CRA A OBITUARIES MRS. EFFA FERGUSON Funeral services for Mrs. Effa Ferguson were held Sat- |urday, Aug. 19, at 2 p.m. at the Armstrong Funeral Home in Oshawa. Mrs. Ferguson died Wednesday Aug. 16 at the Osh- awa General Hospital at the age of 53. Burial was in the Zion Cemetery, with Rev. F. H. Ward, Westmount United Church, officiating Pall-bearers were: A. Smith, E. Wilson, H. Wilson, J. Gaten- by, D. Trivett, E Lockwood MRS. ROBERT J. BROWN Funeral services for Mrs. Robert J. Brown, who died at the family residence, 414 Mas- son street, Thursday, Aug. 17, MRS, GORDON ALLIN Funeral services for Mrs. Gordon Allin, 121 Annis street, were held at the Armstrong Fu- neral Home Saturday, Aug. 19 at 0 p.m. with burial in the| Motintlawn Cemetery. Officiat- ing was Rev. W. Rackham Pallbearers were: R. Lamont, N. Mryglod, D. Comi, J. La- mont, W. Douglas, A. E. Mit- chell WILLIAM RUSSELL SIMON The death occurred at Osh- awa General Hospital, following a six-month illness, Sunday, Aug. 20, of William Russell Si- mon, of 563 Ritson road south. Born at Galt, the deceased was in his 69th year. He married the former Minnie Laidlaw in were held from the Mclntosh- Galt. Mr. Simon came to Osh- Anderson Funeral Home, and awa in 1953 and was employed St. George's Anglican Church, as a machinist at Fabricated Saturday, Aug. 19, at 3.30 p.m. Metals Ltd. here. He was a| Rev. C. D. Cross, rector of member of Local 222, UAW and|St. George's Anglican Church, an adherent of the Unite d|conducted the services. Inter- Church {ment followed in Mount Lawn Mr. Simon is survived by his Cemetery. ; wife, two dughters, Mrs. Q. Cal- Pallbearers were Neil Hez- vert, (Winnifred), of Brampton zlewood, Reg. Martyn, James and Mrs. W. Welsh, (Marjorie), | Arnott, George Tresise, Russell of Dutton and three sons, An-|Learmonth and Ed Weldon. drew, of Kitchener, Donald and ! i MRS. HAROLD PITCHER Otto, bol of Avimal. Funeral services for Mrs. The remains are at the Ger-| 2 R row Fune: Harold Pitcher, who died at the wal Chapel, King street] 2200, per daughter, Mrs. J. . el, iho IR D. Wraith, Herbert street, terment will follow in Oshawa RR 1, Oshawa, were held from Union Cemetery. Rev. Frank H. the McIntosh-Anderson Funeral| Ward, minister of Westmount Home, Saturday, Aug. 19, at United Church, will conduct the!3.30 p.m. Ce services. Rev. Derek Allen, minister of : St. Paul's presbyterian Church MRS. LOLA G. MOUNTJIOY |conducted the services. Inter- After a brief illness, Mrs. ment followed in Oshawa Union Lola Gladys Mountjoy, 14 Gib-|Cemetery. bons St., Oshawa, died in Osh-| pajhearers were Ken Oakley, awa General Hospital Saturday, Ray Pottery, Lioyd Jewell, Ver. ug. 29. | imm, L. Edwards and Mrs. Mountjoy was born pn Tre E Bowmanville. March 1, 1801 to : the late Mr. and Mrs. Cephas| MRS. ANNIE L. LONGWELL Hoskin. She was married to the, Mrs. Annie Lenore Longwell, late J. Harold Mountjoy Nov. formerly of Sydney Township, CAPSULE NEWS Airline Strands UK. Tourists | RESCUE § BERLIN, N.H. (AP) -- Five persons, two of them Canadians, were rescued early Sunday and other guests fled safely when fire spread rapidly through a'75-| room, three-storey wooden hotel on .Green Square. No one was injured. Damage was estimated at $100,000. LONDON (AP)--A stream of hastily chartered planes flew here Sunday with thousands of British tourists who had been stranded in vacation resorts throughout Europe by collapse of a private airline called Over- seas Aviation. The airline, a charter company, grounded its planes and went into liquidation with debts of more than $1,400, 000 FESTIVAL OPENS EDINBURGH (Reuters)--The civic heads of 12 European ci- ties were among hundreds of dignataries who attended the ; : in + [traditional service of praise at| surly wig. Dali .