Durham Region Newspapers banner

Oshawa Times (1958-), 23 Dec 1964, p. 10

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Adult Book Circulation Up' For November At Library | q Emergency Numbers Hospital 723-2211 Police 725-1133 Fire 725-6574 She Oshawa Fines OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 1964 Second Section » City and district features, social and classified advertis- ma | SANTA DOUBLES AS TRAFFIC GUARD Oshawa School Crossing Guard W. J. "Pop" Richards captures the spifit of the fes- tive season as aay \ two ¥ 4 ro Thorton lic 'School across Kiwanians Hear Rev. H. Davidson "We can not take Christmas» merely by itself, to get its true | meaning, we must look at it, through Easter, and through; "Good Friday', said Rev. Hugh © F. Davidson, MA, DD, guest speaker at the traditional Christmas meeting of 'the Osh- awa Kiwanis Club, yesterday | noon. The speaker was welcomed ; 7 by the older members of the club, the Rey. Hugh Davidson jhaving been a Kiwanis Club Selling a car can lead to a charge under the Highway Traffic Act and a licence suspension if the purchaser member during his pastorate as | minister of Knox Presbyterian |: -|Church, from 1945-1950. 5 The annual "Christmas meet- | ing" of the club was under the |' direction of the club's Support- jof-Churches committee, with | Kiwanian Garnet Tubb as chair- | man. Special guests included mem- bers of the Oshawa clergy, priests, pastors and minister of the various churches and [|parishes in the city. The guest speaker was intro- duced by Kiwanian Rev. Harold Cleverdon of the host club, who recalled that Rev. Hugh David- REV. DAVIDSON mefcial, he said that it was true, commerce is involved but son, after serving as an RCAF Padre during the Second World War, accepted a call to Knox Presbyterian Church, Oshawa. After five years, he accepted a new charge at Chatham. Rev. that this was not necessarily a bad thing, since the Christmas business, to many merchants, meant the difference between a profitable year and just break- ing even, or a poor year. "While 'Dn A\declared guest a busy-intersection this week at Garrard road and Highway before school let out for the Christmas Holiday. Note the No. 2. The students -- Karen . candy bowl Santa is holding ; y, 4, on left, and Tanya to' make the occasion more man; 4°-- were enroute to joyous. their last Kindergarten class ~ --Oshawa Times Photo Book circulation at McLaugh- lin Public Tibrary slowed dur- ing November, says Jean Fet- terly, chief librarian. "Circulation in the adult de- partment and the bookmobile is slightly up over last November but the boys' and girls' circula- tion is down so that there is a total decrease of 2,133," she said in her monthly report to the Library Board. Total book circulation in all|® departments last month was 37,- 722 compared to 39,855 in No- vember 1963. Fewer records were ciretilated Jast month but more, films were in circulation. charge of the department,"' saidjian. "She also does the book) Miss Fetterly. "She supervises|mending and has a daily desk the staff and pages, purchases| schedule. books and arranges schedules of} 'All members of the boys' and staff and school classes. She|girls' staff take turns in story- sorts the books for mending and|telling and giving book talks to for the bindery and checks the!the school classes, as well as cataloguing. \taking desk duty. Advisory ser-| "She also visits Home andjvice is given to parents and| School groups and makes plans/teachers. for puppet shows, Saturday|."Mrs. June Hinds and Mrs. Clubs and = story-telling pro-|Elspeth Richmond take school .;Church in Canada. Davidson, who recently received|we may not think it is truly the honorary degree of Doctor|Christmas, buying does do some of Divinity, is now located in| good', he added. Toronto. He is the secretary of} "Some say Christmas has the Board of Stewardship and|been ov er-sentimentalized, Budget, for the Presbyterian|especially for children, but here jagain, this is hot a bad thing. The appreciation of the mem-/After all, who but the children bers and guests was expressed|should be given out first con- by Kiwanian "'Bill' Soloniuk,|sideration, they represent the of Oshawa Missionary College.|very beginning of life itself". Kiwanian Rev. Wesley Herbert} "It has even been charged (Westmount Kiwanis Climb) of|that Christmas is over-religion- King Street United Church, ex-|ized", said Rev. Davidson. But pressed thanks. |there is an inadequacy in "Christmas by itself, for the|Christmas, as it is, it is not Christian, doesn't mean much",| enough to sing a few carols, put speaker Mr.