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Oshawa Times (1958-), 13 Jun 1964, p. 9

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a iy ae if BUSINESSMEN'S TRAINING cation. There are 100 of these courses across Canada, de- signed to. teach new and ad- vanced methods of business to the small, independent mer- chant, Seated left to right are: Mr. Wright and Percy Man- Members of the Oshawa Chamber of Commerce Edu- cation Committee discuss plans for a smal] business- men's training course for Osh- awa with Jack Wright, of the Ontario Department of Edu- (ee COURSE uel, chairman of the educa- tion committee. Standing from left to right are Jack Mann, assistant manager of the Chamber, and. committeeman Morley Finley. --Oshawa Times Photo Oshawa Gets B.C. NORMAN BALDWIN Drunk Assessed $10 0r 10 Days | Vital Phase Douglas G. Lee, 28, of 19 Nash drive, Toronto, was Friday fined $10 or 10 days in jail by . Township. Lee told Magistrate F. S. Ebbs in Oshawa Magistrate's Court he had been drinking} with friends when an argument developed and they put him out of the car. A charge of manded until June 17 Assault charges against Phil| Nellis, 1279 Minden strect and Thomas McMillan, 592 Crerar), street, were also set over until! 9. June 17. | after being found drunk in Whit-| causing wilful damage against Lucien Leo2n, 91 Southwood avenue, was re- Norman R. Baldwin, son of| Henry F. Baldwin, Oshawa Pub-|two years with the Town of Ter-|pushed by another boy into lic Utilities Commissioner, has|race Bay, a company-town own- Ss recently been made chief en-| gineer for Raynier of Canada. Raynier is one of the larger pulp and paper manufacturers| on the British Columbia coast, with plants in Port Alice, Van.| couver Island, Woodfibre, and a| mill in the United States. j Mr. Baldwin attended the North Simcoe Street School and the Oshawa Collegiate and Vo- cational Institute before attend- ing the University of Toronto. He graduated in 1951. Man Post His first employnyent was for ed by Kimberly-Clark Pulp and Paper Company. He was then with H. A, Simons Evd., consult- ing engineers of Vancouver. For the past five years he has been sales engineer for Kamyr Inc., Glen Falls, New York, manufacturers of pulp diges- tives for the paper industry. He is married to' the former Helen Harvy of Winnipeg and they have two children, Thomas eight, and Valleria five, and are currently residing 'in Vancouver. Evangelism Of Work Evangelism is one of the vital phases of church activity to be emphasized at the convention of the Ontario District, Lutheran \Church - Missouri Synod at St. Paul's Luthern Church, Ottawa, 'June 15 to 18. | The report on prepared for the convention lshows that thirty-three. congre- evangelism | Choral Group To Sing Here The Nyack Ambassadors, offi- cial quartet from Nyack Mis- sionary College, is touring dur- ing the summer 'months and 'will appear-here for a special program. They will present their program on Tuesday, June 16, at 8 p.m. in the Alliance Church at 459 Richmond street east. Ar- rangements for the appearance of the Nyack Amibassadors here were handled by Rev. C. V. Freeman. The itinerary of the Ambassa- dors takes them into approxim- gations reported no adult gains during 1963. Thirteen others had only one adult accession ack. Grace Lutheran Church hawa led the district with 19 fixed adults confirmed. jately 13 states and Eastern Can- jada. Dr. Harry J. Arnold will re- present the college faculty on the tour and will present a brief challenge at the close of each Rail Exhibit For Belleville The Oshawa Times Goodyear "R ii . on door box car used to tr t 2?AGE NINE BELLEVILZE -- An impor- SATURDAY, JUNE 13, 1964 Canadian newsprint, a tri-leve) auto carrier, and others. Mr. Fleming said that the passenger display will include a coach-lounge, a sleeping car, a luxurious parlor lounge car and a baggage car fitted with displays, Giving further details about the locomotives which will be especially positioned for photog- raphers, Mr. W. G. Monk, Superintendent of Equipment, said that they will include No. 40, built in 1872 for the Grand Trunk Railway, and the only woodburner type locomotive used for exhibition purposes in Canada. It operated most of its pulled by a steam iocomotive|life between Portland, Maine will be operating twice daily on, and White River Jct., until 1903, a round trip excursion to Anson! when it was sold to a lumber Junction. 