~ 4 | nig HR ag off |St. Giles Cathedral here Sunday | his flamboyant moustache next|'C open the 14th Edinburgh In-| month and was getting used to ternational Festival. A program | the wig as a compensation for of opera, drama, music, ballet| the loss of hair. and other entertainment is| slated for the three-week festi-| FIND DYNAMITE val. QUEBEC (CP)--A group of| |children playing in a field in| |suburban Charlesbourg Satur-| OWEN SOUND (CP) Al |day found 500 pounds of dyna-|plaque was unveiled Sunday at| mite and about 1,000 detonators, |the village of Leith, five miles| abandoned more than two years|east of here, in memory of Ca- ago by a construction firm. {nadian artist Tom Thomson. | Mr. Thomson, drowned in Al-| ENDS FIRST YEAR _ |gonquin Park in 1917. He spent| MOSCOW (AP) Francisimany of his early years in Gary Powers, pilot of the U-2 | Leith. | United States spy plane shot |down over Russia in May, 1960 HEADED AUTO FIRM {completed his first full year in| KITCHENER (CP) -- James |prison Sunday with no Western-|A. Orr, 60, president of Orr Au- ers knowing for sure how he is|tomobiles Limited here, died| getting on or his prospects for|Saturday night at his home. A |release. He was sentenced to 10|native of Toronto, he was in the | years "deprivation of liberty" for spying. CHOLERA STRIKES HONG KONG (Reuters)--Anti- cholera i n o c u lation programs | continued throughout the Far] WIG FOR DALI? { VENICE (Reuters) -- Spanish surrealist painter Salvador Dali turned up at the opening of the Venice Film Festival Sunday UNVEIL PLAQUE coming here from Hamilton in| 1952. His wife and two sons sur-! vive. | | | | DROVE IN TOBACCO BURFORD, Ont. (CP)--Police | 6 Clip's Viscount, "THE CRA ARTS and Crafts | Displays contest took place at | 22 city playgrounds last Fri- | day, Aug. 18. As the summer -~ program nears completion, competition is keen. Top left, completing their contribution to the display. Top right, Mark | Burtch, Rick Dignew and | Kathy Straughan of Woodview | Park, are seen putting a mural three Connaught Park lads, Paul McVety, Greg Maidlow | and Gord Braiden are seen on the wall to add to their art exhibition. Winner of this event was Eastview Park's '"Aqualand" display. THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mondey, August 21, 1961 3 Show Cargo Increase On Seaway OTTAWA (CP) -- Cargo ton- nage on the Montreal - Lake Ontario section of the St. Law- rence Seaway recorded a 10 per cent increase in the first four months of the 1961 navigation season compared with last pre- liminary statistics show: The St. Lawrence Seaway Au thority said Sunday cargo car- ried on the Montreal - Lake On- tario section between April and July totalled 10,678,931 tons com- pared with 9,709,710 tons in 1960. The Welland Canal section car- ried 14,464,916 tons in the 1961 period and 14,487,496 toms last year. On both sections downbound traffic showed substantial in- creases and upbound traffic de- creases compared with last year's figures. For the Montreal - Lake On- tario section, downbound carge at July 31 totalled 7,134,215 tons, a 40.7 per cent increase over the 5,070,344 tons listed at the end of last July. Upbound move- ments showed a decrease of 23.8 per cent to 3,544,716 tons from 4,639,366 tons. Downbound cargo on the Wel. land section this year totalled 11,013,926 tons, a 10.8 per cent increase over the 9,935,697 tons recorded between April and July 1960. Upbound traffic was down FORT ERIE ENTRIES Tuesday, Aug! ust 22, 1961 FIRST RACE Maidens, claiming all $3,500, purse $1,900, 3- and 4-year-olds, one mile and 1-16. 