\up colored lights and _ send Davidson. Commenting that|greeting cards to our friends Christmas has become too com-'and relatives. Yule Hampers Are Delivered -- foes ses geht | "The white gift response was cried yesterday and today when " 3 3 volunteers - delivered Christmas| bb cau ae * athe Mb ne oe Fen hg to the homes 0/ ports of all volunteers, Simcoe Thirty members of the West. | Hall officials and especially mount Kiwanis Club and 12/4: B. Chesebrough, city wel- members of the Motor City Car| fate administrator and his staff. Club volunteered to distribute! She said all citizens who con- over 200 hampers. tributed to The Greater Oshawa Mrs. Ronald Thomas, pack-|COmmunity Chest campaign ing committee chairman, said/had a hand in the Christmas hampers delivered' to needy|Cheer Fund as donations to the families with no children con-\Chest helped pay expenses, tained canned goods, apples,, "To some people the goods nuts, cookies and other food,|in the hampers might not seem and a meat voucher. Toys were|like much," said Mrs. Thomas. included in hampers delivered |"But, to someone who hasn't got to needy families with children.|anything, it would seem like a White gifts, collected at city|great deal." churches during the past two} The hampers were packed in rams. iclasses, file cards in the cata- "Mrs. Hilde Albrecht is very|logue, take desk duty, write and| artistic and does fine' work in|telephone overdues and do all making posters, window « dis-|general duties while in training. plays and in lettering the backs|. "'The members of the staff of| of books," said the chief 'librar-|the boys' and girls' department = | have done valiant work in keep- Sundays were also included in|the Girl Guide Association club- the hampers. 'rooms. 3-Car Collision Miss Fetterly said $5 was stol- en from the bookmobile al- though 'it was. locked. She said City Hall = key ga gs age desk| i t rawer inside the shipping Hours Lis ed room to open "a &: i isited us| | etiuly dilie doce oe paca Fs Oshawa City Hall will be HOSPITAL REPORT ered by unruly children," said|closed from Thursday at 1 p.m. _ The report of the Oshawa Miss -Fetterly. "Police Chief|{o Monday morning. |General Hospital for the week ; jendi h is: admissions, ime good about help-| stafy will work through Pa) ag Reig vatie ys. tenmad The chief librarian said the|UNCh hour to get away by 1. 95:" discharges, 362; newborn annual staff Christmas party|, The Same arrangement 1s in|discharges, male 29, female 22; was held Déc., 14. |force for the New Year's week-|major surgery, 62; minor sur- jing things going since Miss |Boes' death,"' said Miss Fetter-| ily. 'The adult department has loaned Mrs. Elizabeth Linklater to help out." Damage Hits $750 A three-car collision Tuesday;Ray McLeod, 70, of 207 Byron on King street west just west|street north, Whitby and John of Park road sent one man to} White, 31, of 36 LaSalle court, hospital for treatment and caus-| Oshawa. : ed an estimated $750 damage. | Oshawa police investigated a Police said William John/|two-car collision Tuesday at the Smith, 41, of 36 Hiley avenue, intersection of King and Gib- Pickering, driver of one of the|pons streets. There were no vehicles, received a back injury.| injuries reported. The other drivers were Percy} The drivers were Robart | James Seebeck, 20, of 58 King- end. Staff will be off the after-|gery, 141; eye, ear, nose and CHILDREN'S DEPARTMENT (noon of Dec. 31 and will return Miss Fetterly reviewed the|to work the following Monday. |examinations, duties of the staff of the boys' and girls' department. "Miss Enid Wallace is in Emphasize Family As A Unit itis citi i is cotta dato In Polish Yule Celebrations «sac Oshawa Polish community has held several Christmas parties for children recently. The United Council of Polish Organizations in Oshawa spon- Parks and public works em-|physiotherapy treatments, 1066, ployees will observe the same | visits 770; occupational therapy, holiday schedule, sored one for the children of % Polish resident members of the | organization. Jozef Wisniewski was chair- man of the committee. Others who helped were Zbig- niéw Tomczak, Walter Naklicki, Stanley Lasek, Julian Dobra- nowski, Heromin (Ted). Jordan and Jan Drygala, chairman of the Organization. The Gen, W. Sikorski Veter- ans" Association will sponsor a Christmas party for members 'and families January 9. The Polish Alliance Society will sponsor a Christmas party for members and families Jan- uary 16. To Poland, said Mr. Drygala, Christmas has an additional ~ameaning and significance and is celebrated with special rever- ence and adoration. "Apart from the' church, where special services are held, the family is the unit ' carols, Some carols pay hom-| JAN DRYGALA which most happiness is gen- erated,"" said Mr. Drygala "On Christmas eve, all sit fromidown to the evening meal, The! wishes are confirmed. '223. 