'company near Quebec City. In Mr. Hunt has explained that|1940 it was resold to the CN the locomotives will show the|and kept as a museum piece. evolution of motive power from)Also on display will be a very the days of the woodburner to|famous locomotive, No. 6400, the diesel locomotive. He has|which operated for many years added that visitors will be able|through Belleville and in 1939, to sit in the cab of a very|was the centre of attraction at famous steam locomotive as\the New York World's Fair. It well as inspect a freight dieseljalso pulled the Royal Train that in close detail. year. The tender of the loco- The Area's CN Freight Sales|motive holds 18 tons of coal and Manager, Bob Reid commenting 11,700 gallons of water. Another on the display, has said that the!equally famous locomotive ear- freight equipment show will|marked for display will be No. highlight various types of cars, |5700, fastest steamer ever oper- such as the now famous yellowjated by the Railway and for | Two Pupils treal and Toronto, The baby of 'Involved In Push Bout the lot is No. 247, built in 1894 for the Grand Trunk Railway A bout of pushing and shoving at McLaughlin Collegiate and/ and used in yard service. Vocational Institute led to the} ; TWO DIESELS | Two diesel locomotives will be conviction Friday of a 17-year- old pupil, tant railway exhibit is being planned from June 22-28, which will mark the lifting of tracks, dating back to nearly a cen- tury, from Pinnacle street. Ken. Fleming, Rideau Area P; nger Sales M and Chairman of the CNR Commit- tee, said that there will be three different displays open to the public at the station, The first will be of steant and diesel loco- motives, the second will show a selection of freight cars in- cluding a steel caboose, and the third will feature the very latest of passenger equipment. As an extra attraction throughout the school week, a special train L. E. Spencer, president of Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company Limited, and Mayor Ivan Hobbs (a Goodyear em- ployee) "feed" the new service. While the excursion specials $1 $1,6000,000 rubber reclaim plant which opened in Bow- manville Friday. The plant can handle 8000 pounds of tires an hour and is almost completely automated. The process is a "dry" reclaim- Plant Opens. BOWMANVILLE _ Staff Sea na ae e @ y Canada Limited, and Bowman- ville Mayor Ivan Hobbs threw an old tire on a cenveyor belt in a shiny new plant. The tire was carried to a "cracker" where it was chew- ed to one-half inch bits, the first step in an aimost com- pletely automated, "dry" re claiming operation. This was the official opening of Goodyear's $1,600,000 re- claim rubber plant. It covers three-quarters of an acre, is de- signed to process four tons of tires an hour, and is the first of a two-stage developement by the company. The new plant will employ 30 people in addition to the 600 in the man plant, the second stage will double capacity in the existing 'building. From the time the tires are thrown on the conveyor belt until the sheets of rubber are cut off drums at the end of the process, human hands are used only to turn dials and * push buttons. é ing operation, a recently de- veloped method and there are only two other similar -plants in the world. --Oshawa Times Photo David Evenden, of no " } address, was fined $50 or 30) Congregations will be urged to! program. Memlers of the quar- days for being drunk. After re train lay people 'to witness by/tet include: Gordon Twist, first viewing Evenden's record, Ma- word and example in their com-|tenor of Lebanan, Pennsylvania; gistrate Ebbs refused him time munity'. Frank Clay, second tenor of to pay the fine. The department plans to con-|warner Robins, Georgia; Andy duct evangelism workshops for|Scrimgeour, first bass of San members of -- congregational/pabjo, California and Phil En- hT H Id evangelism committees at Ot-|jow, second pass of Swansea, i urc 0 0 tawa and Kitchener in October.