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Oshawa Times (1958-), 30 Jul 1963, p. 16

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16 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesdey, July 30, 1963 HS Children's Book cea and Jeanette Award Withheld e val of @ bro perk, Oo eed'"andrew, a! the Oshews| TORONTO (CP)--The $1,000 Seneral Hospital on Friday: uty 2% e'iprige in the 1963 Little, Brown Bee anks te Or, W,.0: Canadian children's book com- Dr, R. K, Miller and 4th floor staff, /petition will a ea -- : . e¢-|because, in the opinion o e waa otra. ay ms son,|judges, no manuscript received Gdward Charles, A brother for Sharon) was worthy of the prize, we Fey The award, for the best man- uscript of a children's book by a Canadian citizen or resident of Canada, is being continued, beg the next deadline Jan. 31, SSELL. -- Wendy Dawn wishes to ean the arrival of her baby bro ther, Alan Curtis, welght 7 Ibs, 14 ozs, 'on Thursday, July 25, 1963, at the Osh awa General Hospital, Proud parents Edward and Deanna. WAGAR -- Mark and Margaret (nee ) wish to thank Or, Daniel Rog: oye safe arrival of their son, Previous winners have been ers tor the Edith Lambert Sharp of Pen- Genny Willlary 7 ibs, § on, gered ticton, B.C,, for Nkwala, a Gov- Jey ie aa orandparents. sre wr. angiermor-General's Award winner, re. Howes, Roslin, Ontario|and Jean Little of Guelph, Ont., for Mine For Keeps, By RELMAN MORIN MACON COUNTY, Ala, (AP) It is not uncommon in the South to hear a segregationist say that, by and large, he likes the Negro, He sees no inconsistency be- tween having an affection for Negroes and at the same time defending a system that denies them full equality, "The Ne- groes as a whole just aren't ready yet," he says, "It's not thei rfault, but that's the way it is at this point." rl or Triplets, you hole town about dpted antl %00 gouncements are accepted un r a.m, for publication the same day for ently $1.50, Just telephone 723.3492, DEATHS HEB, Janet Saturday, July 27, 1963, at Royal Col- emblan Hospital, New Westminster, 8.C., Janet Brooks Hebb, beloved wife of the late Ellard Hebb, and dear mother of Arthur, grandmother of John and Bever- a Jey all of Oshawa, Funeral service will Royal Bank of Canada branch, be held In British Columbia lwith a note saying it was the MAZUR, Nicholwe . first payment on the $1,400, Entered into rest in Oshawa Gen oe eral Hospital on Tuesday, July 30, 1963,/ Monday night, holdup squad tienelat, Mazur, beloved waned ot Maryidetectives arrested Mrs. Vera Belyus in Nis 8th year, Resting at the "Ki Restronp Funeral Home, Oshawa, win Meckinnon, 48, at her home and mass In St, George's Ukrainian Greek|charged her with robbery, Po- oe pore erect, Aan "~ jtlice said they recovered $819 ' am, interment . regory's eme| '8 i ery. tRriends are asked fot to call a/t@ken from the bank, the Funeral Home before Wednesday. Car-Truck Crash ° Husband of ihe late Margaret Bryson and! K lls l H 4 dear father of Russell, Laurence, Grace| 1 e urts (Mrs, Charles Yule), Ruth (Mrs, Ewart! waite eorge hee : Entered fue rest at ire Open Gate Nurs|truck he was driving collided Home, on Monday, July 2, 19,/with a car in the first fatal Hee et eee, Morr ilan Peéterick, 28, of London, ing. Funeral service in the chapel on Ont., with a fractured kneecap arm; his wife, Laurene, | SAVERY, Wiltiam | At Steckley Nursing Home, Oshawa,/ Rodinson, Resting at the Morris Funeral! . THOMAS (CP) -- Henry Chapel, Bowmanville, Service in oR a os . hin 1 Dee ps George White, beloved husband of yhite, vs: Oth , -to-Til- Mary' Pearce of Pickering. and dearicrast On the new Tempo-to-Til Wednesday, July 3) at 2.20 p.m, inter/and Went Erekine Cometory lwith multiple cuts and possible jinternal injuries; Rosanne