70; treatments 217; casts, throat, ston road east, Pickering and Marion V. Bolton, 38, of 323 |Humber avenue, Oshawa. Dam- 'P " E . jage was estimated at $650. art ngines | Frederick McSwain of Drew street, reported to police that his car had been a hit and " Will Purchase 594 Twenty-five "partial engines" jfleet in a move to avoid rising|age was estimated at $80. }costs and insure availability. | City Council has approved; A BUBBLE REPUTATION LENNOXVILLE, Que. (CP)-- | A PUC study on 'engine|Prof. A. L. Kuehner, vice-prin- Vigilia, during which, special|"ePlacements shows the life of|cipal, dean of science and head traditional food is served, con-|@" engine to be 135,000 miles, /of the chemistry department at sisting of 12 different courses.\or about three and one-half Bishop's University here, has uring this feast, the Polish|Years service. retired after 50 years service traditional 'Oplatek' or water| The Commission, with five|at the university, He received (specially baked bread) is\@Mgines on hand, expects tolacclaim for his published pa- broken, and ghod wishes are|Teplace 30 over the next five|pers on the properties of the exchange for the coming year.' |Y@ars. ifilm that makes. soap bubbles. does not insure and register the vehicle with the Depart- ment of Motor rt. A Transport spokesman in Oshawa said today a pur- chaser might fail to register the vehicle or buy insurance for it. If the purchaser is involved im an _ accident, under the law, the seller can be charged and his licence suspended because the ve- hicle is still registered in his name. Ay "A seller can and has the right, said the spokesman, Yo require the purchaser to fill out the required transfer of registration and sign It. The spokesman said the seller can then take this to the Department and Op Sex $2 registration fee. is done, the person who is sell- _ ing the automobile has com- plied with the law and would therefore, not be held re- sponsible for acts of the pur- chaser in the future. Two members of the Osh- awa Westmount Kiwanis Club load their car with gifts for the needy as part of the Osh- awa Christmas Cheer Fund campaign. The Kiwanians, as their part, volunteer their ser- WESTMOUNT KIWANIANS AID CHRIS vices to deliver hundreds of Christmas hampers. The de- liveries started Monday and will -be completed' by late Christmas Eve. John Howson is on left, Carl Rimar right, The Christmas Cheer drive Z Ask OCCI Music Room Be Re-made Soundproof Car Selling Tricky Will Do Job On Holiday Board Says The Oshawa Board of Educa- tion Tuesday voted in favor of asking the Wilkinson Construc- tion Co. Ltd. to make the musie room at Oshawa Central Col- legiate soundproof, The motion asked that the job be done dur- ing the Christmas holiday period. The room, part of a new addi- tion to the Collegiate, is not now soundproof. : In the building contract John B. Parkin Associates, architects, promised the room would not "leak" sound. They now. say that Wilkinson Construction Company has not built accord- ing to the plan. The board decided at yester- day's meeting that the construc- tion company should fix the room to create acoustic condi- tions equal to the contract draw- ings. *| The board did not go into the 7 |question of who was at fault in Masset: AP RaE, TMAS CHEER FUND was started back in the early days of the 1930 depression and has continued since. It is an affiliate of the Greater Oshawa Community Chest Drive, ~Oshawa Times Photo '|the leaking music room -- the architect or the builder. Robert Hitchinson, building in- 'spector, told the board that sound was "literally pouring" through and over one of the walls forming the music room. He said this was because the wall had not been built to spect- fication. J. E, Sievenpiper, a represen- tative of the architect, said the wall that was letting out sound ee the music room would lave to be pulled down if the room was to be built strictly to specification. He said however, the wall could be made soundproof with certain additions and this would be equal to the contract draw- ings and much less expensive. Two trustees, R. J. Nicol, and E. A. B tt voted against al- Artists through the ages have been influenced by the world around them, said John Hearn, speaker at a meeting of the Oshawa Unitarian Fellowship, The fourth in a series of five lectures being given by Don Heights Congregation, his ad- dress presented an artist's view of Unitarianism. The writers, sculptors, com- posers, painters and actors of one culture produced works that differed greatly from those of another society the continued. The ancient Greeks saw them- selves alone in a universe they did not understand, surrounded by gods too busy to be con- cerned with the affairs 'of man. They turned to the exaltation of man, and the sculpture and City Lutherar.. Atter.