1@ THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, September 10, 1962 clippings notice are available for Baby's Book, Family Tree Records and to mail friends and relatives in those far-away places. To place a birth call The Oshawa T' RA 3-3492. DEATHS Best Spy and the Pentagon as 'one of '|about military subjects." The spy, former Col. Pawel Monat, operated in the United States from September, 1955, to May, 1958, as military attache to the Polish embassy in Wash- He defected to the | United States in the summer of 1959. Monat, writing the account of his espionage, said that during his mission in the U.S. he made .Jabout 40 trips to New York City "The sprawling metropolis, with its bustling traffic, crowded your|meeting places and throngs of 7 |United Nations delegates and Classified. other foreigners all speaking in strange accents, is an ideal stamping ground for a foreign agent." 5 ; "It provides the cover necés- BUCKLEY, Catherine Entered into rest in the Oshawa Gen- on i 1962, Catherine Derocher, widow of John J. Buckley, mother of Mrs. G. P. Henderson (Margaret Mary), of St. Ca- tharines and Robert J. Buckley of To- , sister of Mrs, Nell O'Rourke, of Oshawa, and Fred Derocher of St. Catharines, in her 73rd yeor. Resting at the Armstrong Funeral Home, Osh- awa, with high requiem mass in St Gregory's Tuesday, Septem! ll at 10 a.m. Interment St. Gregory's Cemetery. COOPFR, Frederick F. Entered into rest in the Oshawa Gen- eral 1 on Monday, September 10, 1962, Frederick F. Cooper, beloved of the late Cora Cooper and Mrs, Robert Gazley (Ruth), Mrs. Gordon _ Sloan sary for spies to meet and pass along information and instruc- 8:\ tions, he said. Monat's book, Spy in the U.S., written with John Dille, will be published Wednesday by Harper and Row. "Anyone, from a four - star ber| general to a 15-year-old boy can get into the Pentagon," Monat said. "Amd once inside the Penta- .gon--though many areas are ex- tremely well guarded to let the joint chiefs, the intelligence ing| Staffs and the top-secret plan- the | NETS deliberate in privacy--any- ry. Frie at ag) fueral home before Tues- mn. Entered into rest at the home of her + Mrs. John L ibe, on Sun. one can roam the hallways and pause in the corridors." He and his aides went there frequently, as did military at- taches of other foreign coun- tries, Monat said, adding: "Our '/purpose was to eavesdrop on ps conversations." Other sources of information # RR) readily . available to the spy, » Lila ¢ 4 bridge, Earl of Ajax and dear sister of Mrs. William Hilts of Whiteville, and Ezra Keeler of Lipton, Mich. Mrs. Hilts is resting at McEachnie Funeral Home, 28 Kingston Road West, Pick- ering. Funeral service in the chapel on 'Wednesday, Sept. 12, at 2 p.m. Inter- ment Brougham Cemetery. ORMISTON, Osgoode Entered into rest in the Oshawa General on 1962, Osgoode McLaren Ormiston, be- loved son of the late Mr. and Mrs. -|Monat said, imclude the free press, government technical publications and congressional] loose talk. For five cents a day, Monat OLD COUNTRY SOCCER SCORES J. Starks (Elizabeth) of Columbus, Mrs. F. Kiley (Agnes) of St. Catharines, Dan of Oshawa, James and Frank of Brook- lin, Dr. Russell of Edmonton, Alta., , William of Kinsale and Alexander of GERROW FUNERAL CHAPEL Tottenham LONDON (AP) -- Standings| of the top teams in the Old) Country soccer leagues: ENGLISH LEAGUE Division I WL.T. F.APt Everton 60117 612 51020 511 012 810 Wolv'hampt 5 Kindness beyond price | Notts F 41215 99 yet within reach of all, | Aston Villa 728-6226 LOCK'S FLORIST Funeral arrangement and | Norwich floral requirements for all Bury occasions. OSHAWA SHOPPING NTRE 24 HOUR PHONE SERVICE 728-6555 'CARD OF THANKS BEATH -- I would like to take this * opportunity to thank my friends, neigh- * bors and relatives for the lovely cards, * flowers and visits received during my * recent stay in hospital. Also Drs. Bald- ' win, Stocks and nurses on 3B for their excellent care. ' --Hilda Beath. HATCH -- We wish to extend cur * heartfelt thanks and appreciation for the acts.of "<indaess, messages of sym- pathy and deauti.ul fioral tributes re- ceived during our recent bereavement * of a dear iwsoand and father. Espe- » cially Padre W. A, Branch, 43, Dr. .