1 Loraless, Kronk, XXX104 2 Lady Moocher, NB, 105 3 Wild Bunny, NB, 119 4 Round Two, Despirito, X114 5 Winter Garden, Fitzsimmons, 105 | | 7 Sea Ferd, Coy, 10 8 Sun Island, Enterman, 112 9 Graybrook's Last, Fitzsi'ns, 105 10 Glen Mark, Roy, 119 SECOND RACE Claiming all $3,500, purse $1,90 3-year-olds, 6% furlongs 1 Full Front, NB, 107 2 Act in Haste, Brown, 114 3 Loma Linda, Coy, 114 4 Briarbelle, Despirito, X105 5 Critic's Choice, Fitzsimmons, 0, 09 8 All Cash, Cochlin, XX107 | 7 Cathy Yates, NB, 102 8 Discovery Bay, Roy, 122 9 Mr.r Pieman, Potts, 110 THIRD RACE ( Claiming all $3,500, puse $1,900, 3-year-olds, 6%; furlongs, division f the second 1 On the Nail, NB, 109 2 Airborne Charm, 115 3 Chopita, Gomez, 110 0 | 4 Neat Chance, Despirito, X112 5 Air Bridge, McComb, 122 6 Wings of Flight, Robinson, 1 7 Irish Duke, Behrens, 107 8 Brenda's Reward, NB, 102 FOURTH RACE automobile business all his life, | claiming all $7,500, purse $2,200, 9.year-olds, 6 furlongs. 1 Aunt Rae, Shoemaker, (A)116 2 Fire Queen, Dittfach, 109 3 Sun's Reward, Potts, (B)117 4 Admiral Gano, Fitzsimmons, 119 27, 1923, in East Whitby Town- died in the Belleville General East today following outbreaks are looking for a man who drove| 5 Black Sheath, Gonzales, ship. Hospital Aug. 19 in her 75th She was a resident of Oshawa year for 10 years, and also lived in" Mrs Longwell was born in Toronto and Bowmanville. She povhore, Ont., to the late Mr. was a member of the Westmore- | ang Mrs. Arthur Demorest. She land United Church and of the jjveq on the 5th concession of Kedron United Church. Sydney Township for 51 years Surviving relatives are: One|yiph her late husband John daughter, Mrs Earl Fice W. Longwell. She then moved (Gladys), Oshawa; four sons, ;, mgronto where she lived at Dr. Keith Mountjoy, Brooklin; 944 Coxwell avenue Donald, Oshawa; Murray and 2 : Lawrence, both of East Whitby Township; eight grandchildren. Surviving relatives are: one son, Harold, of Marlbank; two § daughters, Mrs. Raymond Brod- a eral Pile' gf eld worth (Ona), Lindsay; Mrs. Al- strong Funeral Home at 11 bert Dodwell (Molly), Oshawa; a.m., with burial in the Oshawa|°n¢ brother, Dr. Sheldon De- Union Cemetery. Rev. Frank H, morest, Foxboro; three grand- Ward Westmount United children and four great-grand- Church, presided. children. Funeral services will be held MORLEY L. CANNING Aug. 22 at 2 p.m. at the John Funeral services for Morley R. Bush Funeral Home in Belle- L. Canning, president of Can- ville, with burial in the Foxboro nings Ltd., Men's Wear. who Cemetery. Rev. W. H. V. Wal- died at Oshawa General Hos-|ker, St. Andrew's Presbyterian pital, Wednesday, Aug. 16, were Church of Belleville, will offi- held from the McIntosh-Ander ciate, son Funeral Home, Saturday, Aug. 19, at 2 p.m. Mr. Canning|MRS. ol 7 Maroon street. Mrs. Walter H. Jackson, 134 Rev. John K. Moffat, minis: Tyler Crescent, died suddenly ter of Simcoe Street United Monday morning at the Oshawa Church, conducted the services. General Hospital. She was in Interment followed in Oshawa her 6lst year. Union Cemetery. She was born in Birmingha, Pallbearers were F. C. Piper, England, to Mr. and Mrs. David Lawson Richards, Ray Rose- L. Jackson. She came directly bush, Ernie Cay, Angus Barton [0 Oshawa from England 38 and Sid Scammell. |years ago, and was married in |St. George's Anglican Church, COMING EVENTS |Oshawa, in 1926. KINSMEN BINGO | She was a member of King | Street United Church and of the TUESDAY, AUG. 22nd FREE ADMISSION |Church's Women's Association, | Women's Missionary Society: and the Friendship Group. EXTRA BUSES Jackpot Nos. 53 and 81 TEAM 2 | Surviving relatives' are: her |husband; one daughter, Mrs. {Donald Learmont (Joan), EI {liot Lake, Ont.; one sister, Mrs. JUBILEE PAVILION [Elsie Holloway, Oshawa; two | brothers, Frank and Cecil, To- ST. GERTRUDE'S | Wednesday, Aug. 23 at 2 p.m. lat the McIntosh Funeral Home, AUDITORIUM | with burial at the Mount Lawn EVERY MONDAY NIGHT |Cemetery. Russell Crosley, 690 KING EAST AT | WOODVIEW COMMUNITY CENTRE 51-52 TONIGHT -- 8 PM. ronto. Funeral services will be held FAREWELL GOOD PRIZES EXTRA BUSES RED BARN WALTER H. JACKSON United Church, will officiate. MRS. VICTOR CORBETT In failing health for the past |three years, Mrs. Victor Corbett, vard, Oshawa, died Sunday, {Aug. 20 at Hillsdale Manor. | Mrs. Corbett was born at Bir- {mingham, England, June 3, [1878, to the late Mr. and Mrs |John Corbett. She was married summer assistant at King Street] formerly of 45 Rosehill Boule- | there and in Macao, Sarawak a car in circles through tobacco! jand the Chinese Communist fields on three farms near here { mainland. Travellers arriving Saturday night. Edward Sevier| from China told of thousands |estimated damage to his crop at| dying. and of infected villages|$1,000 while Robert Edgeworth | being razed. One traveller from |and Gustave Causyn both said Canton said between 20,000 and their fields suffered $100 dam- 30,000 have died. age. at Birmingham, Dec. 25, 1897, and came to Canada 60 years ago. She came to Oshawa from Renfrew, Ontario, 34 years ago. | She was a member of West- {mount United Church, a past| noble grand of Rebekah Lodge] No. 3, a member of the Pythian] Sisters and of the Ladies' Aux- > {that hail-stones during Satur- iliary of the United Automobile| wabtaty : Workers Association, local 222.|43Y night's thunderstorm ruin. ed his grain crop. Mr. Allin de- Surviving relatives are: her | scribed the stones as "large", | (husband, Victor H. Corbett; and said they came from the three daughters, Mrs. Ralph west He did not say how ma Boneham (Alice), Mrs. Delbert] gores of grain he lost d an Rollin (Thelma), Mrs. Milton|ihe storm ya Fice (Violet), all of Oshawa; | three sons, Leo, of Hespeler,| CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SUBJECT Jack and Clarence of Osh-| awa; one sister, Raechel of Bir-| Brotherhood was the theme| mingham, England; 21 grand-|dealt with at the Christian Sci-| children; six great grandchil- ence service, Sunday, Aug. 20,| dren. in the lesson service on "Mind". | Funeral services will be held F2ul's exhortation to the Colos: at the Armstrong Funeral Home| 20% Was eluded in the sorip| Wednesday, Aug, 23, at 2 p.m. | ural selections. "Lie not one| with burial at the Mount Lawn| © another, seeing that ye have Cemetery. Rev. F. H. Ward {put off the old man with his Westmount United Church, will deeds; 8nd lave put on the new officiate d man, which is renewed in know- | . . ledge after the image of Him MRS. LILLIAN L. FREEMAN | that erasied Hy: Where there a3: is neither Greek nor Jew, cir- Brock street souih, Whithy. died |CUTLclSion. nor, uncircumision, suddenly of a heart attack Sat [varia Seyiain bond non urday at her residence. She was| gq » i Yist is all and in} in her 69th year. : | Mrs. Freeman was born in| Burlington to the late Mr. and| Mrs. Wilson Henderson. She was | married in Burlington, Ont., in| 1923, and has lived in Whitby for the past 38 years. She was a formér member of the Order of Eastern Star, Bur- | lington IODE, Viscount Chapter, | a member of the Whitby United | Church and of the Whitby Lawn | Bowling Club. CITY AND DISTRICT HAIL STONES A Thornton's road south resi-| dent, Clifton Allin, said today] | | TOP BAND | TORONTO -- Bowmanville] Legion Pipe Band Saturday won | the Elwood Hughes Trophy for being the best senior band at the | Warriors' Day parade at the | Canadian National Exhibition. | North Bay Legion was second. OLDEST BARBER Oshawa's oldest barber, Tom- | my Johnson, has snipped the] 8 | . hair of every mayor