¢ Special Lecture On Art literature of Athens are testi- monials to the Greek concen- tration on physical development and the exercise of mental powers. The upsurge of Christian be- lief was reflected in the works of Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci, and other great painters and sculptors. Books of that time were largely religious in nature and all artists sought to debase man and to glorify God. To-day's artist looks around and does not like what he sees, and his dissatisfaction is re- vealed in the dissonant chords and atonal scales of modern music, in the plotless novel and in the pointless painting. The older order has vanished and the new one is intolerable, but Mr. Hearn feels that Unitarism, lin its search for the quintes- sence of truth and beauty, offers a new hope to the world, a new vision to be portrayed by twentieth-century artists for the edification of all peoples. Award GM 2 Contracts OTTAWA (Special) The Department of Defence Produc- tion has awarded two contracts to General Motors Products of Canada, Ltd., Oshawa, it was announced here today by indus- try minister C.'M. Drury. One contract, for passenger vehicles, is valued at $16,897, and the other, for cargo trucks, at $14,429. The contracts are among 67 unclassHied defence contracts for $10,000' or more awarded during the first half of Novem- ber. Total value of the con- tracts is $2,592,211. lowing the contractor to mend the wall and said it should be torn down and built "strictly to specification"'. Trustees, G. K. Drynan, 8. FE. Lovell, G. A. Fletcher, Mrs. €. C. Lee, and Leonard Glover all backed a motion, allowing the contractor to mend the wall. Last week the board passed @ |motion that the room should be jrebuilt strictly to specification: 'GET $50 CASH IN ARENA RAID Thieves broke in the Oshawa Children's Arena during the night and escaped with about $50. cash from a money-changing machine, cigarets, half a dozen hockey sticks and skate laces. Police Chief Herbert Flin- toff said they entered the building by breaking a win- dow and left by a side door which locked automatically behind them« at, ame croe em. Ridgeway School Girl, 12, Wins Times Color Test and dearest and with all). First prize winner in The Osh-|"This young lady did a very friends," said Mr. Drygala awa Times Christmas Coloring | discerning job," they said. "The breaking of the wafer! contest is 12-year-old Sherri Other winners were Peter between friends originated in|. ' ., | Sage of 217 Warden Wilson ave- Poland in the 9th century] Yuill of 514 Miller avenue. She) nie in Whitby and Barbara among the feudal princes who|is a Grade 8 student at Ridge-' Jones of 245 Glenwood avenue. laid aside their differences at) way school. Peter, 8, a student at Hillcrest son of peace and goodwill to all|, S02'7t sald today she. intenda| chee! won $1. Barbara, 1. won men. They exchanged bread as|'® USe the $20 she has won to} cchool, r an assurance of goodwill. Today,|buy school supplies and "for| Judges said the response to the custom continues, and the last minute Christmas shop-|the contest sponsored by The bread is symbolizéd by a wafer,|ping". Times and local retailers was and as it is broken with fam-| Coloring contest judges com-!| great, Hundreds were received. ily, friends and neighbors, good|mended Sherri on exercising! Ages of youngsters taking part great care in detail:in her entry.'ranged from 4 to 12 years. age to the new-born King, and/ radiate power, charm and artis-| try, others reveal the lyrical| beauty of Polish folklore. The} breaking of the wafer then| takes place with those nearest} FIRST PRIZE winner in The Contest, 'Sherri' Yuill shows of the Oshawa Times Staff Times Christmas Coloring her entry 40 Miss Karen Bell --Oshawa Times Photo Ronald Simcoe, manager of the arena, said the thieves broke into the cigaret machine owned by PicO-Mat Vending Com- pany. He said four windows were smashed by the thieves in their attempts to enter the building. IOOF Holds Kiddies' Party A Christmas Party for some 150 children was held at the Kinsmen Hall by the officers of Court Motor City of the Independent Order of Foresters. William Bow, of WhitBY, and Harold McKew, Oshawa, enter- tained the children dressed as clowns: Two children, Joelle and Gaetan Huebner, then gave two dances. The guests were then given presents at the Christmas tree by Santa Claus. Refreshment were later served. A Christmas dance for mem- bers of Court Motor City was held later at the hall. The buf- fet supper was prepared by the Ladies' Auxiliary. Frank and Olly Brown, who will soon leave Oshawa for Windsor, were prseented with a gift as a token of gratitude for the work done by them in estab- lishing Court Motor City. Door prizes, spot dances and lucky draws were among the entertainment featured during the evening. ' MUSEUM HOURS Jack Mann, secretary-man- ager of the Canadian Auto- motive Museum, announced to-day that the Museum will be closed Christmas Day, but will be open Boxing Day, from noon to 6.00 p.m. and Sunday, Dec. 27th, from noon to 6.00 p.m. Mr. Mann stated that the Museum will afford Oshawa residents the opportunity to take their weekend visitors on a tour of the Museum, CRS oe ie

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy