LODGE PRESENTS VETERAN'S JUBILEE 50-YEAR JEWELL One of the highlights of the Ladies' Night held at the Osh- awa Masonic Temple Satur- day night by Cedar Lodge, AF and AM, was the posthum- esi ous presentation of a Veter- an's Jubilee 50-Year Jewel to Miss Alice Ross. The jewel would have been presented to her father, William Hall Ross, had he not died recently. Caught by the camera, from left, are Very Worshipful Bro. Harry L. Wallace, Rt. Wor- shipful Bro. William J. Car- negie, of Port Perry, district deputy grand master of On- tario District, Miss Ross and drowning. gored to death by a bull. Al- berta and Manitoba each had known slayings or suicides, in- By THE CANADIAN PRESS At least 33 persons met acci- dental death in Canada during) the' weekend, nearly two-thirds of them in Ontario and British Columbia and 24 of them in traf. fic accidents. A Canadian Press survey from 6 p.m. Friday to midnight Sunday showed Ontario had 10 traffic fatalities, two of them in single head-on collision. One: man died in a fire and a young woman in a fall. British Columbia had six traf- fic deaths and three by fire while Quebec had four traffic deaths, one by fire and one by Two persons were killed in traffic in New Brunswick, one died in a fall and another was one traffic death. The survey does not include dustrial accidents or natural deaths. Ontario fatalities: Accidents Kill 33 Canadian Friday Peter Parte, 30, of Ottawa, when his car struck a transport truck on Highway 115 near Osh- awa. Saturday Lawrence Ryan, 18, and Car] Wiltshire, 19, both of Believille, in a two-car collision near Ma- doc, Ont. Joseph Caughley, 72, of Tor- onto, struck by a car while crossing a street. Gerard Swayles, 40, of Mid- land, Ont., when his car hit a tree near Penetanguishene, Ont. Mary Joan. Davey, 27, and Mrs. Etoile Smalldon, 54, both of St. Thomas, in a two-car col- lision near London. James McMillan, 45, of Wind- sor, in a fire in his apartment. « Sunday Susan Annabelle Logue, 24, of Toronto, when she fell down stairs and fractured her skull. Frank Martin, 22, when his car went out of control at the Stoney Creek traffic circle near Hamilton on the Queen Eliza- beth Way. Worshipful Bro. Harold S. Sli- ter, master of Cedar Lodge. --Oshawa Times Photo CAPSULE NEWS CITY AND DISTRICT Statue Stolen In Ottawa Park OTTAWA (CP)--A brone In- dian figure was removed from the base of a statue of Samuel de Champlain in an Ottawa park late Saturday night or early Sunday, the RCMP re- ported. An Ottawa radio station (CKOY) reported that an Eng- lish-speaking man telephoned to say that the statue was dam- aged in retaliation for the top- pling of a statue of General Wolfe in Quebec City last week. CLASH AVERTED HAMILTON (CP)--Police ar- rived at a Communist rally Sunday and headed off a possi- | ble clash between Communists ' and a group of anti-Communists i who attended the meeting. ! Hoarse from shouting abuse and insults, the two groups of about | 2 persons each at one point athreatened to square off in front { of the Cannon Street hall. | DIES ON FLIGHT TORONTO (CP) -- Funeral , services will be held today for Mrs. Eileen V. Huckle, 65, re- tired assistant secretary of the Law Society of Upper Canada. | She died Thursday on a flight from Arizona where she had been visiting her son, Harcourt Huckle. DIVORCES RISE { OTTAWA (CP) -- Divorces granted last year totalled 6,709 against 6,563 in 1961 although tions from Quebec and New- and residents were stalled in' Parliament, the bureau of statistics reported. Ontario and) British Columbia accounted for' €8 per cent of all 1962 divorces, or 4,571 MAKE PARENTS PAY REGINA (CP)--The Saskat- chewan Urban Municipalities Association has decided to seek legislation which would hold pa- rents financially responsible for wilful damage incurred by ju- veniles. The association has en- dorsed a resolution asking that the parents of any juvenile who wilfully damages or destroys public or private property shall be financially responsible for damages up to $300, PAINTER HONORED HAMILTON, Bermuda (CP) Ear! Bailly, paralytic Nova Sco- tia artist who paints by holding the brush in his teeth, Saturday made a wheelchair tour of an art gallery built in his honor. The permanent two - storey building was established by Eu- gene Outerbridge, a retired Ber- muda businessman and friend of Mr. Bailly for 15 years. On exhibition are 45 of Bailly's re- cent paintings and several of his early works. MARCH ON EMBASSY THE HAGUE (Reuters) Some 50 Dutch demonstrators Saturday marched on the Cana- dian Embassy here with ban- ners bearing anti-nuclear weap- ons slogans. The demonstrators carried a letter to the Canadian government asking it not to ad- mit nuclear weapons into the country. The letter was put in a letterbox when there appeared to be nobody at the Embassy. TRY TO KILL CASTRO? Fla. (AP)--An at- Fidel Castro at a e often plays base- ends was reported in received by an exiled Newspaper man. A gun resulted and several per- led, said the letter, Ramiro Boza, for- Havana newspaper WIPING OUT REBELS HAVANA (AP)--Premier Fi- Castro admitted Sunday it would take his armed forces "'a few more weeks" to wipe out rebels operating on Cuban ter- ritory. Castro, speaking to a cheering crowd in Matanzas, 70 miles east of Havana, said that his army and- security forces have wiped out 60 per cent of the rebels during the last 30 days. BRITISH PATROL LONDON (AP) -- A RoYal Navy frigate with 30 marines aboard slipped out of Bermuda during the weekend on a Carib- bean patrol to keep a lookout against anti - Castro raids on| Cuba, sources. in London said Sunday. The 2,150-ton HMS Lon- donderry was sent on the mis- sion at the request of the United States, informants said. AVALANCHES STRIKE INNSBRUCK, Austria (AP)-- Six skiers were killed by ava- lanches roaring down snow-la- den slopes of the Austrian Tyrol Sunday. Five more were miss- ing and believed dead. Nine ski- ers--seven West Germans and two Austrians--were buried by a giant avalanche in the area of the Kematen Hut. Police re- ported four bodies recovered. LAST TOURISTS GO ZERMATT, Switzerland (AP) The last tourists left this ty- phoid-stricken ski resort Satur- day as all hotels and restaur- ants closed their doors. Several hi hard-core skiers who had refused to be frightened) away by the typhoid fever epi- demic finally crowded the trains of the narrow-gauge mountain railroad which is Zermatt's only link with the outside world. REBELS SENTENCED MADRID (Reuters) -- Ten persons, including a woman, were sentenced Saturday to jail terms of up to 23 years on charges of military rebellion, The woman, Maria Del Carmen Sanchez, who received four years, was among five jailed on charges of rebellion for being members of the Spanish Com- munist Youth Committee. The other four got 12 years. FIND SIX IN RIVER SALYERSVILLE, Ky. (AP)-- Six Lima, Ohio, residents, miss- ing since they started to eastern Kentucky two weeks ago to visit relatives, were found Sun- day in their car which had plunged into the Licking River near Salyersville. The coroner said the car went off the high- way at a curve and plunged into the river. SUMMER TIME STARTS LONDON (Reuters) -- Britain officially went on summer time at 2 a.m. Sunday when clocks were set ahead one hour. BST is six hours ahead of EST. In- troduced in 1916 during the First World War to make the maximum use of daylight, sum- mer time ends in October when __|clocks are turned back. FUGITIVE CAUGHT NOGALES, Ariz. (AP)--Wii- liam Leroy Maus, 28, wanted in Michigan's biggest bank rob- bery, was arrested Saturday as he walked across the border into Arizona from Mexico, The FBI said Maus carried a bag with $44,716 and two hand guns, but offered no resistance. He was sought in the $153,000 rob- bery of the Bank of Livonia, a Detroit suburb. APRIL FOOL, COMRADE MOSCOW (Reuters)--Several Western correspondents were summoned to the Soviet foreign office early today by a tele- phone caller who told them in accented English to expect "'an important announcement." Some, remembering the date, checked and found the summons was a hoax. But at least one Christian Science Subject Freedom from materiality, bondage of any sort, was em- phasized at Christian Science church' services Sunday. High- lighting the Scriptural selec- tions from the Lesson- -Sermon on the subject "Reality" was this passage: "The night is far spent, the day is at hand: let us therefore cast off the works of darkness, and let us put on the armour of light" (Rom. 13:12), 4 DISCUSS TOURISM Tourists industry leaders in the Oshawa, Peterborough, Kingston, Ottawa and Torcuto areas met in Peterborough Sat- Youth Charged After Chase A 16-year-old Oshawa youth was arrested Saturday night fol- lowing a police chase on Osh- awa streets during which the pursued car nearly rolled over. Constable Charles Gallogley chased a car on Conant street which had been reported stolen in the city. The driver jumped from the car and ran into a service station where he was apprehended. Police said Victor Gerald Pomery has been charged with car theft, five counts of break, enter and theft, and two counts of break-and-enter with intent. A flash fire raging through an annex apartment at 87 John street this morning caused an estimated $2,000 damage. Mrs. Robert Gibbs and her! four-year-old son, Paul, who were in the apartment when the fire occured, escaped without injury. Mrs. Gibbs said she noticed smoke coming from the base- ment at 9 a.m. and tried to telephone the Fire Department from an extension phone but found the phone was out of order. She then began prepar- ing to leave with her child. Two Escape