| Hudd' sf'ld @ 390 KING STREET WEST Scunthorpe Di Queen's PR 41213129 Divis' 3 = Chelsea Sunderland Kate ow Newer we Oo hawt ewersosoew ivisi | Southend Watford Milwall wo, AS Peg > ae aweow oreo Saar Darlington Torquay Workington Gillingham SCOTTISH LEAGUE Division I (No standings have been is- Division II Stenh'semuir 300 6 1 6 Montrose 30 Ayre 3 0 Hamilton 21 Branch 43, friends and neighbors. --Mrs, A. Hatch and family. To Scare By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Negro and white youngsters ; in the southern states attended ' classes together in greater num- | bers than ever before as the * fall term opened this week. ' The spitting, booing New Or- leans white crowds, the bullets smashing the glass of a paro- ' chial school door, couldn't over- + shadow the fact that the deep- : South city completed the first + week of its biggest school de- segregation in relative quiet. About 300 Negroes were in in- tegrated classrooms in 20 pub- lic and 36 parochial schools, the ; crowds dwindling, the bomb \ threats and the pickets dimin- * ishing. : ' 'The shots were fired at the St. : Rosalie Elementary School ' across the Mississippi River ' from New Orleans, apparently from a passing car in the grey light of dawn Friday. No one was hurt and authorities had no clues. ' SCHOOL CLOSED One parochial school closed. * The parish priest said that "no- ' body showed up" at Our Lady of Good Harbor at Buras, some * 80 miles south of New Orleans. . Five Negroes had enrolled * opening day -but haven't been | back since. Leander Perez Sr., Louisiana ' segregationist leader, watched » the week's developments and * then peredicted Negroes will ' ' 1 ; ' ' ' ' ' ; ' 1 ' ' ' i ' ' ' ' i ' i i Dawn Shots Fail Negroes push the white people out of New Orleans in 10 years. spread in Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Maryland, North Caro- lina, Tennessee, Texas and Vir- ginia. | Alabama, Mississippi and) South Carolina remained the only states with no integration at the public school level. At- tempts to lower classroom ra- cial barriers failed in a num- ber of cities including Albany, Ga., scene of mass anti-segre- gation demonstrations and 1,200} arrests. Roman Catholic schools in the 71-county Atlanta archdiocese integrated quietly with 17 Ne- groes attending six previously | white schools--four in the At- lanta area, one in Marietta and/ one in Athens. | Negro pupils were admitted to the only Catholic high school | in Jacksonville, Fla,, without | incident and without previous | announcement: | WINS PAN-AM BERTH | MONTREAL (CP) -- Pierre! Desjardins of the Royal St, Lawrence Yacht Club, Mont-! real, won the Pan-American Games Dragon class yachting trials Sunday. He won three of the six races held Monday, Sat- urday and Sunday for 3,295 points to qualify to represeni Canada in the Pan-American Games next April in Brazil. C Pentagon Claimed NEW YORK (AP)--A Soviet|said he could get from news- i ed who leer agl me Ue papers information that would ates describes New York as i a mecca for Communist agents rey Bolg: ee ee es our best sources of lose talk pl Baon 7 or: Feepanaly: Source Chopavane Wins Seagram Cup TORONTO (CP)--Utilizing his early speed, Viscount Hard- inge's Chopavane, with leading rider Jim Fitzsimmons in the saddle, led from start to finish to win the $11,800 Seagram Cup Stakes at Woodbine before 15,332 patrons. Chopavane, six-year-old son of; Chop Chop and winner of this stake in 1960, held on to win by a nose from fast-closing Windy Ship, winner of this event last year for the Stafford Farms. Half a length farther back came the Western challenger, Gali- nod, owned by J. B. Azanza of Calgary. finished last. 200-Pound Lady Leads Douk Trek Chopavane completed the mile Pete Slastubin, a bearded sep Fanny Storgoff, is the real and sixteenth in 1.43 4-5, a little|tuaganarian in shorts, leads the|leader of the march from the more than a second slower than|™@5 march of Sons of Free-|Kootendys to the Fraser Val- the track record. Hidden Treas- ven Peg enya ny rr 'the Ta her {t probably would ure, Canada's 1961 horse-of-the-|answer is always year, ran disappointingly and|"Ask Big Fanny." the same:|never have got under way. It is Big Fanny. her imposing formless cotton dress, who gets} sion of angelic innocence on her the marchers moving every|weather-beaten face, says it day. i Big Fanny decides 'when and isn't so. "I'm just a spokesman," she says. "But these people need where the marchers will st0P eenebody to help them. I do the and Big Fanny is the real liai- son between the Freedomites| best I can." and the police accompanying the march. . "The women started all this," domites on their trek regard says a member of the sect's|Fanny as the leader. fraternal council, which has dis- They tease her and she teases claimed all responsibility for|right back, sometimes wra) the march, "And Fanny is the|a ponderous arm around an bf- worst of them all." Big Fanny, full name Mrs.|/200-pound bulk encased in a ficer in 2" affectionate bear- Big Fanny, with an. expres-'hug. sued this season for Division I)| | Public school desegregation | ..» WE WILL PAY YOUR GAS BILLS THIS WINTER IF YOU INSTALL A NEW GAS FURNACE IN OSHAWA AND ARE NOT NOW USING GAS! Corner of Athol and Celina « 728-9441