CHURCH STREET RELOCATION IS RAPIDLY TAKING SHAPE Here is a view of the work | Services have been re-located being done on Church street, | by Oshawa Public Utilities between King and Bond streets. | Workmen and building on the east side of the street have | King street end of the street. been removed to allow for the | The job of laying the base for straightening of the jog at the | the new paving is progressing Jail Driver Seven Days Richard Patfield, 38 Second street, Bowmanville, was sen- tenced to seven davs in jail by Magistrate F. S. Ebbs, Monday, on a drunk driving charge. His car was impounded for three months and his licence suspended for six montis. Patfield was found asleep in his $ [car, parked in-the driving lane of Highway 401, with the lights on but the engine stopped, at 3.30 a.m., Sept. 27. OPP Constable A, W. Breward, who found Patfield, said in his opinion the accused was intoxi- cated. "He was confused. He wasn't sure whether he was go- ing to Toronto, Bowmanville or Oshawa, to visit his daughter." He also said Patfield was very co-operative, polite and his speech was elear. CITY AND DISTRICT HOSPITAL REPORT week ending Oct. 3: admissions 253; births, male 23, female 32; discharges 240; major surgery 32; minor surgery 77; eye, ear, nose and throat 37; examinations and treatments 99; casts 3; phys- iotherapy treatments 280, CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SUBJECT The divine source of all true power was emphasized at Chris- tian Science services on Sunday, rapidly and much of the curbing has been installed. --Oshawa Times Photo Arrangements Show Feature of the Mrs, L. Johnston and Mrs. O. C. Society | Weeks. Lovell] Container of red hardy mums with|-- Mrs. A, Maskell, Mrs. D. Mac- as|Millan and Mrs. O. C. Weeks. Container of rose hardy mums Mrs. D. MacMillan and D. MacMillan, Container of mums other than {above colors -- Mrs. S. Burnett, Mrs. O. C. Weeks and Mrs, D. The monthly meeting Oshawa Horticultural was held in the E. A. School Monday evening Harry Firth, of Scarboro guest speaker, Mr. Firth specializes in grow- ing chrysanthemums and was in- strumental in the recent forma- tion of the Ontario Chrysanthe- mum Society. His love of chrys-| - anthemums has given him a de-| MacMillan. sire to learn more about them| Container of Button or Pom by experimenting and studying Pom mums -- Mrs. D. MacMil- them, They do not require spe- Men only, cial care but need the care any garden flower would get. strongly advises starting plants each year which is easily done by cuttings in the spring. The annual Chrysanthemum Show, which was held in con junction with the meeting, boast- ed many outstanding arrange ments. Also in conjunction with the meeting, a plant sale was held. The results of the show were: |E, Sandford, Mrs. C. Smith and|for its perusal. The article in- Container of white hardy mums -- Mrs. D. MacMillan. Container of pink hardy mums/Mrs, E. Sandford, Mrs, D. Mae-|°f ~~ Mrs. L. Guy, Mrs. D. lan, Modernistic arrangemen t| Whitby Senior "A" hockey club mums predominating -- Mrs, E Sandford, Mrs. 0, C. Weeks and Mrs. C. Smith, Arrangement for child's sick room -- Mrs. C. Smith, Mrs, L. Guy; Mrs. D. MacMillan and Mrs. E. Sandford, tie. Moonlight arrangement -- Mrs. Mrs. O. C. Weeks. | Thanksgiving arrangement -- to carrying out the work, matter arrangement for| He|den, any flowers -- 0. C. Weeks, |of {he finance committee, recom- new William Alchin and D. MacMil- mended to council that one page Mac-| Millan, William Alchin and Mrs. Millan and Mrs. A. A. Maskell. - Container of bronze hardy| OBITUARIES CITY COUNCIL WEATHER FORECAST Oct. 4. The Golden Text was from Matthew (7:19): "Every tree that bringeth not forth good fruit is NEWS IN BRIEF | { Oshawa city council voted . endorse a resolution from Strat- ford, that the provincial govern-| ment be petitioned to take steps| to eradicate the roosting of star-| lings in residential