since Osh-| Surviving relatives are: her| awa, now a city, became a town | husband, Clayton A. Freeman; | with one exception. The 84-| one son, Donald, of Toronto; | year-old barber, who celebrates| three brothers, Stewart, of Ham- his 65th year in the profession | |ilton, Wilson and Douglas, of this week, says the only one he | | Burlington. : | has missed is the city's present | | Funeral services will be held mayor, Mrs. Christine Thomas. at the W. C. Town Funeral Chapel in Whitby Tuesday, Aug. | 11 CALLS 22 at 2 p.m. with burial at the| Ambulance crews of the Osh-| Mountlawn Cemetery, Oshawa. awa Fire Department responded Rev. J. Smith, Whitby United|to 11 routine calls between noon | Church, will officiate. | Saturday and 9 a.m. today. y QUINELLA SIXTH RA [Claiming all Three-year-olds. Division of the Second. (A)X111 6 Sun Ward, Borgemenke, (B)117 7 War Ferd, NB, 107 8 Prince Sadi, NB, 119 (A) Mrs. S H. Sadac D. W. Scott 2nd (B) Alred Stable entry ca and «| FIFTH RACE | Claimin 4.year-0 1 g all $3,500, purse $2,000, Ids and up, one mile and 1-16. 1 Early Mischief, NB, (A)104 2 Prince Robert, Despirito, X114 3 Formal Trust, Shoemaker, 17 4 Man O'Valor, NB, 114 5 Happy Harry, Gomez, 117 6 Lovely Susy, NB, (A)109 (A) Early Mischief Stable and Mrs. W. Von Richthofen oe entry BETTING CE $3500, Purse $1900. 64 furlongs. 1. Kayville Doll, Gonzales X104 2. Richburn, Coy 110 . Willies Warrior, Robinson 107 110 . War Caper, Dittfach 117 . Ferncliff, Dittfach 110 . Chorus Queen: NB 102 . Big Native, Borgemenke 119 . Kayroman, Shoemaker 107 Dittfach, 110] 5 SEVENTH RACE "CENTRY CLUB" Claiming all 184500. Purse $2000. Four-year- olds and up. 6 Furlongs. Mr. Edgor, Parnell X109 . Kennecot, Gordon 114 . Windsor Forest, Despirito cy," said Emergency Measures) X105 {Co-ordinator Col. F. S. Wotton| 4. Janet Yates, Shoemaker 105 today as he mailed out about 4 5. Suggest, Gomez 110 6. Fair Juor, NB 110 7. Sundry, Harrison XX 107 8 9 0 "Shelters are important, but |what is more important is know- ing what to do in an emergen-| | | booklets on shelter plans and the | interested homeowners. From a trickle of inquiries over the past year, requests for ppy Waves, Dittfach 110 the booklets and information |have suddenly spurted as an |apathetic public becomes con- |EIGHTH RACE cerned over U.S. President Ken- {Claiming all $6000, Purse $2200. nedy's speech asking Congress | Four-year-olds and up. One mile for more money for military plus. preparations, the Berlin crisis, : 53 . Percy Yates, NB 109 . Proud Stepper, Adams 114 . Dadswood, Despirito X114 . Whip Out, Parnell X109 . Stand Firm, Despirito X112 . Esteemed, Coy 117 {10. Cho [(10) |ercises off Oshawa. "A few people are definitely |going ahead to build shelters," {said Col. Wotton, hinting that he {has one in the planning stage Stresses Data 'On Emergency "Eleven Steps to Survival" to| Too Many Cooks, Gomez 114 and closer to home -- Navy ex-| . Hooker, Shoemaker 119 . Sir Raymond: NB 114 2 3 4 5 6. Ruse De Guerre, NB 109 7 8 9 Fitzsimons 114 9 . Compactor, ) POST TIME 2 P.M. DRIZZLING AND SLOPPY AAC--X.5, XX.7, XXX-10 Ibs. "ee se oo Trio Injured In Collision BOWMANVILLE (Staff) -- Three persons were injured, one seriously, in a two-car head-on collision on Liberty street north, near the Third Concession here Sunday night. Istvan Doncsecz, 45, of 37 Will- cocks street, Toronto, suffered a laceration to the right eye and lcut knee and David Lloyd Broome, 45, of RR 1, Hampton, suffered a cracked left rib and bruised hand when their cars came into collision. A third party, not yet identified is still in Bowmanville Memorial Hos- pital. Cpl. Kaye Freethy conducted the investigation. He was assist- led by Town Constable Louis Phillips. Both