oe Rose Rover Crew Elects Officers held next weekend. We will leave hr ys Abst by car and spend day and Satur- day night in Burlington at ai hall or wherever sleeping quar- ters are arranged. During Saturday we will par-' ticipate in various competitions such ag boating, canoeing, tent- pitching, signalling and first aid. Later in the evening the winners will be announced at a banquet and trophies and crests will be awarded. Fol- lowing will be a dance, films D. M. ROSE ROVER CREW Thursday night was election night and our new crew execu- tive for 1963-64 are as follows: First Ma' ° Oshawa, TO CHARGE JUVENILE Allen; Quartermaster, Bob| Jim Allen; rma: Huchinson and Scribe, Grant Southwell. Congratulations fel- Ricta Tot' eer tne soetien' ahead o! e Chaplain am be decided next week, Labor Day weekend saw 14 crew coarees journey to Sar-jor some other entertainment. nia for the 22nd Ontario Pro-| Sunday morning there will be vincial Rover Moot, Activities}a church parade and then we included swimming, canoeing,|will head for home. This is the skeet shooting, car rally, camp-| only regatta specifically for Sea fires and hootenanies, Rangers and covers all skills. Displays were given by the|All the sea crews in the areas Lands and Forests, Dept. of|participate and last year Air Highways of Ontario, oil mu-jand Land crews were also in- seum and travel and publicity|vited. This is only the second of Ontario. A good and exciting|year it has been held but we time was held by all 600 Roy-jare hoping it will become a ers in attendance. --" part of our pro- A few of the crew are realjgram. "hams" when it comes to pos-| The camp held on the 24th ing for the TV cameras. The| weekend turned out to be small London TV station featured the|(we ended up with only four moot on its Sunday night news|girls) but certainly was a lot of fun, There seemed to be a -- big attraction in Toronto that "DEN CHATTER" weekend. Hmm ? ? Anyway it Rover-Scouter weekend, Sept.|did result in Mary 'Kolynko get- 21-22 . . . Thumb sticks . . ./ting her Campcraft Badge and Next week is clean up nite . . ./the disposal of a lot of the food Ronnie, how was the '"Karé"|we have 'been hoarding ever parcel ? ? ?.... Al Mottomley|since our Banff trip, We even is worn out from the trip to|/discovered that some of our un- Sarnia and took Thursday night|perishables do perish. And you off . . . John Armstrong spent] should have seen those tents go some 20 hours riding to andjup! In the dark even. Every- from the moot . . . Squires get/body certainly worked energet- busy with those books . . . Crewlically and even the weather co- council meets when skipper? ? ?/gperated which resulted in a ... Acorn roast .. . Well, that/thoroughly enjoyable time. What wraps it up from this corner . .|more could we ask for? "Jimmy Cornered"| It was recently announced that the annual regatta at SRS CRUSADER HMCS York will be held on Hoist the joily roger! Mu-|Sept. 21 this year. Just one tiny! Oh well, it was a good week after the Burlington re- idea. Mate Nesbitt is back now/gatta. It's going to keep us so I guess we'll have to shelve/hopping. that idea. But lo and behold she} Some of our richer members didn't tell us we were terrible|have been out hob-nobbing with (which we seem to be unfortun-|the elite set lately. Bob Tilling ately). These long vacationsjand Gloria and Louise Bilyj must agree with her. She even/spent the Labor Day Weekend went so far as to say we evenjin New York. All right if you had a chance of making a de-|like New Yorkers (so they tell cent showing in' the boatingjus). Between tipping everyone races this year. So hi ho andjthough they say they did have away we go. My it's nice tojfun but from what I heard have encouragement' like that.