areas. Alder- man Finley Dafoe volunteered {the information that starlings | keep army worms to a minimum. [Its a question of which you {want to be bothered with," said {Ald. Dafoe, Mayor Lyman Gif- {ford observed philosophically {that birds are like humans. "All \have some. good," he said with ay enigmatic smile. | USE HOCKEY PROGRAM Ald. E. F. Bastedo, chairman TORONTO (CP)--Official fore- casts issued by the weather of- fice at 11 a.m.: Synopsis: More than an inch of rain has fallen in the last 24 hours in southwestern Ontario and along the north shore of Lake Ontario. There is little change in sight and throughout southwest- ern Ontario another inch or so is amounts east and north of the N a Peninsula. It continues fair and cold in Northern Ontario. Regional forecasts valid until midnight Wednesday: Lake Erie, southern Lake Huron, Niagara regions, Windsor, London, Hamilton: Light » sionally moderate rain today Intermittent light rain Wednes- day. Little change in tempera- ture. Easterly winds near 15. Northern Lake Huron, western Lake Ontario regions, Toronto: Overcast with light rain and drizzle today, cloudy with occa- sional showers Wednesday. Little reporting and subsidies to be change in temperature. North- paid. Report was referred to|east winds near 15. board of works. | Eastern Lake Ontario, Georg- SEEK APPROVAL ian Bay, Haliburton regions: Oshawa Board of Education! Mostly cloudy with occasional lof advertising space in the -iprogram be purchased. Council agreed. WINTER WORK PLAN The department of municipal affairs submitted a long article {on the winter works incentive {program 1959-60 to city council cluded regulations with respect Cloudy, Moist Spell Goes On expected with somewhat lesser southeast winds near 15. hewn down, and cast into the fire." FOUR NEW MEMBERS Four new members were re-| ceived into membership at the| quarterly communion service Sunday in Knox Presbyterian Church. Kirkland Lake region, Sudbury, | [North Bay: Cloudy with a few| |sunny. intervals today. Cloudy] {with a few light showers Wednes- |day. Not much change in tem- | perature. Easterly winds near 20. Timmins, Kapuskasing regions Mostly sunny todav. Cloudy with [showers Wednesday. Little change in temperature. East to ONE ACCIDENT Oshawa Police Department re- ported only one accident Monday night. Two cars were involved in a collision on Ritson road south at| Athol street. One car was driven| {by Bernard D. Mazurkiewich, 1008 Cedar street. The other was driven by Donald N. Sisson, Cour- tice. Total estimated damage was 25. 2 AMBULANCE CALLS Oshawa Fire Department -re- ported only two ambulance calls Monday night. There were no fire alarms. GIVEN THREE MONTHS William Peterson, 42, of Osh- awa, was sentenced to three months in jail by Magistrate F. S. Ebbs in magistrate's court, Monday. He was charged with begging on Simcoe street north, Oct. 3. Peterson had asked some- one for 50 cents and got two cig- arets. SUSPEND SENTENCE Ann Weldon, 17, of 200 King street west, charged, with three others, in the attempted break- TORONTO (CP) -- Tempera- |tures: | Dawson | Victoria ... | Edmonton ... Regina | Winnipeg {Fort William .. {White River ... Kapuskasing S.S, Marie ... North Bay ... Sudbury ... Muskoka . Windsor . London Toronto Halifax a A .|showers today and Wednesdav. Monday night asked city council|yiitla" change in temperature. to approve debenture issues total- Northeasterly winds near 15. ling $2,410,000. Costs included - ii 2 ing and entering of an Oshawa store, Sept. 12, was given a two- year suspended sentence in ma- Killaloe . Earlton purchase of a lot for and the e- mums -- Mrs, D, MacMillan, | Mrs. A. Maskell, and Mrs. A.| Graham. | Container of yellow hardy FUNERAL OF mums --- Mrs. D., MacMillan, | HARRY F. HANCE -- Requiem mass was sung in St. " Mary of the People Roman Cath- {olic Church at 9 a.m, today for omp alin S {Harry F. Hance who died at the {family residence, 563 Ridgeway {Ave., last Saturday. Rev. N. J. Gignac sang the ver 0 P |mass. Interment was in St. Greg- ory's Cemetery. The pallbearers were B. Budai, B. Wilson, V. McLaugh- Nn nusse lin, S. Clark, W. Hayball and {Joseph Kelly, OTTAWA (CP) loge Welter of MRS, CHARLES W. CLIFF complaints over a eged voting ir- Following an illness of three regularities cropped up Monday weeks the death occurred at the in fe Jederal br election in Rus- Oshawa General Hospital Mon- sell constituency. day, Oct. 5, of Mrs. Charles Returning officer Wendell Stan- Ww, Cliff, 258 Bruce St. Mrs. Cliff ley said Monday night he had was in her 99th rear. never received so many com- The former Harriett Jane Meg- plaints. They included five cases gitt, the deceased was born in of impersonation at polls in sub- Eramosa township, Welling- urban Eastview--largest centre of ton county, Feb. 17, 1861 and was population in the constituency. |married at Markdale in 1887. Other complaints included a] A resident of Oshawa for 41 charge by CCF candidate Denis/years, Mrs. Cliff previously lived Kalman that he had seen two/at Durham, Walkerton and Car- cars in Eastview during the day gill. She was a member of St. carrying banners for the Liberal|George's Anglican Church. and Conservative candidates. Mrs. Cliff was predeceased by This is prohibited by the Canada her husband in February, 1952 Elections Act, {and by a son, Karl S. CIiff, in | August, 1950. She leaves a son, L. M. Cliff, COMING EVENTS |of Oshawa; three grandchildren ul five great-grandchildren. £2 N Leagues .-. Ses] e funeral service will be dl a Eel execu. |held at the McIntosh Funeral tives, Outarie Bowlers a ome as p.m. Wednesday, Oct. meeting tonight at 7.13, Genosha Hotel.'7, Rey, C, PD, Cross, rector of St. fi! Jeast FCA gg Shel George's Anglican Church, will manville. 33b conduct the services. Interment SOCIAL evening on Wednesday, Oc. Will be in Oshawa Union Ceme- tober 7, 8 p.m. corner of Bloor and tery. Simcoe. Bingo played for prizes. R freshments served Everybody comed. FORMAN, os | TURKEY DINNER | WESTMOUNT UNITED CHURCH | (Floyd ond Gibbons Stréet) WEDNESDAY. OCT. 7; 4:30 Adults $1.50 -- Children 12 and under 75c. KINSMEN BINGO Tuesday, Oct. 6 JUBILEE PAVILION 57 and 55 Alliance Possibility | LONDON (Reuters) -- British --philoscpher Bertrand Russell said {Monday that fear of China might {lead the United States and Rus- |sia to form an alliance. | This alliance in effect would be {a world government which might {precede a true world govern- iment, Lord Russell was answering questions during a discussion of _ his new book, Wisdom of the Jackpot Nos FREE ADMISSION EXTRA BUSES 232b RADIO PARK BINGO 8p 6th at the HALL § m. October AVALON 20 games, $6 ar Share the Wealth $100 Jackpot--54 Numbers and 2 specials ot no extra chorge $10 NEARLY NEW SHOP 75¢ Ladies' Suits and Coats, 75¢. Thursday and Friday, 2 p.m. to 9 p.m., St. Gertrude's, 690 King St. E 233b'portant weapons of war. --| Poland |West, a survey of Western philps- {ophy, He described an American- and {Russian alliance as "a possibil- |ity---not a probability." | "It is possible because of fear {of China by both. No one else | would be able to interfere. The {Russians would probably ask for to take part and the {Americans, if they were very (kind to us, might ask for the United Kingdom to be included." | He said that war could only be erection of a 15-room school on Wilson road south, erection of a |secendary school on Stevenson road north, an eight-room school| lon Oshawa blvd. north and a i two-rcom addition to Cedardale public school. Items were refer-| red to the finance committee, | In : . . ] HEALTH MATTERS By ALAN HARVEY Council received a letter from| Canadian Press Staff Writer Dr. C. C. Stewart, Oshawa MOH,| LONDON (CP)--A problem in reporting, in his opinion, unsani- nomenclature confronts Mrs. Ver- tary condition of the drinking dun Perl, Canadian - born candi- fountain at the Four Corners. Dr. date in the British election. Stewart recommended that the Mrs. Perl, a perky, energetic fountain be removed. Dr. Stew- woman who used to play the fid- art also submitted a report from gle in the Vancouver Symphony Major A. S. O'Hara of the On-'Orchestra, is fighting the Conser- tario department of health. This |vative-held seat of Abingdon for report. suggested certain im-|the Liberal party. The campaign Speration of the Ritson and that pesky business of names. [Rotary boos before next sum when she was bora 48 years * 5 ; 3 ago, the Battle of erdun was {red to the property committee raging and her "patriotic" par- and Parks board. ents decided to borrow. a name. CONTEST BARRELS {But Mrs. Perl is a pacifist. D, Brown, chairman of the Thus, she bears a battle tag Dead Sowsews | Sisiness into an unequivocating crusade Men's Association, asked for per-\;oainst war. Friends call her mission to place six barrels onipay the Latin word for peace. the sidewalk in the downtown] "Verdun just doesn't seem ap. area to serve as ballot boxes for| iota 7 gh i wp p a contest the association is con- gis ME ir have to ducting. Item was referred to . property committee, |PEACE MARCHER ENDORSE RESOLUTION | A friendly freckled woman with| City council endorsed a resolu-|reddish-blonde hair, Mrs. Perl is tion from Barrie regarding work acti in Britain's nuclear dis- lon trees being included in sub- armament campaign and has] |sidized winter works program. [Walked the 50 miles of the peace] SEPARATE STUDY {march from London to Aldermas- The Lazarides traffic survey, | Lo | not yet submitted to city council,| She grew up in Calgary and in| is to be enhanced by a separate|the foothilis of Alberta, went to| study, carried out by motorists London on a music scholarship themselves. On Oct. 15, car at 18 and spent the war years in drivers using the Cromwell street Vancouver while her English hus-| interchange will be given post-(P2nd, Max, flew with the RAF, cards and asked to answer the| Speaking with a crisp Canadian | | Pacifist Active provements be instituted in the is going fine, she said, but there's] gistrate's court, Monday. She was unable to appear, for sen- tence, with the others because she was hospitalized with pneu- monia. VISITORS AT ROTARY Visitors at the meeting of the| Rotary Club of Oshawa, in Hotel| Genosha on Monday, included! George Ritchie, Niagara Falls; E. Crome, Bert Wandless, Jim Carey, Alan Payne, Bruce Quincey, and Mike Clayton, of Oshawa; Stanley Cunnington, of London, England; George Coo- per, of Toronto and Rotarians G. Beaton and T. Moore, of Whitby. MEMBERS HONORED Four members of the Rotary Club of Oshawa, who celebrate their birthdays this week, were honored at the club luncheon on Monday. Those honored were: Aldfred Stevens, Franklin Brown, Mervin Cryderman and Gilbert Murdoch. STREETS CLOSED The following streets will be closed today for construction: Church street, from King to Bond; Simcoe street south, from Bloor street to Conant street at various times for bridge re- pairs; Olive avenue, from Wil- son road south to Central Park boulevard south; Sherwood ave- nue, from Somerville to Chevro- let; Byng avenue, from Hortop street to Somerville street. Whenever possible these streets will be partially opened to per- mit movement of local traffic. Extreme weather conditions, such as heavy rainfall, may re- sult in the closing of other streets. lection accent, Mrs. Perl cheerfully brushes aside the 8,364 majority |of Airey Neave, her Conservative opponent in Abingdon, a Berk- |shire constituency. There is also {a Labor candidate, P. Picard. "There is tremendous interest in the Liberal campaign," she said. "I think it's going to be a straight fight here between Lib- erals and the Conservatives." IMOBILE COMMITTEE ROOM Jauntily, she runs her cam- paign from a trailer which she calls "my mobile committee room." She does her own driv-| ing, winding 70 