctioned at Ontario in company with Miss Brown, she had left the Brown home about 7 p.m. in the evening to pick up Miss Brown's sister at the home of a friend. ALAN HEARD Alan will study music composi+ tion at Berlin Hochschule fur Musik. Acquit Two In. Rape Counts TORONTO (CP) -- A Quebee race horse owner and his trainer were acquitted in One tario Supreme Court Wednes- day on charges of abducting and raping an 18-year-old high school girl. from Stoney Creek, jnear Hamilton, last January. Ronald Kenneth Turcotte, 30, of St, Hubert, a trotting horse owner, and Roger William Kin- ser, 21, of Rosemount admitted picking the girl up on' a_ high- way near St. Catharines and ending up in a motel in Scar- borough, a Toronto suburb. Turcotte said the girl willingly entered his car,.had sexual in- tercourse with him and decided to accompany the men to Mont- real, Kinser said he was not in- volved with her at the motel. Acting-Mayor Ald. Hayward |Murdoch said the property is 'airly heavily assessed' and L. 'Pete'? McMurtry, all of |] can't see that this land would/Flue-Cured Tobaeco Growers Oshawa; Mr. Beal, Marcel St. |be too much good to us." \Marketing Board exchanges. Jean, of Val Gagne, Ont., and | The board will recommend to} So far, 148,061,559 pounds of Romeo Pigeon, of Ottawa. {council that the property not/the 1963 crop have sold for an --Oshawa Times Photo 'be purchased for a park. javerage 49.85 cents a pound, {