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Oshawa Times (1958-), 26 Sep 1964, p. 9

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~ Emergency Numbers Hospital 723-2211 Police 725-1138 Fire 725-6574 She Oshawa Times OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1964 Second Section City and district features, sports and classified advertis- ing. i" \association I have never seen '| sales hit $60,000,000 in one month 'juntil this year, August is now '|the fifth straight month in which '\sales topped the record. of pre- 'ivious years. % 4 spokesman for the Canadian As- i ilows, CAREB Executive Secre- 11964 and Multiple Listings Up 27% The growth of the Oshawa dis- trict is reflected in the 27 per 'cent increase shown in a year) by multiple listing real estate! sales. 1963 multiple listing sales as) of August reached $1,921,000 and! showed a jump to $2,445,000 at) the end of August this year. The} Oshawa growth is an example! of MLS across Canada. Multiple Listing Service sales PRELIMINARY DATE IS SET ATTEMPTED MURDER CASE The preliminary hearing into| Wilson was again remanded in 706,000 ahead of last year, Aljaid against Frederick Wilson, |37, of Hanmer, following a shoot- sociation of Real Estate Boards | ing, in a downtown hotel June ait wee said recently. MLS is an exclu-|99" pac been scheduled wing. Also remanded in one sive service of member boards o4 9, for) yo apts fe ys oS with of the Association. Crown Attorney Bruce Affleck! A charge of possession of stol- As of August 31, sales to date tojq Magistrate H. W. Jermynien goods against G Boor. were 32,415 properties for alin Oshawa Magistrate's Court|dages, 20, of 887 Ritson road value of $476,823,000 compared/ Friday that he will continue to| to 27,268 for $391,117,000 in the|oppose bail until that time. same period in 1963, The dollar! increase was 22 per cent. Sales for the month of August were) 4,499 properties for $65,705,000 compared to 3,806 for $53,589,000 in August 1963. The increase for the month was 23 per cent, "The current. level of MLS sales can only be described as phenomenal," said H, W. Fol- 2. Bail was set vt $5,000. | Accused Gets Probation For 1 Year A 22-year-old Oshawa man j Mier edd sep ae year's probation after wi guilty to breaking into and entering 253 Sinclair avenue, Aug. 30. Magistrate H. W. Jermyn told |Thomas Irving, 38 Kawartha | sitireet ; "Tt was a very foolish piece of business but you should get a break." | ' Power Boats To Perform An anmada of power boats will storm into Oshawa harbor next Saturday. They will all be en- tries in the Lake Ontario Power Boat Marathon. Thirty to forty boats are ex- tary. "In all my years with the "At the current level of sales, MLS could reach $685,000,000 in top $800,000,000 in MASONIC REGALIA OF OFFICE IS PRESENTED AT CEREMONY At the Grand Convocation of the Past Master of Cedar week H. S. Shiter, Past Mas- Members of Cedar Lodge. R. the Grand Lodge of Canada, Lodge, Oshawa, was appoint-' ter (eft), made the presenta- A. Stone (centre) is Master of in the Province of Ontario, ed Assistant Grand Director tion of his regatia of office on Cedar Lodge, AF and AM. AP end AM, beld in Toronto' of ceremonies. "At the regaer 1 oy the Olticers and --Oshawa Times Photo in July, Jack Biddulph (right), meeting of Cedar Lodge this es : ; + | Court Charge Is Dismissed Two Convicted Of Assaul Await Sentence October 2 [the window down on Ellerbeck's dismissed | head, trate's Court , Oshawa printing|offence," Mir, Scott said. FATHER'S ADVICE neither showed up in court. | company resulted (Dunsmoor has just finished! Asked by Mr. Scott why hei." theft charge against James| conviction of two strikers. serving 15 days in jail after|hadn't laid charges soon 'after| Forster, of no fixed address, Dunsmoor, 300 Albert) being found in'contempt of court|the incident, Henkelman replied|"@S 80 dismissed by Magis- | by Jack Parker against Harold