Her- Robbery Loot Paid Back On Time Plan TORONTO (CP) -- A grey- haired woman who robbed bank of $1,400 last Friday "on a loan basis". has apparently re. turned $75 of the loot,. An envelope containing $75 was received Monday at the Monday, July 29, 1963, William Savery,) RR No. 1, Newtonville, In his 94th year.) chapel Wednesday at 2 o'clock, Interment ' Orono Cemetery. jton, was killed and four persons jinjured Monday when a pickup drother of Gertrude (Mrs, Mills) oy bury section of Highway 401. Toronto and Frank of Pickering. Mr.) Injured were car driver Al- A key point in his reasoning is that the. great mapority of Negroes are like children and must be treated as such, A composite of many conver- sations with the thoughtful type of segregationist goes. pretty much like his: "when I was a kid, my best friend was a colored boy, We played together, fished to- ether, slept side by side on unting trips, I was in and out of his house every day and he was in mine, eating from the same kitchen table, "After we grew up, I paid his hospital bills and loaned him money When he needed it, I went to the weddings and fu- nerals in his family and he came to ours, On Saturday night, when he got into trouble with the law, who went to the jail a 2 a.m, and bailed him out? I did." It was a comfortable, harmo- nious relationship, he says, FRIENDS STILL : And even today, while racial strife rises toward the danger point in many places, you can still see this relationship be- tween individual Negroes and whites jn the south, Here is a cotton plantation, deep in Alabama, It is about 10 miles from the nearest community, the nearest sheriff or policeman. In. the county, Negroes outnumber the Most Negroes, Whites Enjoy Relationships dren of the Negro "'hoe hands." In the sun-drenched after- noon, the oldest boy goes fish- ing with two Negro boys. He brings the sandwiches. GIRL IS SAFE Meanwhile, the oldest girl goes horseback riding, deep in the woods,. She ig alone, Her parents say they never worry about her, that she is perfectly safe, Some miles away, in a corner of the plantation, an aged Ne- gro woman sits, rocking, on the porch. She is the widow of a "hoe hand" who worked here many years, The house is hers as long as she lives. The planter asks whether she is all right. 'Gettin' along jes' fine' she says, A little scene takes place in 'he cotton fileds, As the Ne- groes stop work for their mid- day meal, the planter slips a dollar bill into a woman's hand; he tells a man to "drive her to the store," You ask what this is about. For some reason, she brought no food to the fields that morn- jing, "Maybe she hasn't got any jmoney," the planter says, "or maybe she just plain forgot. iBut I sure can't see her go without eating." In the winter, when the fields are bare, he finds other work on the plantation for his "hoe hands."' They have to eat in the winter, too, It all adds up to a unique segment of the racial story. 'UNCLE TOM-ISM' The _ integrationist, however, calls this "Uncle Tom-ism," j|And the militant Negro says it is 'paternalism,"' archaic, de- igrading the Negro, numbing his jeffort to develop himself, | Let's look fyurther, The planter frequently works jin the fields beside the "hoe hands." The relationship ap- jpears completely comfortable. {Little jokes -- in language "LOCKE'S FLORISTS Funeral orrangement and floral requirements for all mann, 3, of RR 1, Mono Road jStation, 12 miles northwest of Toronto, with. a cut forehead; OCCASIONS. OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE 24 OR Oe NEWS IN BRIEF jand her sister Vicky, 5, with a jfractured leg and cut forehead. greed sop add gore largely unintelligible to a Yan rs of the planter's! y e . Big po ligentg eodly Ana|kee--pass between