|they're not rich any more. How. The Burlington Regatta,ljever, they feel it was worth it which I have been mentioning|so that's the main thing. so often, is formally known as} Has anybody seen a lost Ran- the Whiteoaks Inter-Area Seajger cap? Ranger Regatta and will be WOODBINE ENTRIES TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10 firm. Police said that the boy was placed in the charge of the Children's Aid Society until charges are laid. EXCAVATION STARTED The job of excavating for the foundation of the new building to house the Bank of Montreal branch, at the north west corner of Simcoe and Athol streets, is underway. PG SRe ORRRS ET CER GSE 22S ESR ESESA HE CEES 1 & FUNERAL SET GREENSVILLE, Ont. (CP)-- Funeral services will be held to- day for W. Bryce Hyslop, 73, resident of Tip Top Canners imited of Greensville from 1928 until last May. Mr. Hyslop died Friday in hospital in néarby Hamilton, He was a past! president of the Ontario Food Producers Association. CAPSULE NEWS Ontario Students Given Bursaries -- traffic was attributed mainly to|to be hanged for killing a man, tario Automotive Transport As-jincreased movements of ironjhis wife, and three-year-old son sociation's bone poe vig ore. The = pron herd during a robbery. tion announced Sunday jasicent over the previous high 0} awarded $25,775 in university|9,354,823 tons set in May of this} WAS RUBBER EXECUTIVE bursaries to Ontario high school/year and 10.8 per cent higher) NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP)-- and ge bane ohversiy Thejthan last June. James Wam Walsh, 76, who awards include univers en- i Darke trance bursaries to 44 high REPORT 66 DEATHS Sempeay ta ant alte een ST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP)--A| six workers and helped build it school graduates and 20 contin- uing bursaries to students aidedjtotal of 66 deaths from an epi- by the foundation during thejdemic of gastro-enteritis have last four years. been reported in Newfoundland GOVERNMENT INSPECTED MEAT SPECIALS TUESDAY ond WEDNESDAY ONLY FOUR BOYS HURT Provincial Health LEAN, FLAVOURFUL,, 5 TORONTO (CP) -- Four Tor-|Sunday, All the deaths have TROPHY PRESENTED TO CONSERVATIONIST Stan Hockett (left), con- Newcastle Sportsman Club. ident of the club, looks on. ™ servation chairman, Zone 5 The award this year was won The award was presented at Ontario Federation of Anglers by Frank Vaniersel (right), the monthly meeting of the poe Hera cg is shown od = page = ae Newcastle Sportsman Club. senting the trophy for the s work on club pro; ® most active member in the Bob Middleton (centre), pres- Oshawa Times, Paote GMC Reports Record Sales DETROIT (AP) -- Record sales of nearly 3,000,000 cars and trucks for the first eight months of 1963 were reported by General Motors Corp. At the same time, August pas- senger car sales for the entire industry were said to have Meaitopped the 500,000 mark for the Sifirst time since the 1955 boom Mlyear. Ward's Automotive Reports Paigave figures Saturday on the - ; August car sales. Ward's said wea mithe sales totalled 502,032, com- pared with 492,464 for August of! ilast year. GM said its eight-month sales of cars and trucks totalled 2,988,094, topping the previous 4/1955 record of 2,870,086, despite fua|a falling off in August car sales. The eight-month total in- micluded 2,638,410 passenger cars compared with 2,595,667 in 1955. day in Trinity Church in thisjinto one of the world's largest Communist village. The munici-|tire manufacturers, died Sun- pal council, all Communists in-|day. He was executive commit. cluding Mayor Giuseppe de San-|tee chairman of Armstrong. tis, attended. : = KILLER ESCAPES MERSIN, Turkey (AP) -- A TORONTO (CP} -- The On- Tommy Jacobs Cops Utah Open SALT LAKE CITY (AP)-- Young Tommy Jacobs survived a