Wilce, 329 Fulalie avenue, was M + "A man cannot twice be placed in jeopardy for the same 'Threats of murder and vio- lence against an employee of a strikebound 11965," said Follows, A false pretences change. laid), jtario street, Bowmanville. The court was told that Irving! was pushed through a wii of the home by a companion after the glass was broken. Maurice Collier, the home- owner, returned home and found Irving in the process of stealing a case of beer, the court was told. Mr. Collier was so angry, the magistrate was told, that he struck Irving and smashed the yindows of an auto owned by Irving's companion, which had been left in the driveway. Irving's employer, Geo Chai said the accused \@ Damage Hits $675 Three road accidents in Osh-} awa, Friday, resulted: in $675) property damage but not per- : iene sonal injuries the Canad > ; sa | Commerce 35th annual meet- A crash on Stevenson road) ing in Winnipeg. The Conven- was nesponsible for $200| tion will be on Sept. 28, 29 | WESTBOUND Ken Crone, President of the Oshawa Chamber of Com- merce, left Friday to attend rge was : | custody week pending posting of $1,000) / Ronald Gaul, of no fix- south, was remanded until Oct.) & across Canada fn 1964 are $85,-\the attempted murder charge|Custody until the preliminary] | | | | | KEITH ROSS pected to enter the marathon and all must be a minimum. of 15 feet in length. The marathon starts on the Humber river in Toronto with first stop at Oshawa, the half- way mark. Boats will gas-up and skippers take a short rest at Oshawa then they will return. thon is 80 miles. in Oshawa at about 12 noon. They leave Toronto at 10.30 a.m. Estimated length of the mara- ' Local Endorses dlar Settlemen Four-Cent Hour Hike As A Start A201 vote in favor of a settlement offer Boats are expected to arrive) ang damage. The drivers were| 2nd 30. The theme of this Joseph Newell, 53 Juliana drive,| year's convention is "Pro- | gress through Understanding." ana Laurens' Bishop, 15 On-| Among the speakers to be on the program are Federal Trade Minister Mitchell Sharp,. Premier Roblin of Manitoba and John Deutsch of the Economic Council of | a good employee and would lose his job through being victed. y not con- A two-car crash at Wilson road south and Eulalie avenue, between cars driven by Ray- Rotarians View Slides Of Britain ' Woman Hurt |In Collision Mrs. Wayne Kerr, of Dunblane tion has been lowered to ten years. evans, Toronto, is being held mond Bilsky, 106 Wilson road) Canada. Mr. Crone will be the Barry trt ss me H. W. Jermyn, when street, and Richard Ellerbeck, neither the accused nor. Mrs. Joan Forster, the complainant appeared. Gordon John Greer, 36, of 181 Kingscourt Apartments, Ajax, of ¢ Mark Henkel ey | by Mr. Justice Haines, General) that he was acting on the ad- Printers had eartier obtained) vice of his father--the assistant] ee Som against the) general manager of the com ,| Strikers, 29, and will be sentenced) Roy McMurty Jr. counsel for) Oct, 2. Two mischief cl op harges|the printing finm, argued that) porated Henkelman's Dunsmoor laid by fel-\the Supreme Count hearing had|adding that Dunsmoor said "we John Nantais andjbeen of a "quasi-criminal |were as good as dead and that pany. Donald McKenzie, 21, conro- evidence Gerhard Krahl were withdrawn|natune and therefore did not|/we were scabs." by the complainants. In a marathon session in constitute a court. Oshawa Magistrate's. Court, GIVES TESTIMONY most of the to hearing strikers and day was given over) case,"' Mark Henkelman After Magistrate Jermyn in- changes imvolving|sisted that "we hear the facts of other employees ofthis General Printers Ltd., 57 Sim-| testified that on July 29, Duns-) In the Zanoskar case, Austin Hicks, a composing room arp. prentice, said he was assigned to take pictures of employees as they left a near door of. the plant "The pictures. were to be sent |Frewell avenue, was fined $25 jfor intoxication after it was test- lifted that he was picked up by police near the Hotel Genosha Sept. 24 following complaints. Melville Ferguson, 36, of 818 |Simecoe street south, pleaded guilty to a change of imtoxica- tion and was fined $50 or 30 days. It was testified that police anrested Fenguson after he was south, and Onnme Ranta, Kirk- land Lake, caused $150 damage. The third onash, at Park road south and Cordova road resulted! in $325 damage. Drivens in- volved were Wilfred Generoux, Paris, Ontario, and Neill Patter-| be in attendance for this 3-day | | convention: son, Toronto, accredited delegate for the Oshawa Chamber of merce and the Bowmanville Chamber of Commerce, It is expected that top businessmen from all across Canada will | BOWMANVILLE (Staff) |Membens of the Bowmanville Rotary Club were shown slides of a trip to the Bnitish Isles dur- ing their Friday luncheon meet- Jim Speers, principal of Cour- tice High School and a member of the club, showed slides of the trip he took last summer. for treatment at the Oshawa General Hospital following a car-truck collision at Brock street and Rossland road, Whit- by, this morning. Her husband was treated for minor injuries and released. The driver of the truck was un- injured. Mrs. Kerr sustained a}; ASSAULT DAUGHTER HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) -- Mrs. Laura Gail Alvarado Frida: y was sentenced to 25 yeams in prison for assaulting her two- year-old daughter, Pamela Sue broken collarbone. ACCUSED SAYS HE STOLE CAR: coe street south. moon 'jumped at me {from|to Toronto' and circulated to found lying on the ground Sept. In another action, an execu-/behind and threw a plank in| show pictures of strike breakens|" tive member of Local 222, Uni-| my direction," land seabs,',Hicks added. ted Auto Workers, Patrick Mc-| Later that night, Henkelman) Hicks said he was about to Closkey, 102 Mary street East, | testified, he was standing on the|take pictures of the accused Whitby, was acquitted of alsidewalk near the plant when @/when he 'ran down the alley-- charge of assaulting Jack Hoop.|car containing three men stop-|halied up his fist--struck me on er, a truck driver ped and Ellerbeck end "ltthe arms. I told him to leave Sreco Zanosker, 609 Orerar| moor got out, -- me alone but he hit me on the avenue, who was kept on the job! "Bllerbeck said I had taken|arm, Then he kicked me in the Rotary Group since the strike began, June 9,/his job at the plant and he| oat of the pants," | also acquitted of assaulting Aus-|would kill me," the 17-year-old! ponaild Smaill, another striker, | tin Hicks, who, it was testiified,| Henkelman said. : | said he saw '"Specko' kick Aus. was trying to take Zanoskar's| '"Henkelman. said Eillerbeck! tin in the backside." picture, : |"shook his hands in my face,| Ajjan Jackson testified that the hearings, lan] rigped my shirt and said he|pe peand Zanoskar. ask Hicks| Scott, counsel for the Intema-|would smash my face if 1 did|not to take bis pictune" just/ tional Typographical Union, kept) not. stop working at the plant. | hefone the skirmish, reiterating that 'these changes} '"Dunsmoor said in strikes) Zanoskar, 35, told the magis- have been laid by the company | people did get killed and Weltrate that just before the inci- in an yg ga tl get Gohating| shone vig te ge pur, (Sent he received a visit at ints in a r-management! Henkelman ed. 