vehicles were de- scribed as "total wrecks." PEARSON TO ATTEND NEW YORK (CP)--Canadian Liberal Leader Lester B. Pear-| son, will join a number of world statesmen at a private confer- ence on problems of develop ment in the emergent nations to be held Aug. 28 through Sept. 1, |at Oxford, England. Pearson |and Sir William Hayter, warden {of New College, Oxford, an- {nounced jointly Sunday plans for the international conference on {Tensions in Development spon- {sored by the Council on World Tensions Inc., of New York. | Oshawa's Busiest Real Estate Firm NOTICE Please note that service for all TV -- STEREO -- HI ERS -- RECORD PL TOR RADIOS, etc. i new management of TV SERVICE CENTRE 85 KING WEST Discounts On New and Used TV & APPLIANCES Fl -- TAPE RECORD- AYERS -- TRANSIS- s available under the PHONE 728-5153 | himself. by 24.2 per cent to 3,450,990 tons from 4,551,789 tons. SCIENTISTS LEAVE MONTREAL (CP) -- Seven Soviet scientists Sunday night left by air for Russia minus one of their comrades, Dr. Mikhail Klochko, now in the protective Where is the flood of inquir- s coming from? A large portion of the people who early became interested in civil defence were from the Unit- |ie: { oled Kingdom: says Col. Wotton. People who had been through bombings. "Then dyed-in-the wool Cana- dians asked for information, especially after Kennedy's |speech. And just lately, profes- | sional people and leaders in the { community have been writing for booklets." Predicted Col. Wotton: "If the government ever alerted our military reserves, people would start to dig." Last week the Canadian gov- {ernment called for a speed-up in civil defence preparations, in- cluding a nationwide survival exercise with public participa- {tion in late October or early {November. custody of the RCMP. In Ottawa last Wednesday Dr. Klochko sought and was granted asylum in Canada. | Room Size RUGS! Wall-to-Wall Broadioom! Choose from the largest Cartwright High Results BLACKSTOCK--Following are the results of the Cartwright High School Grade 13 results: Alan Asselstine: 2--2nd, 2-- 3rd, 4 credits; Leslie Assel- stine: 3--2nd, 1--3rd, 3 credits; Lawrence Butt: 1--1st, 4--2nd, 2--3rd, 2 credits; Margaret |Hooey: 1---1st, 2--2nd, 4--3rd, 2 credits; Sylvia Kozub: 1--3rd, 3 credits (passed 5 subjects last year); Frances Staniland: 1-- 2nd, 43rd, 8 credits; Ardis McArthur: 1--1st, 1--2nd, 2-- 3rd, 4 credits; Lloyd Wilson: 1--2nd, 3 credits (passed 8 sub- jects last year). Erie Boat Spotted By Search Plane SIMCOE (CP)--A small boat | with three men aboard, missing {since Sunday in Lake Erie, was | sighted today by a search plane | and the pilot reported all ap- peared to be safe. James L. Storey, Wray Broad and James E. Geeg, all of Bur- gessville, were sighted drifting about eight miles off Turkey Point from where they had left on a fishing trip. Another boat was sent out to |pick them up. TRAIN KILLS SIX SYDNEY, Australia (AP)-- The Brisbane - Sydney express train: crashed inot a car at a grade crossing in New South Wales Sunday killing six of the car's seven occupants. The crossing guard was charged with manslaughter. lection in Oshawa Discounts up to 50% NU-WAY RUG CO. 174 Mery St. SLICED SKINLESS BROKEN LEAN, CROSSCUT SHORT RIB LEAN, TENDER LEAN, MINCED F. R. BLACK 0.D. | OPTOMETRIST Contact Lens Consultation er Eye Examination BY APPOINTMENT . , . PHONE 723-4191 136 SIMCOE ST. N., OSHAWA I I | | | I I BEEF FRESH MADE LAMB PATTIES [gai e]V)] Chron SENSATIONAL MEAT FEATURES TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY ONLY! Breakfast BACON CLUB STEAKS 39 29 av a 3 Ibs. $ 19 VVVVVVYVYVY ew WOOLWORTHS Super Bakery Specials BAKED FRESH DAILY IN OUR OWN KITCHEN! 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