|yassachusetts. The pianist is The congregational units also|pan Foster of An ] Pj . will be urged to be alert to pos-| pennsylvania. nua icnic -- haiti miasions "in The program includes interest- 'ir ci u F ; The people of Grace Lutheran) Rev. Dr. Oliver Harms, St.) (06 arrangements of some of the Be ie ' A avorite hymns, spirituals and Church, Park road at Highway/Louis, Mo., seventh president of| |. oospel songs. An inter- 401, Oshawa, on Sunday, June|the Missouri Synod in Synod's entity sie eee tontine the 14, will be holding their annual! 117-year history, will attend and yi eB 'in several combin church picnic. Waltona Park, will deliver ihe sermon at the ations. y x located at the southern end of opening services. | aie pee ie Mill street, Newcastle, is the, The convention essay '"Teach- oe ~~ Pg ce scene of this year's gathering. 18 se Hp dg edt ns hag pe is a co-eclucational Bible The picnic will begin with,Siven by Rey. Walter Wangerin, : s oe ee. lprofessor of religion and edu-\college located in Nyack, New worship conducted by Pastor cation at Concordia Teachers) York. The student body numbers Philip Fiess at 10 a.m. in the Celle River Porect tL Orel cr $00 students. who come park. Coffee will be served and The District conventions alter- from 33 states, 15 foreign coun- there will be ice cream for the/nate annually between eastern|tries and Canada. It is accredit children. Vicar Nelson, Rob-\.nq western Ontario. The con-\ed by The Middle States Asso- ert Baier, James Nelson and) vention was last held in Ottawa/ciation of Colleges and Secon- Arthur Oswald served on ihe 19 years ago, dary Schools; The National committee in'charge of arrange- The Ontario District of Synod|Association of Schools of Music, ments, comprises about 100 congrega-|The Accrediting Association of Because of the picnic therejtions with a membership of 33,-/Bible Colleges and The New will be no Sunday School con- |609. York State Board of Regents ducted at the church this week.' Directing the convention will) The public is cordially _ in- Divine worship will be observed be the Rev. Philip Fiess of|vited to this most interesting at the normal hour of 11 a.m.Oshawa, president of the On-\program by the Ambassadors. at the church. The holy sacra-|tario district. Other officers are: : : * ment, normally celebrated on Rev. C. H. Neuhaus of Simcoe the second Sunday, will be and Rev. Lloyd Wentzlaff of Kit- postponed to the third and chener, vice-presidents. ' June. Rev. M. F. Pollex of Hamil- fourth Sundays of June secretary; William Alle- - , mang, Kitchener, treasurer;) 4 2 -year/dld Oshawa man GOES TO AUSTRIA and Rev. H. H. Erdman fj was Friday fined $50 or 30 days MILAN, Italy (Reuters)--Pre-|Kitchener, executive secretary./in jail for disorderly conduct Was Disorderly Man Fined $50 atime |CON, Philadelphia, open for inspection as well. One will be similar to those pulling Robin Stuart, 221 Highland av- enue, drew a $50 fine or 30 CN's Super Continental over the! * days in jail for assault occa- 2,924 miles between Montreal sioning bodily harm against an- and Vancouver, while the other will be a 1750 HP Road Switcher other pupils, Kenneth LaSalle. LaSalle told Magistrate F. S. type used in high speed freight |Ebbs that he was in a hall- |way April 29 when he was tuart. The Grade 9 student said he was pursued by Stuart into the |parking lot and there, in be- |tween two cars, he was struck |several times by the accused. | | during the week will be cater- ing to the school children in and around the vicinity of Belleville, a "rail-fan'" extra has been| planned for Saturday, June 27! to Peterborough, and will be) open to local residents as well.