to 80 miles a day through such picture - postcard villages as Didcot and Wantage iin north Berkshire, | "They are beautiful places and ithey drip history. The other day hi made a speech in a market Iplace opposite a memorial to |King Alfred. As a Canadian, I |got a great kick out of making my noises in such an historic set- ting." With her husband, an executive of the Marks and Spencer de- partment store chain, and their 20-year-old daughter Sari, she lives at Whitchurch, Oxfordshire. The house consists of two ancient cottages "knocked together" around a garage that used to be the local jail. She has installed Canadian- style gadgets in the kitchen and is properly indignant when Eng- lish housewives drool over her "American" kitchen, all crimes but treason and pi- questions on them and return the/ cards either through the mail| or to mail boxes provided at] GM's south plant. In this way it! is hoped that a clear picture may | be gained of traffic conditions in| this area. HOME NAME SUGGESTION | Alderman Cecil Bint, chairman| for the Home for the Aged com-| mittee, submitted a motion that| the new home be named Hills dale Manor. growing possibility that the gov- TO STUDY WASHROOMS |ernment eventually will permit a Ald. Christine Thomas author-|free vote in Parliament on aboli- {ized a motion asking that the tion of the death penalty for mur- |property committee examine the|der in Canada, informants say. possibility of constructing wash-| Exactly when such a vote will rooms on the city's Church street he arranged is uncertain at this e point. But informants say there {is mounting évidence of a change in the majority - view of Cana- | By DON PEACOCK Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP) -- There is a | | | PAY SICK BENEFITS Labor relations chairman Hay-|. : ward Murdoch submitted a| 3120s on this subject. recommendation to council that] No one seems to have any Hubert Chase be paid his sick concrete figures to support this, benefits and lieu-day pay on a but some sources familiar with basis of 209 days. Chase is now this matter say there has been retired from the fire department.[2 Marked tendency in recent The money for the extras had|Y®2rs for juries to bring down been withheld pending an exam. manslaughter verdicts where {abolished by a world government whick had a monopoly of all im- 2 ir ination and interpretation of the murder was the original charge. agreement the firemen have with | DIEFENBAKER VIEW the city. A free vote im Parliament Non-Party Vote On Death Penalty racy. It was the most recent of several attempts by him. As usual, it never got past the dis- cussion stage. At the last session of Parlia- ment an almost identical bill was put forward by Frank McGee, Conservative member for York- Scarborough. It suffered the same fate as Mr. Winch's bills. It is possible an arrangement might be made at the 1960 seg sion for a private Liberal mem- ber to sponsor a similar bill. This might then set the stage for would be in line with the views on capital punishment held by Prime Minister Diefenbaker while an opposition member, A possible indication of things Following is the report of the|§ Oshawa General Hospital for the | THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, October 6, 1959 3 2 CONSTABLE WILL Veteran Police Shortly afterwards, he was pre-! sented with a parchment by the Royal Canadian Humane Society, | for bravery. | Bill left Sault Ste. Marie with the rank of acting poiice chief, | and went to Cochrane as Chief] Constable, He served as chief| constable in Prescott, until 1949, when he was appointed police| chief of East Whitby Township, a| position he held until the town-| ship police was annexed by Osh-| Constable Bill Cairney retires from the Oshawa Police Depart- ment next Monday, Oct. 12. Bill is an old policeman, at 60. He is lucky to be an old police- man. At least twice in his career, he has looked death in the eye, and has