them, They when he has to travel, he tells/@8ree that the cotton looks homes, dumping garbage on the _ porch of white integration- sts, VENOMOUS LETTERS To anyone who pleads for reason and good will in the struggle over. civil rights, he scrawls a "hate letter," It 1s misspelled, ungrammatical, fre- quently obscene, dripping venom, "That type of white man," says a Southern newspaper woman, "is at the bottom of the scale and he knows it, "The only thing that sep- arates him from an equally poor, uneducated Negro is the color of his skin, He has to look down on somebody so he looks down on the Negro." But what about the segrega- tionist who says he has a genu- ine affection for his Negro friends? How does he. square this with the fact of injustice and inequality? He begins with a basic prem- ise, a conviction that underlies most of his attitudes--that, by and large, the Negro has not yet reached a stage of develop- ment where he is "ready" for full equality. "No race on earth ever made so much progress in 100 years as the Negroes have made," he says. "But they did it with the guidance of the white man and they still need our guidance." Flowing from that comes his opposition to integrated schools, "The Negro doesn't have the same capacity for learning," he says, "'Moreoyer, his home en- vironment is seldom conducive to study, So why should my children be held back to his pace? They're both better off in schools where they can ad- vance at their own pace." DIRTINESS CITED The segregationist also says that Negro children frequently jcome to school unbathed and wearing dirty clothes. He says they come from homes with a high rate of illegitimacy and adds, "I don't want my kids sitting next to kids who talk Today's Toronto Stock Ma TORONTO 11 A.M. STOCKS By The Canadian Press Toronto Stock Exchange--July 30 (Quotations in cents unless marked $. z---Odd lot, xd--Ex-dividend, xr--Ex- rights, xw--Ex-warrants. Net change Is from previous board-lot closing sale.) Net Sales High Low a.m. Ch'ge Alta Dist 400 295 25 295 Alta Gas 210 $27 27% 27+ We Algoma 210 $534 53a 53% Alumini 900 $25% Alum lpr 21S $22% 22% 22% Anthes A 25 $17 VW Anthes B pr 50$103 103 103 -- Ve 100 S51ve SIM" SIM+ 225 $léVe 16a léVe 125 $234 2344 234-- Arg B pr Atl Sugar Atl Sug A Bank Mont 25 $634 84 Gu-- Bell Phone 1245 $53% 53% Site + % Bramalea 100 $5 Sve Sele t % 300 290 Brazil 290 (290 BC Fores! ws WW WY + 8 11000 $21% 220 2) =I t 'ow 45 485 485 $26 260 (6 5 $2) 2) 8} ee, PES | S10Ye 10Ve 10a $5244 524 S24 200 «200-200 200 S4 200 $4 Mm 9M Me Mh-- Vv lo 16% + 61% 61M 5 $ ---? 200 100 $54 760 $94 39% Si6% $61 C¢ ind Gas r2010 10 200 $304 Oo $7 Cdn Celan 20% 7? 580 580 $26 26 x» sve Mw CPR Clairtone $1SVve 15% 370 $50% 50 100 $15 15% M8 $7 17% 27s 37 7 $56Va S6R $18Va 18Ve 18a Dist Seag Dom Stores Dom Tar Exquisite Ww--- Ve 7 sé Ni Net Stock Sales High Low a.m. Ch'ge Lev) LobCo B MB PR Mass-F VeNO NGas NeW Util pe Pac Pet Home A Stock H B ONG Medal Sales High Low a.m. Ch'ge 125 $16Ve 16¥e 16Ve 233 $1444 14% 14% 500 $7% 74S 7% 1824 350 M45 Ss 40Ye 40 oo ve 200 $7% 2000 YOO $324 32Wc 32%4-- 200 1 962330 3} 3 9105 $13% 13% 13%-- 50 $47Ve 47VeC47Ve --whh 'oods «6100 $7% ut 7% -- Vale 9 90 90 WM --) 200 $36Va 36V2 36Ve 250Ve $19¥2 19Va S $82 82 «82 8B pr 225 $104 104 10% 500 83 400 114 2000 «6 8 83 DI na 4 a8 --V Wa 5 45 680 «680 M2 200 WY Ve 8288 38a. = Sos" s8au ~ fas" +70 1 =e 150 $20Ve 202 200 $10%e 10%e 10+ Ww No 8 8 8 + ws 37 WwW WV 1 635 635 10S $13% 13% 139% Ve 8 8882582288 3 wotS Sasha es C Silica Captain 8 322 $612 61M 61M 190 $12% 12% 12% 290 $27 OD YOO $15Vec 15Ve 15Ve 210 $5¥e Swe 5X 230 $55W 5544 SSW 100 $14 14a 14 0 $4 14 +h ws on + ws v pag W +1¥9 ; 700 SS $s NS $16 16% 16 | Bee Pes OE 500 495 495 495 men oY 2 2 22 --2 Mm' WR Wath 200 SIS SIS SIS en 3 6 1000 «138 13% WY Va Ve 5 3s MW =--v soo. 6S $s $ 780 $26Ve 26¥2 262 1 i wo W 3 Vel Jellicoe 11500 7 70 7 423 S10% 10% 10% -- " 42 M-- Lamaque Latin Am Leitch rket Listings Rewihe Kerr Add 45 145 (145 L Dufauit 2500 12 12 12 Lake Ling L Shore 376 655 645 (645 100 655 655 655 1000 252 e328 esseedes3s og Pi $883 3 F Sahel g8us st a > Ss > += & & > e on s a 8 weGSEE oF $8. Bas 8s 38 Lo ft 4 3° Bobs 3 e z* Nefs 3 ™ L Ea sx as wv Ve x» 276 34 WW 1% 430 190 ws 7 W3 n sSsiees 6854 1400 500 250 7000 '000 2000 300 3000 100 265 00 1500 1000 3800 2000 7000 1 6S 6 6 6§$ 68h HN 200 180 180 180 +8 325 32S 3S --S 100 137. «137,37 3 1000 46¥h 46Va 46¥2--1 m0 7 78 8 Sales to 11 a.m.: 349,000. 13875 75S 200 Sé¥e 6a 6 370hCU@lhCUC 350 350 «6350 --SS imp Tob pr 100 int Nickel 300 Hudson Bay Expected To Vanish WINNIPEG (CP) -- Hudson Bay will disappear in several thousand years, says a geology Lav Fin 265 openly about what they have/professor. the Negro foreman, away a few days, You look after thing around here." At night, the foreman listens to the dogs. If he hears a pecul- IN MEMORIAM | , iA%t5,20N7 Bate | LONDON (CP) -- More than A half the families in. Britain eee ot Bee, Uae cessed away/can't have a meal on matching ne year ago on July 29, 1982, tableware says the Pottery See, nar Mar Aer id tod ee tew,| Manufacturers' Association. If But someone Knew your needed rest,ithe nation was judged on the Cee ee eee eee crc jcoments of the average china But al! ts wel, thats Gone by Thee, [CUpdOaNd it Says, Britain would --Remembdered and sadly missed dy be classified as an underdevel- iar note in their barking, he will go outside to investigate. He is proud of being charge." Driving. into the plantation, you see a softball game in a field near the planter's house. Three of his children, including DEATHS "in| ? Tn be/800d. | "Way I figure," says the Ne- jgro foreman, "the better the jboss does, the better we do." There will be a bonus for them jat Christmas. | He has been on this planta- tion 24 years, another man for 17, several others for from eight to 10 years, SOME TRIED NORTH The foreman once went to Florida and worked for a year. a girl, are playing with the chil-/He came back, Some of the others went north for jobs. They came back, too. All of them have been to school -- three, five, six years. Gouger, June, joped country. WOERMKE -- In loving memory of a Gear tite oo ond wrote George] SEEK NUDISM BAN wre pened away sudden'y, July % 98! BELPER, England (CP) -- Time may heal the droken_heartes, People -- ------ a Years may make The wound less sore, Dilan to ild a nudist colony Fa ta tees ne nen ee, _ Just outside the town. One coun- Who wat aay te oriet Is lessened Pte said it would upset Boy smite may Ride the tears, ts who camp in the area Derpte the seine Orne seen and the occupants of a nearby Despite . ae hea i a eurey eet te Se eae pa old folks' home. Alen. ne GAINED END RTSMOUTH, England MEMORIALS (CP) -- Able Seaman Gordon MARBLE and GRANITE /Bigss wanted to get out of the é navy so he hauled down an Designing, Corving, Lettering oll Installation, Repairs admiral's flag and threw Open Evenings Until 9 overboard. Biggs, 21, got his idismissal--plus a year's de- Oshawa Monument Co. tention 1435 King Street Eost WHALERS NO MORE 728- 3111 EDINBURGH (CP) -- Brit. RIMAR By THE CANADIAN PRESS Macamic, Que, -- Emile Le- sage, 58, Union Nationale mem- ber of Quebec's legislative coun- cil, Ottawa -- Dr. D. K. C. Mac- Donald, 43, an eminent. Cana- dian scientist who was one of the world's foremost physicists in the low - temperature and solid-state field. Cannes, France -- Edgar Sen- igier Belgium, &, the man lwho supplied the uranium for the first United States atomic bomb experiments; of a heart jattack, .... | St. Louis -- Eberhard Anheu- i lser, 83, former chairman of the|ter of racial trouble comes! You see television antennae on the Negro houses. The fore- man says he saw pictures of the disturbances at Birming- ham and elsewhere, North and South. What did he think? "Well," he says, "they is sorry colored folks and they is sorry white folks everywhere, and I wish they'd both jes' leave us alone." Whether this is the axtitude, generally, of the Negro. field lworkers in Macon County is difficult to say. Even the whites there, who. consider themseives on close personal terms with their Negroes, say they don't know what the "hoe hands" are ithinking, as the. clash and clat- j jnearer. seen at home," For similar reasons, he doesn't want his wife and daughter to sit next to a Negro in a movie theatre or a lunch counter, use the same fitting} rooms in a store, or the same! rest rooms, Does he really. believe the Ne- gro's ultimate goal is to "marry your daughter?" Yes, he docs. He's convinced of it, ' As to the Negro's right to vote, one segregationist said, "There's no reason why their best people shouldn't vote, those who are educated, literate and able to make a judgment on candidates and issues. But) there aren't many with these qualifications." So it goes, consistently, over point after point--the assertion that the Negro's level of devel- jopment is not yet at a sage where he is "ready" for. full equality. "What he is asking," segregationists say, "is the rights without the responsibili- ties." I once asked a southern news- paper editor, a segregationist, to list the five or six principal reasons why so many Southern- ers believe in segregation. On the back of an envelope, he set down the various points. Lead- ling his list was one word: | "Habit." jAmerica during the last ice age. Dr, Bruce Wilson of the Uni-; versity of Manitoba says the earth. surface of the area is ris- ing as a result of the disappear- ance of a mile-deep sheet of ice that covered much of North Hudson Bay was formed by a weakness in the earth's crust at the junction of two ancient mountain ranges. "During the giacial period this area was depressed more than the rest of the continent." And now it's rising faster. Hudson Bay is a massive body of salt water touching| Ontario. | Dr, Wilson said in an inter- view the Hudson Bay area has. risen. about 500 feet in 7,000) years, He predicts it will ruse 800) feet more in the next few thou-| sand years, draining the water) back into the Atlantic Ocean. | "This is a. very short period of time, considering the magni- | tude of what is happening," the water level is 60 feet below the | Atlantic sea level. | "It's something like the way, the moon attracts water. in he) eocans to cause tides," Dr, Wilson said. "Because the At.) lantic has a greater mass of] water, it attracts waters from] Hudson Bay, making the sea' level (in the bay) lower." ATTENTION! CHURCH GROUPS SERVICE CLUBS SOCIAL GROUPS YOUNG PEOPLE'S CLUBS, ETC. Be Sure To Advertise Your Activities In The Oshawa Times COMING EVENTS COLUMN If your organization is holding a bazaar, bingo, turkey shoot, dance, rummage sale, business meeting, fair, tea, bridge, euchre, fashion show, or in fact any event which you wish to let the general public as well as your members know the date, place and time, etc. . . . YOUR QUICKEST, MOST ECONOMICAL AND EFFICIENT WAY IS TO HAVE THE OSHAWA TIMES PUBLISH YOUR MESSAGE IN THE COMING EVENTS COLUMN YOUR ain's last remaining whaling MEMORIALS factory ship, the Southern Har. Dignified ond Distinctive vester, is up for sale and this MONUMENTS means virtually the end of this country's whaling industry, The} FLAT MARKERS in Designs For Any Need board of Anheuser - Busch i Brewery and a former director Not all segregationists,. of] OBITUARIES of the St. Louis National Base- = profess to like Negrees.| ane dall Club Incoporated. | ere is the bigot, ridden) ship's Owners put the industry's! , e ot pee! Ms z : ies a6cn oe sassihidein: oss Conk heel with fear and hatred moe a __ NICHOLAS MAZUR Mr. Savery married the former whales" [Reventlow, 79, former DanishiHe is the coe na ng = 'ccs.| Following an illness of four|Margaret Bryson in Clarke >y lambassador to Britain indiscriminately inte' Tee sejmonths the death occurred this/Township on Mar. 17, 1897, She THEY SHOULD LAST | indiscriminately into Ne gi) morning at the Oshawa General/predeceased him in 1945. LONDON (CP)--In an effort) Montreal -- Gerald Gratton, ~~" Hospital of Nicholas Mazur, of) On the corner of his farm at 152 Simeve St. S. Oshawa to thwart vandals, chairs that/35, one of Canada's outstanding) HIT BY LIGHTNING 746 Albert street. He was in his Starkvilje, just north of New- 723-1002 728-6627 will survive fire and knives/weight ~ lifters in international) NEW YORK (AP)--A bolt of 68th year. tonville, Mr. Savery had a fice Evenings that will float when thrown into/competition; of injuries suffered lightning flashed out of a thun-| A son of the late Joseph and/blacksmith shop for many lakes are being put in thelin an automobile accident. detstorm and struck three per- Anna Mazur, the deceased was years. He had been retired for PAIDMAN -- We, The family of the fate Ecware Charles Maleman wish to express ger Deartie?® appreciation for The expressions of sympa hy, Hora rh wren and cards & The loss Of a Gear ho capital's. parks. Burning park! _ Sens on the beach at Coney Is./born April 8, 1896, in Hungary/2bout the last 20 years. chairs and throwing away din.| Granby, Que. -- Clier (Ollie) iand Monday, One, 12-year-old and was married there in June,| Mr. Savery served as secre- ing utensils has become a pop-/Braull, 78, believed to be the Jovce Willinsky, died in a hos-/33i7, jtary-treasurer of the SS No. 10 ular form of vandalism. first French-speaking golf Pre-\nital six hours after being) A resident of Oshawa 'School Beard, Clarke Towa: ifessional in Quebec province, | . ms jship, for more than 25 years. JETS SCARE COWS shocked. Carol Sidlowski, 13,/Canada for 36 years, Mr. Ma.-/ In the First World War be CARMARTHEN, Wales (CP) Bremen, West Germany--Cari and Carol's father, Waiter, 48,/rur had been an employee Of) 2 Gcsrceas with the Strd ware maics anc orderiies of Ward 2A. Ovrese Gereral Maphal. Also many Phares % Ye Rew. Onoiey, and Rev Wookack for Their comoling words, the Reyai Canadian Lepen and Agxifary Gererai Mates for flowers and ue of cars. % He Armatrore Forera! Home fer alr King ang efficient management @ Me service. --Wrs, Vere Naloman and famity Radio Quotes Congressman On Cuba Pact MIAMI, Fila. (AP) -- A radio tation quoted a Florida con- gressman as saying Monday that he has been informed a se. eret pact detwren the United States and Coba has allowed Caban Premier Fidel Castro to pick half the persens waving Caba as refarees for the United States. Represemative William Cra- mer (Rep. Fla.) said im a tele. phone imerview from Washine- ten taped and broadcast by sta. tien WIOD: "There is Htle reason to be. Reve other than that he would Oemmunist Parpase im his coun- Cramer did net identify his sources of information on what be called 'the secret, clandes- tine deal." He said the deal "in- volved some 4.19) peonie com- ing out of Caba." "Castro demanded in order to release 908 U.S. citizens that he choose half.of all others coming ext," Cramer said. jdoodysrapped car. Farmers in South Wales are protesting that supersonic bangs from jet aircraft are siampeding their cattle. F. W. Borgward, 73, German neighbors of the dead girl, also oar designer and manufacturer; were hit. The hospital listed whose firm went bankrupt in Sidlowski as improved but Caro 1961, of a heart attack. jwas in critical condition. GET AUTO PORTRAITS LONDON (CP) -- The latest whim of the British motorist is! to have a painting of his car hanging over the mantiepiece Artist Donoagh O'Brien reports brisk trade and his clients in- cude former British race driver Stirling Moss. RETOOTH ROUND ALCONBURY, England (CP) Charlie, a fiveyearok guard @og at an American airbase in (Huntingdonshire, has been fit. ted with false teeth. He lost his real teeth through chemnr Recess of concrete and wooden pests HONOR STRATFORD . ON - AVON. England (CP)}--A choral work called The Noble Heart will be part of the festival here acxt! year to celebrate the 403in mmiversary of Shakespeare's birth, John Gardner and John Greemwood have been com. missioned t) write the work PICK UP 4" PALERMO, Sicily (AP) -- A roundup of suspected Mafia members throaghoul Sicily reached 402 Tuesday with the arrests of another 69 men. The @rive agains the Sicilian under. work society was touched off by the Slaughter of seven po- hoemen, killed Jone BW mm a SPORTS OUTDOORS By Bill Bero FIRST important rule for a hunter is to 'Duplate Canada Limited since ' 4 3 coming te the city. He was aleve, Gaudin al Ari n-! poral. -- unit on recruited jan Kingston, P jot the Duplate Sports snd So-) ue Pog pb e- )cial Club. _ _.. lof the Shiloh United Church, | He is survived by his wife.|ynich was located on a corner jthe former Mary Beyus; @ SOM/or his farm property. jand a daughter in Hungary; 8) Sorviving are two daughters | sister, Mary in the United Statesiand two sons: Mrs: Ewart jand two grandchildren, Mary/Robinson (Ruth) 'and Russell |Anne and Betty Mavur, in Osh-'Savery, both of RR 1, Newton- nwa. jville; Mrs. Charles Yule Mr. Mazur will be at the Arm-\(Grace) and Laurence Savery, strong Funeral Home for mass both of Oshawa. Mr. Savery in St. George's Ukrainian Greek was predeceased by two daugh- Catholic Church at 10 a.m. Fri-iters: Lillian and Mrs. Alex day, Aug. 2. Interment will be Barclay (Dorothy). in St. Gregory's Cemetery. Rev.) There are 11 grandchildren J. C. Perema will sing the and 10 great-crandchildren. mass. | Mr, Savyery is at the Morris Funeral Chapel, Bowmanville MRS. MARGARET PEELING The memorial service will be The death occurred in Toron-/held Wednesday, July 31, at 2 to this morning of Mrs. Marin m Rev. R. C. White, minister garet Peeling of Newtonville United Church, She is survived by four sons./will conduct the service. Inter. Arthur and John, Oshawa; Sid-iment will be in Orono Ceme- ney, Edmonton and Donald, jtery. Hulifax. Mrs, Peeling will be at the McIntosh Anderson Fane-ai/ Home. Funeral FUNERAL OF ERNEST WALTER arrangements) The memorial: service for wil be announced later |Ernest Walter Bemis, who died jFriday, July 26, at the Oshawa WILLIAM SAVERY \Generat Hospital in his 85th A resident of the Newtonville year, was held at the Armstrong area for more than 63 years,/Funeral Home at 2 p.m., Mon- Wiliam Savery died. Monday,|day, July 29. July 29, at the Steckley Nurs-) Rev. Lester Laird, paster of ing Home, Oshawa, after a/Meadowcrest First Baptist brief Miness. He was in. his $4th'Charch, Brooklin, conducted the year. services, Interment was in Osh- A son of the late William andjawa Union Oemetery. Jane Savery, Mr. Savery was' The pallbearers were Mer- born at Kensington, Middlesex, vyn Bemis, Edward: Hawke, England. He came to Canada in/Douglas Harding, Roy Slack, COMING EVENTS. NOTICE REACHES OVER 19,000 HOMES DAILY Just Phone 723-3492 And Ask For An Adwriter 1884 when he was 15 years old |[Ray Mock' and George Brown.

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