| There will be photo-stops en- route at points especially select- pected that a large number of United States visitors, some will be here for this trip. The following day, a rambler jour- | | LaSalle said one eye swelled up "and all I could see was| yellow". He said he spent a week in a hospital bed with both eyes bandaged. Eye Specialist Dr. S. H. Wit- zel said it is unlikely that com- plications would occur in the jeye and that, after treatment, jan eye test showed LaSalle had | 20-20 vision. Stuart said that after the pushing episode he was kicked in the groin by LaSalle and "when I chased him into the parking lot he had his fists up". Stuart said that during the fights La-Salle "told me his eyes hurt. I asked him if. he wanted to call it quits and he said 'no'!" Magistrate Ebbs said Stuart used more force than was ne- cessary in "giving this boy quite a beating'. DEER VISITS LAUREL COURT Miss Gytha Soloniuk, 161 Laurel court, Oshawa, was looking from her front win- dow, Friday afternoon, when she saw a light brown, four foot high female deer. The doe was standing on the front lawn of her: home. It walked up and down for a few moments then jump- ed across a creek into wood- land. Miss Soloniuk said she had never heard of deer coming on to the roadway or near the houses, in this area, before. Admits Theft Of Outboard A 22-year-old Oshawa man who stole a $275 outboard motor after he had been drinking was Friday remanded in custody until sentence Monday. David Hobbs, 125. Mill street, |told Magistrate F. S. Ebbs in \Oshawa Magistrate's Court, he! istole the motor from a boat at the home of Harry Chinn, 288 |Hillside avenue,' and "I don't} know why I took it because I! |had been drinking". } Hobbs said he put the motor in the trunk of his car, and left it in a garage. Class To Use Temporary Abod | | | | | | | | | | e | | Construction of the new Catho-| lic High School.in Oshawa is; considerably behind schedule| and the Separate School Board has decided Grade 9 and 10) classes will be under its admin- istration for the coming school term Grade 11 will be accommodat- | mier Robarts of Ontario left) Representing Grace Lutheran) Crown Attorney Bruce Affleck, ed in a new temporary building,| here by air Thursday for Vi-|Chutch, Oshawa, will be Fre d)told Magistrate F. S. Ebbs that/adjacent to the present school. enna after a four-day visit|Frobel, 263 Grooms street as|Barry Porteir, 89 Arlington ay-| From present indications the aimed at increasing trade and/lay-delegate and the pastor Phil-| enue, used "filthy and obscure"|arrangements for Grade 9 and establishing business contacts\ip Fiess, as clergy delegate. |language in the Oshawa Police/10 and will be in. effect for between his province and Italy,|-- ------------------= {Station whe brought in for/the school year 1964-65. Stanley J, Randall, Ontario eco-| Despite: its location 1,000) questioning | However, Grade 11 will pos- nomics and industry munister| miles from the.sea, the port of} 'Porter pleaded guilty to thelsibly move into the new high who accompanied Robarts to/Montreal in 1963 served 5,656) charge but not guilty to attempt-|school, if accommodation is Italy, left here by air Thurs-| vessels, day for Nice, France. |going. 1 | | set by the magistrate. 11064-65 term, ney has been arranged in the form of a monster picnic to Co- bourg Beach. Both special trains will be pulled by the steam loco- motive. Alderman Frank C. Murray, Chairman of the Civic Organiz- ation, said that a wide variety of activities have been arranged during Railway Week. These include the Tommy Hunter. Show with Gordie Tapp, the Haymes Sisters and Bert Niosi and his band; an appear- ance by Moe Kaufman and his fourteen piece orchestra; a giant Hootenanny with Gordon and Marion, Charlotte Vaile, and the Allan Ward Trio. Also scheduled are a Western Horse Show, Motorcycle Races, in- board and outboard Motor Boat Races, and a Harness Racing event. The Hastings and Prince Edward Regimental Band will be presenting a special concert. Airplane and Helicopter Sight- Seeing Rides will be available from the 25th to the 28th in- clusive. EXCITING WEEK It will be an exciting week in Belleville,. Alderman Murray said, which should attract peo- ple from all over the Quinte | District and beyond. ed for their scenery. It is ex-| from as far away as California, |" The Education Committee of |the Oshawa Chamber of Com- |merce decided at a meeting at |Hotel Genosha Friday, June 12, ito recommend that their organ- jization sponsor a small business management course in co-oper- ation with the Department of Education. The scheme was presented to |the committee by Jack Wright, program director of the Small Business Management Training) Program of the Department of Education, He said that the plan now offers five courses: man- agement accounting; retailing; marketing for manufacturers; |purchasing for manufacturers | \Lightfoot, Joso and Malka, Ted\anq bookkeeping. Soon to be added are: person- nel; business law; manufactur- ing; marketing for service busi- nesses and export marketing, |PREPARED BY EXPERTS been prepared for the federal departments of Trade and Com- merce and of Labor by experts in the various subjects. Small Shell Concerts Open Thursday The Band of The Ontario The course materials have; classes of from 15 to 20 mem- bers are preferable, Mr. Wright said. It is organized on a com- munity basis, and usually spon- sored through chambers of com- merce or businessmen's groups. There have been 35 such courses held in Ontario in the last year. Begun in Toronto, Ot- tawa, London and Windsor, they have spread until there have been 100 of them across Can- jada. : The idea for such a plan in Canada was conceived three years ago by the then Prime Minister John Diefenbaker, Mr. Montreal Officer Held Connected | With Mail Heist MONTREAL (CP) -- Gerard Proulx, a Montreal police sef- geant, was arraigned Friday on two charges arising from a $1,- 300,000 mail truck robbery | March 31. | Proulx, on the staff of the po- lice department's headquarters cell division and a policeman for 17 years, was charged with conspiracy after the fact and receiving $3,700 of the loot. The warrant for his arrest |said Proulx aided and assisted | A full program of events will|Regiment will open its summer|the bandits following the rob- early in June. Copies may also be obtained by writing to Alderman Frank C. Murray, City Hall, Belleville, or Mr. Ken Fleming, Passenger Sales Manager, Rideau Are:, Canadian National Railways, Belleville. Piggy Bank Raid Costly A day-time raid on a piggy- | bank which netted $19, cost an|of countermarching in the park] Oshawa man a six-month jail term in Oshawa. Magistrate's Court Friday. In return for the sentence Martin Kozlar, 27, of 48 Albert street, told Magistrate F. [Ebbs that the man with whom| the complainant, Mrs. Bernice Watson, lived owed him $25. Mrs, Watson, of 435 Howard street, said she left piggy bank full at 6 a.m, June 4, and when she returned home in the even- ing there were only "seven or eight cents left". Another woman who lived in the house told her that Kozlar had been in the house, Mrs. Watson testified. "The man she live with owe| $25 . . . so I just took," admitted Kozlar. He said he had spent the money. The accused's record, read to the court, revealed convictions for theft, assault and threaten- ing. CELEBRATING BIRTHDAY Fred 0. Kirby, 103 Warren| avenue, a former member of} the Oshawa Town Council, is; receiving the congratulations of| |his many friends today on the; make her first court appear- celebration of his 84th birthday 3,369 of them océan:|ed theft for which $500 bail waslavailable, prior to the end of|Mr. Kirby is a former presi-|applies to have her: declared a jdent of the Golden Age Club. \charge. The 35-year-old woman,| 8:56 p.m. The band, under "he direction lof Captain G. B. C. Quick,| ILRA™ ARCM, has prepared] ' program for| this occasion aad will have the lnewly formed General Motors « 3tanding 'all-male choir as guests under}; \the direction of Mrs. Elsie Dob- json, with Mrs. Marie Taylor as accompanist. | The General Motors Band, under Pipe Major Alex Stewart, will parade to the |band-shell and give a display during the program. They will 'also play two numbers with the brass band -- "Scotland The |Brave"' and "The Green Hills} jof Tyrol", h The band will include the 'Overture "Zauberflote" by Mo- |zart more popularly known as |the Magic Flute, ""Moon River" \by Mancini, Cornet Solo "'Trum- Pipe} | be available in all Belleville Re-|concert series at the McLaugh-| bery. |tail Stores, Hotels and Motels/jin bandshell next Thursday at| Preliminary hearing for | Proulx, father of three children, was set for June 19. The mail truck was hijacked by seven men while en route to Montreal's central station |pet Tune" and air played by| $/Sgt. J, R. Entwistle and a euphmuim solo, "To A Wild played by S/Sgt. W.