come up grinning. He started his police career 30 years ago, when he joined the Sault Ste, Marie force, working 10 and 12-hour shifts for a frac- tion of present day police salary. Only six years after he joined|awa City Police in 1951. the force (he already had the] Just four months before his re- rank of patrol sergeant) he was| tirement, May 28, 1959, PC Cair- awarded the highest honor a po-|ney gave another display of cour- liceman can earn -- the King's age. Police Medal. Known among Po-| nrsREGARDED PISTOL lice as "The Policeman's VC,| "pe ang Constable Charlie Gal- the inscription on the medal says y,o0l0y had been assigned to es-| i ay allantry"'. ne Ser briefly "For G port the manager of Oshawa's ing Street Brewers' Retail RESCUED. BOY Store, as he took the Friday re- It was on a bitterly cold north- IAM CAIRNEY WITH MEDAL land winter morning in Novem- ber, 1936, when Bill earned his medal, He was off duty, when a cruiser stopped and picked him up. The cruiser was headed for the ice-bound St. Mary's river. A little boy had fallen through the ice while skating. Arriving at the river, the po- licemen saw that the bov, Henry Lang, aged 9, was about 700 feet out in the river, clinging to the edge of the ice. Grabbing a rowboat, Sgt. Cair- ney tried to push it in front of him over the ice, but the weight of the boat broke the ice. He ceipts from the store to the bank. The manager climbed into his car, when a man stuck an auto- matic pistol in his back and or- him to hand over the mon- ey. The manager dropped below the level of the car window and called the officers. Pointing his loaded pistol at PC Cairney, the bandit ordered the police to raise their hands. Ignoring the gun, PC Cairney drew his revolver and fired over the man's head, forcing him to surrender, Bill has retained the Scottish burr he brought to Canada in 1923 when he got a job with the Al- Officer Leaving City Force asked to put on a one-evening show for the Rotary club. So many boxers showed up, that he packed the arena for three nights, The Cairneys now live at 46 Fairbanks street, Their two two daughters have grown up and married. They have two grand- children. Bill has no immediate plans for the future, except that he intends to stay active. His pet hobbv is teaching his budgie to speak. So far, it can repeat 'Mary Had Little Lamb" flawlessly -- with a Scottish accent, Court's Ruling On School Debt ToBe Appealed PORT ARTHUR (CP) -- An Ontario Court of Appeal ruling that Roman Catholic ratepayers who switch their support from public to separate schools are no longer liable for public school de- benture debts may be appealed to the Supreme Court of Canada. Rev. V. Mills of Toronto told the Ontario Public School Trust. ees Association Monday that the Ontario court's ruling "may well be financially disastrous to pub- He school supporters in certain parts of our province." swam through the frigid water, phi As ne ahead of him,[goma Steel Co. in Sault Ste. until he reached the boy and, with(Marie. In 1924, his fiancee, the the last of his strength, hauled the|former Dolina Mackenzie Downie, boy into the boat. He was too|came to Canada, where they were weak to climb into the boat him- married. self, but .managed to cling to the| In the same year, he went to gunwhale until help arrived from Chicago, to play professional soc- the fire department. cer for the Chicago Thistle. They He was in the water almost an stayed in Chicago until 1929. hour. Two days later he was out It was a wild town in those of hospital and back on duty. days," Bill commented, *'Capone After a few days, Sgt. Cairney Was in his heyday, but it was a was called to a meeting of the good town to live in". police commission, where Mayor| When he returned to Sault Ste. John McMeekan presented him|Marie, Bill organized a police with the King's Police Medal. |boxing club for boys, holding One Robbery: mei i his: Foiled But Two Succeed pro boxers