From Apartment Fire NURSE CALLS DEPARTMENT A VON nurse who had been attending to Mrs. Kate L. Capin next door noticed the smoke and immediately called the Fire De- partment. She then alerted Mrs. Gibbs and assisted her in leav- ing the building. Fire Chief Ray Hobbs said' the fire originated in a waste container kept in the basement. The basement walls and the dwelling were charred while MARKET PRICES Ukrainian urday to discuss techniques for improving services offered to' tourists. The conference, held at the Empress Hotel, was spon- sored by the Canadian Tourist Association and the Ontario Chamber of Commerce. OWEN SOUND SPEAKER Hon. Michael Starr spoke at Owen Sound Saturday night in the interests of Percy Noble, PC candidate in Grey North Riding. ON DAIRY BOARD Hon. Wm. A. Stewart, minis- ter of agriculture, has announc- ed that George McLaughlin, well known farmer of Beaverton and second vice-president of the Dairy Farmers of Canada, has been appointed Ontario's repre- sentative on the Canadian Dairy Advisory committee. DRIVER FINED $300 PETERBOROUGH -- A $300 fine and costs were levied against Paul Burnett, 22, of Oshawa who pleaded guilty be- fore Magistrate C. W. Guest in court last Friday to careless driving. Burnett's driving li- cence was suspended six months. NO ACCIDENTS The Oshawa Police Depart- ment reported no accidents over the weekend. 10 GRASS FIRES The Oshawa Fire Department battled 10 grass fires over the weekend, five Saturday and five Sunday. No serious damage was reported. The city ambu- lance responded to seven calls between Saturday morning and this morning. IDENTIFY BODY BOWMANVILLE (Staff) Bowmanville OPP detachment has identified the body of the man who was killed in a car- transport crash on Highway 115 Friday night as 30-year-old Peter Parte, of 93 Gladstone avenue, Ottawa. Parte was the driver of a car that struck the rear wheel of a transport and rolled over, coming to rest on its roof. He died of a broken neck, police reported. SPEAKING WINNERS PETERBOROUGH Holly McMurray, 16, of Belleville, and Carol Allison, 17, of Picton won the secondary school public speaking zone finals here Friday night. The winners will compete in the provincial finals in Toron- to April 15. The Durham Coun- ty area was represented by Cathy Slemon of the Courtice District High School. INDIAN CENTRE OPENS TORONTO (CP)--Several In- dians wearing brilliantly col- ored costumes and headdresses danced and whooped to a throb- bing drum Saturday as Lieuten- ant - Governor Keiller Mackay TORONTO (CP) -- Churning cream and butter print prices were reported unchanged today. The egg market was firm with offerings inadequate for a good demand. Country dealers are quoted by the federal department of agri- culture on Canada grade eggs, delivered Toronto, im fibre cases; a large 44, A medium 42, A small 38; B and C grades no) market, Butter prices: Canada ifrst grade: Ontario tenderable 51- 52; non-tenderable 51%, in light = Western 51-52 (nomi- nal). Girls' Choir Is Pleasing "Bandura, my comforter, "Play for me in this foreign land; "So that I will see my Uk-' e, If only in my dreams." Dnipro Hall surged with dreams Saturday night as more than 400 Oshawa Ukrainians Injured Woman Crawls 3 Miles Across Ice heard a t by the Ukrain- ian Girls Bandurist Choir from Detroit. Dressed in traditional cos- tume, the 26 girls (12 with ban- duras) led the audience from foot-stomping gaiety to quiet nostalgia and back again many times during the evening. PARRY SOUND, Ont. (CP)-- A pregnant woman, her back seriously injured, Saturday night crawled 3% miles across treacherous French River ice for help after her husband was killed by the propeller of his snow sled. Mrs. Loretta King, 22, was struck by the propeller as it killed her husband, Theodore, 23. Also struck was an uniden- tified four-year-old girl who is in hospital here with broken ribs. King, who worked at a Bad River tourist camp about 70 miles north of here, was on his way back to the camp with his wife, his two children, aged 2 and 3, and the four-year-old after picking up supplies on Highway 69. The propeller broke loose, striking him on the head and battering Mrs. King and the little girl. Mrs. King, seven months pregnant, took the children to a small island and painfully crawled back to the camp for help. "The woman should get a medai for bravery," said Const. J. R, Lahaie of the Still River provincial police detachment. She was taken to hospital here. Smoke, Ash Still (A bandura is a many-string instrument that looks like an over-sized mandolin. When plucked, it produces a gentle, sound. Some banduras came directly from the Ukraine. Oth- ers have been made in Ger- many and North America.) The choir is sponsored by Peter Potapenko and has been touring the eastern U.S. and Canada for six years. Most of the members are unpaid, The girls were invited to sing COULD HAVE BEEN WORSE Said Mrs. Gibbs: "it could have been much worse, the only outstanding damage to my furniture was to a refrigerator and a chest of drawers kept in the basement." Another son Michael was at school at the time of the fire. The annex is owned by E. S. (Ted) Campin, 178 Baldwin street. building. Fire Chief Hobbs said some main building. The fami live at 195 Gibb Gibbs' father's home. Scout Good Turn Is Huge Success ing, shoes and other articles were collected by 600 Oshawa Boy Scouts Saturday. The 15- ton collection will be turned over to the Society for Crippled Civilians. Contributions were picked up from thousands of homes throughout the city. Early in the week, cubs distributed paper! bags to the homes for the pur- pose of packaging the goods. The Oshawa Boys Scouts As- sociation expressed its appre- ciation of the response of the walls in the upper part of the]: smoke damage was caused to]; some of the contents, he said. : His mother,Mrs. Kate' L. Campin, occupys the main smoke damage was done to the mily will temporarily street, Mr. Following their flights with members of the Oshawa Fly- ing Club, Sunday at the Osh- awa Airport, crippled children from the Oshawa, Whitby and Bowmanville areas, were ser- ved refreshments in the pilots' lounge. Seen here at left is CRIPPLED CHILDREN ENJOY REFRESHMENTS -- Gordon Braiden, Haig street, Oshawa, serving cookies to Michael and Alan Reynolds, of 329 Dovedale avenue, Whitb: YY: Oshawa Times Photo LUMBER EXECUTIVE William J. Henry, Oshawa, who was named d vice- ELECTRIC VEST WARMS DRIVERS A French firm has come up with an electrically heat- ed vest for drivers who are exposed to weather. Made of plastic sheeting, it oper- ates from auto battery. If you've a yen for an import or sports car, don't just wish, check "Autos for Sale" in the Oshawa Times Classified Section. There is a@ wide selection of makes and models, so you get be- hind the wheel of just the car you want at the price you want to pay. Check the Classified Section today. Youth Discusses Vital Problems Vital problems facing Chris- tian youth today were discussed at the Oshawa Christian Youth Centre, Warren avenue, Sunda: night. On the panel were two pastots from Oshawa churches, two youth leaders and three young people from churches of various denominations in the area. Some of the topics discusséd included: dating, marriage and finding God's will in out indivi- dual lives, FLOWS STRONGLY On the start of its journey, the Gulf Stream gushes through the Florida Straits at about 100 billion tons of water .an hour. president of the Ontario Re- tail Lumber Dealers Associa- tion at its 46th annual con- vention in Toronto. Mr. Henry is general manager of Osh- awa Wood Products Limited, Oshawa, Ontario. NEW HOME SPECIALISTS Five truck-loads of used cloth- ; FUEL OIL for automatic delivery by our metered trucks DX OIL CO. Phone 668-3341 IMA Real Estete Ltd. TRADES ACCEPTED 728-6286 323 King St. W. | S>ameSss MORTGAGES Ample Funds for Ist MORTGAGES 2nd MORTGAGES We Also Purchase - Ist and 2nd Mortgages . N.H.A.LOANS --~ ARRANGED You Will Find OUR SERVICE (S FASTER OUR COST IS LOWER 7 SCHOFIELD-AKER ~ Limited 723-2265 -- 728-3376 " After Hours 728-3376 SS HESS people of Oshawa on this "Good Turn" project. here by the Oshawa branch of the Ukrainian Youth of Can- ada. Sunday, the choir nad a concert at the Ukrainian Cul- ture Centre on Christie sireet, Toronto. During intermission Saturday, Dr. Nicholas Ostafichuk wel- comed the bandurist choir on behalf of the organizations at Dnipro Hall. The girls sang mostly of love; between men and women, love of a mother for her soldier son and love of country. Solo numbers were performed by Valentina Bukovecz and Helen Kravchenko. Luba Pashkevych was master of ceremonies for the concert. Two of the girls play promin- ent parts in organizing the choir; Anna Boydun is assistant administrator and Anna Kow- alchyk is assistant organizer. CUSTOM BUILT EVERY SIZE LVERY LOCATION WE TAKE IN TRADES CALL Wn. Roth 725-9991 Falling On Bali sian government drew up plans for a large-scale migration from the "Isle of the Gods," The central government in Jakarta hoped to resettle some 400,000 of Bali's 3,000,000 resi- dents on fertile rice lands in the islands of the Celebes, the Mol- uccas and perhaps also on Su- matra. officially opened Toronto's Ca- nadian Indian Centre. Director James McGuire said the centre, a renovated rented house, will act as a guidance and recre- ational centre for Indians com- ing to Toronto. HAWAII leave any day YOU wish correspondent reached the for- eign ministry only to be. turned away. "KINDNESS BEYOND PRICE, FOOD Breokfest, Lunch, Dinner BUSINESS MEN'S LUNCH 12-2 P.M. 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