'He (Duns-| ' aye , dispute." | moor) put his hands on my amms|torsye°" °¥ men fO™ nated, many Oshawa and On- In the Henkelman assault) and said he could break them if "They said they would kitt)t@tio residents are indicating case, Mr. Scot argued that/he wanted to." me. They scared my wife and their interest in the history of both men had been dealt with) Later, Bllerbeck 'stuck his| igs' Zanoskar said he had the car industry by touring the by the Ontamio Supreme Court) head into the window of the/neceived phone calls "some-/Museum and bringing visitors his sixth drinking back in at night.'"' Douglas A. Fisher, General Manager of the Canadian Auto- motive Museum, 99 Simcoe street south, reported today that the Museum is continuing to attract many visitors. Although the holiday season has termi- The accused admitted it was) conviction, | fs ree adding, 'I no sooner get out of/W@s Friday jailed for 30 days }jail in the momnings and I'fiin Oshawa Magistrate's Court jafter pleading guilty to a charge ~|of driving whille his license was| TO DRIVE GIR under suspension. RoNand Villeneuve admitted! Ltd, plant, Ritson road south. A %4-year-old Bay Ridges man|stealing a car Sept. 24, LFRIEND HOME a) 1 could drive my girl friend ie. | Magistrate H. W. Jermyn was \told the pair was found police in the auto parked behind \the Cole of California (Canada) Tours Museum oo Is Graduated RCAF STATION NAMAO, Alta., -- Sergeant R. W. Green, 30, son of Mr. and Mrs, R. D. Green of 108 .Westmount St., Oshawa, Ont., has graduated from the summer bush course of the RCAF's Survival Train- ing School here. Sergeant Green, a radar tech- nician at RCAF Station Sydney, N.S., joined the RCAF in Sep- tember, 1951. The Survival Training School teaches techniques of survival to aircrew and. other personnel who, in an emergency, may be. come stranded in uninhabited or isolated areas. It's classroom is the 'great outdoors' at Jarvis Lake, Alta., where summer and winter bush survival training is given, and at Resolute Bay, Cornwallis. Island, N.W.T. where Arctic survival is taugh CELEBRATING BIRTHDAYS Congratulations and best wishes to the following resi- dent of Oshawa and district who.is celebrating his birth- day today : Glennie Wraith, Herbert avenue, RR 1, Oshawa. Phone 723-3474. and Dunsmoor had been found|Plant and said he would kill| times at 3 a.m. saying I'm a/|from such distant places as guilty of contempt of court and/me,"' Henkelman added. scab, taking somebody else's|Holland, Wales, the U.S.A. and Ellerbeck had been acquitted. " The youth admitted bringing) joh and they would kill me." | England. eae Te : : se WAS PHOTOGRAPHED The attendance at the Museum e ' The accused added that he for the past week reached 365, | 4 |had spent five years at hard|bringing the total for 1964 to . OO Tl Sg |labor in his native Communist-|21,024. The number of visitors occupied Yugoslavia " and got/for the month of August was | photographed alll the time thare,|/4,683 as compared. to 2,994 in A D f d d \f don't like being phote-/ August of 1963, the first year | graphed." of operation. re e en e | Hicks, he said, "went into a During the past week the fighting position' and cailled/Rotary Friendship Group toured Th controvercial qdestion of;public more than by the school his fellow picketers a tunned|the Museum and many service education boards spending/pupils themselves," him around and gave him a kick! clubs, church groups and educa- money or "frills" in schools| ' Wall-to-wall broadioom, Mr. |" the pnats," Zanoskar added. | tional institutions have recently cropped up at the weekly meet-/Milloy said, was put into some The hap garb ruled that "'in)made arrangements for guided) ing of Kiwanis Club of West-/schools. He said: 'Parts of Tor- the light S- his fonmer exper-|tours of the Canadian Automo-| mount. onto are old and if we do not car thts man might : have|tive Museum. uaior tant super-/Sive the students a taste of|fett the photographing consti-/ The Museum continues to A A. I. eee pc some finer things, in a great woge Ng oo ae Game : look remain open to the public--Mon- intendent age Ae many cases this is not the case|,,." We Mculoskey case, Jack day to Friday, 9 a.m. to 5.30 school system, in Toronto, told} Hooper said that July 28 he was a " : fm at home, can we expect them to)... : . : p.m.--Saturday, 10 a.m. to 9 the Board of Education meet; m Pr eee driving a truck out of the plant Pam ee +a meting respect these finer things after p.m. and Sunday and holidays ing: 'They say we are wasting), ° fees when he was confronted by a ville wher | weir school days? A from noon to 9 p.m. , money on too many frills when| "wt pnw gentlemen they will wedge of picketers. Mr. Hooper)" " achools are built and that Wel io) and this is part of the rea.| Samed "'muniging". a few of are not sticking to essentiais"' sok iar ns pncalles frills." the men with the vehicle's!Oshawa and District Labour He was guest speaker at the) He said it had been suggested M ee! cg nile Council, said that = his years of ' , Eta "| Mr. Hooper said McCloskey) association with McCloskey '"'he meeting which had teachers @/eyery student should stay in| i i ' j ts ae , '}came around to the side of thejis very honest and no more! . apecial guests. "School. until his education was|truck 'got me by the throat and/violent than any of us." Mr. Milloy asked: "What is ajcomplete but added:. "'Surely| shook my head a bit." | After dismissing the charge} frill and what is an essential? the public does not want us to! McCloskey said he got "kind|against McCloskey, the magis- In Toronto we have recently|keep people who have no inter-| of provoked after the bumper of|trate adjourned 'two other erected a school with a swim-jest'in learning or have not the/the track brushed by my knee,"/assault cases until Oct. 2. ming pool. Why was this done? | ability to progress." d th | Because the schoo! is situated Mr. Milloy said people were on park land and the pool rep- becoming teachers "because of| denied taking resents a great need to the par--money"" but this was true of| neck ticular area and is used by thejany profession. litt Pilkey, president af the|Bryce Johnson. The Hooper accused! Arthur Cocker by . the|and James Learmonth, plafnant's arm and said he grabbed the. com-|/Charged by Robert Cadman is/answered one fine call Friday | 57 Division St.,|when a pile of rubbish on Nassau 43 Gar-/street burst into flames. Seven! jrand road nonth, is change by|routine ambdiance cails were/4.30 in the afternoon and from also reported during Friday. | } ONE CALL The Oshawa Fire Department }less more and more people come Blood Clinic 'October 1 Whole blood for transfusions jas far as supply goes can be |compared with beds in our hos- jitals, No sooner do we have an addition to the hospital than the needs exceed the expectations jand all beds are full with many }people waiting. In another sense, the same applies to. the supply of blood. No matter how jmuch blood is_collected at_our \clinies, we seem to use more jand never can we get very far ahead with our supply. Many people are not aware of \thhe good that is done by donat- jing blood that can be deposited jin our Blood Bank for use when jit is needed. Those who have had friends or 'close relatives |who: have received blood trans- fusions know how important it is to have blood available when it is needed. Ninety-five per cent of the work done by Red Cross is done by volunteers. Thousands of Ca- nadians give freely of their ser- vice in helping to render the various services of Red-Cross. In Oshawa, it takes about eighty volunteers for every clinic. No matter'how hard they work, we }cannot supply enough blood un- forward and donate. Our next regular Red Cross Monthly Blood Donor Clinic will be held at St. Gregory's Audi- & |6.00 to 9.00 in the evening. torium on Simcoe street north on Thursday, Oct. 1 from 1.30 to MURDOCH OPENS AUTORAMA SHOW AT ARENA Alderman Hayward Murdoch of Oshawe cuts the ribbon to officially Autorama, which is sponsored by the Motor City Car Club of Oshawa. Bob Reynolds, who is open the annual chairman of the Autorama, looks on while Mr. Murdoch performs his duties. The show officially opened Friday -- it will be open today and Sun- "day at the Children's Arena. On display are 35 cars that have been styled to their own- ers' taste. ~Oshawa Times Photo

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