in the local auditor- MONTREAL (CP Police ium. On one occasion, he was nabbed two holdup men Monday LEGIONNAIRES PAID IN SALT Mr. Mills, executive secretary of the association, told the an- nual meeting the judgment was one of the most important ever delivered on separate school legislation. He said an appeal may be needed. The ruling by Chief Justice Dana Porter reversed a previous judgment by Mr. Justice H. A, Aylen of the Ontario Supreme Court in a case between rate- payer Ferdinand Slevar and the owuskip of Crowland, near Wel- Chief Justice Porter said there is no continuing obligation on any individual Roman Catholic for public school debenture pay- ments after he becomes a separ- ate school supporter. Said Mr. Mills: "At one stroke of the pen a very important and necessary deterrent to hasty and ill-con- sidered actions of the part of an individual Roman Catholic, or a group of Roman Catholics, has been removed insofar as becom- ing a separate school supporter + «+ . is concerned." The word salary goes back to ancient days when Roman legionnaires were paid off in part with salt, or "'salarium", with $19,000 from two suburban bank branches. The banks were robbed within half an hour of one ancther. as the Romans called it. Need cash to buy TV or Four masked, gun-toting hood- lums collected $7,000 from a furniture? Then you'll fina an Oshawa Times Classified Ad branch of the Banque Canadienne Nationale on Rosemount Boule- is worth its weight not only vard after forcing the staff to FOUR SEASONS TRAVEL T E., OSHAWA ONT J iy +, --V : woof 1 RA. 86201 in salt but gold. Raise the sprawl on the floor in the rear. -- cash you want FAST by sell- Eight blocks away, again in ing usable things you no suburban Rosemount longer need through a low- cost Classified Ad. Dial RA 3-3492 now. branch of the same bank lost $12,000 to three holdup men. In the finance company rob- bery attempt, one of the suspects was shot down by police and is in hospital under guard. DIVED THROUGH WINDOW The other attempted to escape by diving through a glass window onto a second-floor roof. He ran across a rooftop but surrendered meekly after police fired two warning shots. Several finance company em- ployees were on telephones when the three bandits entered, and the pecple they were talking with notifid police. A dozen policemen arrived within minutes to find the three masked men holding five em- ployees and a customer in the back room. Constable Jean - Guy Lussier shot one man when the three tried to flee. The third made a getaway. The trio left behind a suitcase full of money, and two Tender EAT "Get the Pick POULTR to come may be found in the|a free vote, guns, fact that since the Progressive Conservative government took office in June, 1957, only seven of 33 convicted murderers have been hanged. The cabinet, exer- cising its constitutional respon- sibility for the Crown's preroga- tive of mercy . has commuted death sentences of the other" 26 to life imprisonment. WINCH BILLS One of the most tenacious cam- paigners for abolition of the death penalty for murder--and substitution of life imprisonment instead--is - Harold Winch, CCF MP for Vancouver East, He sponsored a Commons bill in 1958 to abolish execution for DOCTOR OF is pleased to announce t! 136 SIMCOE ST. EXAMINING OF EYES FITTING OF GLASSES AND CONTACT LENSES CHILDREN'S VISUAL TRAINING TRUE-TRIMBEEF { Meat Specials ! Order Your THANKSGIVING We have one of the finest selections of local killed TURKEYS, GEESE, CHICKENS, CAPONS, DUCKS, etc. in Oshawa--all ot LOWEST MARKET PRICES! F. RICHARD BLACK OPTOMETRY he opening of his office for the practice of OPTOMETRY at N. (at Colborne) FOR APPOINTMENT PLEASE PHONE RA 3.4191 EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT MEATY PORK HOCKS CONTRYSAUSAGE smoke BACON SQUARES N Wed. & Thurs. of the Flock" Y NOW! 3-1.00 WED. ONLY [ MEATY SPARERIBS 2 Ibs. 49 THURS. ONLY! TENDER SILOIN STEAK Ih. 79c