| | Rose'"' | Whitsitt. Major W. C. Paynter, second in command of the Ontario Regiment, will be the master of| ceremonies and His Worship] Mayor Lyman Gifford will wel- come the citizens to the 1964 summer programs. WOMAN FACES CHARGE | VANCOUVER (CP)--Habitual criminal proceedings have been started against Margaret Mc- Neill--believed the first time in Canada a woman has faced the serving a two-year prison term!) for possession of: narcotics, will ance June 18 when the Crown | habitual criminal. TRIAL FLAG-RAISING OPPOSED OTTAWA -- Harold Winch, NDP. member of Parliament for Vancouver East, raises objections to the trial flying from the main city post office. Committee To Sponsor Management Course Wright said. There are upwards of 500,000 small businessmen in Canada and it was felt many of them would benefit from further education in business practices. The main cornerstone of the plan was taken from a similar Swiss training course which has been very successful. LEADERS ARE TEACHERS | The classes are taught by leading business and profession- al men, Mr. Wright said, who either come from the commun- ity itself, or are brought in by the Department of Education. It is hoped that the courses for small businessmen will offer jan alternative to the costly and lengthy university courses which small businessmen have had to attend to keep up with new and advanced methods of business. This "dry" process, as Op- posed to chemical, is a new developement of the U. S. Rub- ber Company. An official of that company said yesterday there are only two other plants in the world like the one in Bowmanville -- and this is the most modern of the three. The plant will recover about 10,000,000 pounds of rubber a year. Briefly, it works this way: the tires are broken up into pieces, the wire is taken out and the fabric removed. | The rubber is ground to a |powder, mixed with pre-blend- ed oils, heated, refined, cut in- to sheets and piled for shipping. The operation begins with the giant "cracker" (two corrugat- ed steel drums, set 3-16 of an inch apart, rotating toward each other, one drum moving three times the speed of the other) where the tires get their first grinding. It ends with the "refiners" where the reclaimed rubber is built up on heated drums and rolled in sheets to a thickness of about one inch. MANY OPERATIONS "In between the cracker and refiner, the material goes through about two dozen oper- ations. It is passed over power- ful magnets which pull the me tal from the ground tires; it is blown te the separ: room where it is circulated an recirculated by belts, screw con- veyors and compressed air through ingenious screening and separating process which remove the fabric from the rub- ber. The rubber itself is screen- ed, ground and reground until it is reduced to a powder. It is conveyed to the Re- claimator System, where the material is mixed with reclaim oils and passed through the Reclaimator. In the four min- utes it takes to pass through Workshop Is Planned A special workshop is being planned by the Indoor Garden- ing Association for their meet- ing Tuesday June 16 at 7.45 p.m. in the craft room at the Osh- awa Recreational] Centre. Various cultivating methods such as soil mixtures, potting, | bonsai, and. special equipment | will be demonstrated. A discus- {sion of the various methods will follow. This will be the last meeting of the organization until Sep-' tember, and all devotees of in- door gardening have been wel- the Reclaimator, the material is compacted, heated, plastic- ized and cooled before being passed to the refiners. In the process, some remark- ably versatile machines are brought into play. For instance, one of the machines combines gravity and forced air to re- move tire fabric from the rub- ber crumbs. The crumbs of fa- bric and rubber are fed onto the lower end of a sloping, vi- brating screen. Air is blown through the screen at a pressure sufficient to float the fabric while leaving the rubber on the screen. While the fabric is blown off, the heavier' crumbs of rubber "walk" up the vibrating screen jand are conveyed to the final comed. grinding process. of the proposed new Canadian flag on Parliament Hill in Ot- tawa this Friday, Mr. Winch \ said the flag should come down unti] Parliament had authorized it. (CP Wirephoto)

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