+: MELLARD, Lula At the Oshawa General ee eS ee we eee te es ee Se ee ee ee ee ee ee nnereneerde me ee ee ee ee ee ee wwe oe ee meres beige ee i f i 23 y i 8 fr i ; ist i Eine # He sh ee he i a db on Tuesday, October 2 at Mount Lawn Ceme- eh ie i Chamberlin, dear father of Mrs. H. Seeley (Ada), Oshawa; Mrs. B. Hamil- ton (Kathleen), Trenton; Mrs. J. Mc- JACKSON, Baby Dale Leslie In the Oshawa General Hospital ,on MeNULTY, Kathleen Louise At Toronto on Saturday, thleen Louise * gister of James, Herbert, Jean (Mrs, a Lemon), Bill, Marilynn Mrs. Joseph's Tuesday at 10 a.m. Interment Bo' ville Cemetery. Hospital, 29, 1962, Lulu Hillard Millard, Eames, beloved wife of Street, sister of Federal marshals stand al- most shoulder to shoulder around the Lyceum Building MARSHALS RING LYCEUM BUILDING | students, crowd close. The on the campus of thy Univer- sity of Mississippi at Oxford LONDON (CP) -- The wide- screen version of Rodgers and Hammerstein's South Pacific has closed in London's West End after providing some 2,550 enchanted evenings for more than 3,000,000 people. : The film had been playing at the same theatre since it opened April 21, 1958, to a crit- Five Year Display Film Closes After Attendances hardly changes Just as many people saw it this August as in the same month last year. And the £1,500,000 it took in at the one theatre alone would easily cover the original production costs. weeks -- the movie became a cinematic institution in London. One patron admitted seeing it 60 times. Shortly after the film opened it was announced that Porgy and Bess would be the next at- traction. It has taken more than four years for George Ger- shwin's classic to arrive. | Helps You Overcome FALSE TEETH Looseness and Worry No longer be annoyed or feel ill-at- ease because of loose, wobbly false teeth. PASTEETH. an tmproved alka~ line (non-acid) powder, sprinkled on ur plates holds them firmer so they feel more comfortable. Aveid embar- Trassment caused plates. Get PASTEETH today at any drug counter Many people never seem to get night's rest, They toss and turn in bed--and then are dull and listless A throughout the ical ovation that was far from thundering. "a long, dull film," said The Times. During its long run -- missing the all-time record of Gone with the Wind by only seven registrar's office is located in | the Lyceum.--(AP Wirephoto) EDITOR'S NOTE: The cat - and - mouse game was over. Stephen Dinka and the pretty sister-in-law he had spirited from a Hungarian dance troupe on tour in Paris were on a plane bound for the United States. But there still were surprises in store. Here is the conclud- ing chapter of the story, made available exclusively to The Associated Press through the co-operation of the Detroit Free Press and the Knight Newspapers, which masterminded and fi- nanced the rescue. By DALE NOUSE Detroit Free Press Assistant City Editor Copyright, 1962 The Detroit Free Press DETROIT (AP) -- Over, the dark Atlantic, Stephen Dinka could relax for the first time in Canada Leads Unemployment Parade WASHINGTON (AP) -- Un- employment has been running higher per capita in the United LOCK'S FLORIST Funeral arrangeme: floral requirements PING occassions. OSHAWA SHOP! ENTRE \ 24 HOUR PHONE SERVICE. 728-6555 Ne end for all States than in any other indus- trial nation of the free world except Canada, a panel of eco- nomists reported to President Kennedy Saturday- The finding in a book-length report issued by the presiden- tial committee named 10 GERROW FUNERAL CHAPEL Kindness beyond price yet within reach of all. 728-6226 390 KING STREET WEST onths ago to judge the relia- iy and usefulness of the U.S. government's monthly statistics on employment and jobl 3, Sunday. In foreground curious Berlin Wall Unknown To Many Hungarians He and Mary Goodfellow of the Detroit Free Press had suc- ceeded in snatching Emese Szk- lenkay, 20-year-old Hungarian dancer and his sister-in-law, from the Communists who had been chaperoning her troupe's tour of France. The strain of the search for Emese in' Paris, of finding her in a student dormitory, of slip- ping her to freedom on'the pre- text of getting a cup of coffee --all this was behind them. But there still was one shock left. Half-dozing in the seat (of their U.S.-bound plane Friday, Sept. 21), Emese turned to Dinka and said: "We were lucky." WROTE LETTER He nodded agreement. They had_been lucky. "That's not what I mean," she said. Then she explained that the troupe was to have had a three-day vacation in Paris. Those were the dates she had given her sister in a letter to Ann Arbor, Mich., which had started the whole intriguing story. "But they cancelled it," she said. '"'We were to have left two days earlier- I had no opportun. ity to write again. But then our plane reservations got mixed up and they decided to let us stay after all." Dinka felt weak. For the first time he realized that, although he had no way of knowing it. the whole expedition might well have been one long wild goose chase, Emese settled down and drifted off to sleep. Dinka bowed his head and relaxed. I met them at New York's Idlewild Airport. Dinka show- ing his fatigue but looking happy and proud, Emese calm and somewhat bewildered. At noon Saturday (Sept. 22) our jet touched down at Detroit and within moments Emese, crying and laughing, was in the arms of her sister, Mrs. Mar- guerite Dinka. At the modest Dinka home in Ann Arbor, enjoying Mrs. Dinka's chicken paprikash, the conversation was light and gay. But somehow, the Berlin wall was mentioned. To everyone's astonishment, Emese said: "What is that?" She explained that in Hun- gary, nothing is known of the Mercy Killing Denounced By London Bishop WINDSOR, Ont. (CP) -- The Roman Catholic Bishop of Lon- don Sunday denounced women who undergo abortions to avoid the possibility of bearing de- formed infants. Most. Rev. John Cody, speak- ing at ceremonies marking the opening of a $1,500,000 wing at Hotel Dieu Hospital, said mercy killings and sterilization were forbidden by God. Bishop Cody made an obvious reference to Mrs. Sherri Fink- bine, the Phoeniz, Ariz., televi- sion performer who recently un- derwent an abortion in Sweden because she had taken thalido- mide, a drug blamed for caus- ing deformities in infants. The bishop said he used the abortion case to illustrate the work hospitals run by religious orders can do in preserving re- ligious values as the foundation of the Western way of life. BREAKS RECORD ROANNE, France (Reuters) Henry Rechatain came down to earth today after a world record 174 hourson a tightrope. He snapped the record of 101 hours, five minutes held by Rune Ols- son of Sweden. Berlin. wall, only that U.S. troops are "massed" on the bor- der. DISCUSS FUTURE Sunday was quiet. In the even- ing, Emese's future was dis- cussed. Given a free choice (she had little in Hungary), she said she had little interest in contin- uing her dancing: "It is nice, but not so impor- ttnt," she said. "Life must be happy, but there must be work --worthwhile work--to make it so. Although not possible, I woiild have liked to study math. ematics and chemistry at a uni- versity." She said that in Hungary, she was not qualified for university because her father had been a doctor. "Only working class are admitted," she said. When the story of the success- ful sortie was revealed in The Free Press, the Dinkas' life be- came exciting. The telephone rang almost continuously. Dinka, who turned aside offers of money, said: "The Free Press took care of my expenses and I'm deeply grateful. But their help here and in Paris was more important. Even though we know there are parts of this story that can never be told, I hope it gives Hungarians and ali people hope and belief in the rightness of freedom." The report by the six-man team of professionals, includ- ing labor and industry econo- mists, also said: The ite unemployment IN MEMORIAM rate of seven major foreign countries in 1960 averaged only 2.1 per cent of the labor force, the report said. The U.S. rate was 5.6 per cent. The report said the rates were seven per cent for Can- ada, 1.9 per cent for France, one per cent for West Germany, 2.4 per cent for Britain, 4.3 per cent for Italy, 1.1 per cent. for Japan and 1.5 per cent for Sweden. By PETER JOHNSON MOSCOW (Reuters) -- "'High- minded" Soviet citizens who tried to break up a_ hospital love affair by putting ihe woman involved on trial at a meeting have been attacked themselves by the Literatur- naya Gazeta, organ of the So- viet Writers' Union. IN MEMORIAM In a recent issue it told the story of a young doctor named Valery who separated from his otRiet $ fl gee ty ih e.g af ge E F i 5 F 7 ee 1-3 VE: ssed|dear father. SEVERS -- In wife after quarrels and went to Soviet Love Affair Draws Angry Blast work in a hospital at Nikolayev in the Ukraine. There he fell in love with a woman doctor named Galina and told her about: his mar- riage. The couple began living together and, the article by Yuri Scherbak said, Galina im- mediately was dubbed his '"'mis- tress." Valery sought an official di- vorce, but instead a hospital meeting was held "at which ay present not only members o loving of our dear father, William Severs, who pass- ed away 1, 1960. There's a place set apart In the depth of our hearts, A corner that's always your own. No one can replace it, nor time it, We keep it for you alone. Lovingly remembered by Bill ,Thel- ma and Donald, Bradenton, Florida . SEVERS -- In loving memory of a and grandfather, William a who passed away October 1, This month comes with deep regret, It brings back a day we shall never forget, You fell asleep without goodbye i our memory of you will ie. --Sadly missed Wayne, Bill and SEVERS -- In loving memory of a dear father and grandfather, William J. Severs, who passed away October Charlie, Irene, tell | 1» 1960. Nothing can ever take away im near, by daughter, gi son-in-law Percy and their fam- SHAW -- In loving fore aged of a dear Nothing can ever take away The love a heart holds dear; Fond memories linger every day, Remembrance keeps him near. Sadly missed and always remember- 'ed by sister Florence and brother-in-law Raymond, 'My Fair Lady' Closes After Six Year Stand NEW YORK (AP) -- Broad- way's big one, My Fair Lady, coves closed Saturday night amid a tumultuous ovation. Cries of "More, more" and thunderous applause salted ev- ery big scene. And when the 2,717th performance of the long. est running musical in theatri- cal history was over, the au- dience rose to its,feet and sang Auld Lang Syne along with the cast. "T've never seen such an en- thusiastic crowd, even on an opening night," commented Herman Levin, the producer. The play, putting to music the story of Pygmalion by the late George Bernard Shaw, first opened on Broadway March 15, 1956. The show grossed a record CARD OF THANKS $65,535,541 box office receipts and brought in millions more in the sale of recordings of the EDWARDS -- Special thanks to friends and relatives sho sent cards and flowers also nurses of El and Dr, McKinney during my stay in Osh- you all, Alice Edwards music that made it a hit. the Young Communist League but dozens of. sensation lovers..." 'PUT ON TRIAL' Galine, who was "put on trial," was asked questions such as "how long have you been living together" and "have you had a love affair with a mar- ried man before?" The "'moralists covered the young woman with filth," the newspaper said, > The meeting expelled Galina from the Young Communist League and recommended her banishment from the city.: But these efforts failed to break up the love affair -- the couple moved to another city. The article asked who had given the "righteous citizens" the absurd idea that "a public meeting or administrative inter- ference could return a husband to his wife, or could re-awaken a feeling lost forever." Such people "know in ad- vance how many times a per- son ought to love, and how many times he ought to marry" Soviet law, the article de- clared, tried to limit marital tragedies. But beyond the limits of law lay "intimate persona! relations where no one has the right to intrude rudely," The play was adapted from MOVE NORTHWARD the Shaw piece by Alan Jay Lerner and Fritz Lowe 'and was produced by Levin. 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