charge by Don January and a near collapse on the final hole and nin the #10,000 Utah Of a FIRST RACH. -- Starwise. $7500 maiden and 4 , pen - ma golf tournament with an eight-|cisiming. Purse $1900 for 2year-olds. #2 under par 272, Woodcote. Park, Robinson 113 The victory was Jacobs first|(0", eck Cormack 12 11 since he won the San Diego|Tavy Bive, Dittta Open in January last year. It}/jell, Arcund. No Roy (Apne camel "0 96,400, rg a Ninth Wave, Potts 19 wmnings for the year 818, |Srromar, pson rye who st art i d the| snow Beau, No Boy (ans round tied with South Africa's vi Gary Player at 205, fired a 33-/peye Mv Walsh X02 35--68, finishing one stroke be- hind Jacobs at 273. M. Cuddy and V. Burteh end 6. Player, bothered all day by hole for Toronto's east-west sub-| WARSAW (AP)--J. A. Rob- way, now under construction. erts, Canada's deputy minister The boys were believed to have|Of trade, arrived Sunday on a been dropping lighted matches|three-day visit which Polish of- into the 30-foot hole when thejficials hope will foreshadow in- blast occurred. The explosion|Creased Canadian purchasing of flung the children and timbers| Polish goods. He is scheduled to covering the hole back from the|Continue Wednesday to Czecho- opening. slovakia and Belgrade. "AVERAGE, AGE 43 FOUR MISSING KITCHENER (CP)--Average|, NEW YORK (CP)--The cap- tain and three deckhands are Jof Canadian veterans of the Sec-' ond World War is 43 years com.|ssing and presumed drowned following the sinking Saturday red to 72 years for those who) Parved in the First World War,|°! '¢ 89-foot tugboat Flushing says Robert Kohaly of Estevan, in the treacherous Hell Gate Sask., membership chairman of ref ye ogg geno as ag He sald the last census 'Une,/after a barge she was towing 1961 showed 1,056,000 veterans! was nutied atiead of th in Canada. the tide. e tug by CaVEN TRANS COMMUNISTS AT MASS' TORONTO (CP) --Montreal-| GENZANO, Italy (AP)--Pope "a "Hopalong" 'THE ANNUAL SHOW of the - Oshawa Junior Garden Club was held Saturday at the Chil- dren's Arena with a record gumber of exhibits on dis- . In the top picure Jane (left) points out one of the prize-winning exhibits to her sisters, Susan and Heath- er, daughters of Mr. and Mrs. 32 ON ROADS 37 Canadians Don Powell, 435 Rossmere. The bottom photo shows Mrs. Earle Sandford, chairman of the Junior Garden Club and Mrs. Evelyn Bennett, treasur- er of the Senior Garden Club, looking at one of the huge sunflowers that were on dis- play for the first time. --Oshawa Times Photos Split The Loot, Robinson 119 Choppy Waves, No Boy 111 onto boys were injured Sunday|been of infants under one year. LEAN MINCED * when they were thrown into the! air by an_¢xplosion in a test LEAN, TENDER Fiddiestick, Terry 118 Cartersville, Wolski 116 FIFTH RACE -- Brighton Plate Allow- said the tugboat went down 2-year-olds. 'ences. Purse $2500 for 6 Fur- longs. Chinese Girl, Remillard 107 Roman Scholar, No Boy (A)107 Buck's Nephew, Bohenko 110 Aged Dust, Waish X105 Ritter Von Kar, No Boy (A)114 Peacock Pike, Fitzsimmons 117 Robertson entry SECOND RACE -- Stokes. $2500 claim: Ing. 'Purse $1800 for 3-year-olds and up. Die On Weekend By THE CANADIAN PRESS Thirtytwo of the 37 acci- @ental deaths in Canada during the weekend occurred on the roads. Three persons were drownd and two died in fires. A Canadian Press survey from 6 p.m. Friday to midnight Sun- day local. times reported the highest toll was in Quebec: 11 road deaths, three drownings and one burned to death, Ontario had 13 traffic fatali- ties. Alberta reported two deaths on the highways and one by fire. British Columbia had two fatal accidents, both in traf- fic. Newfoundland, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and Manitoba had a single road death apiece. Prince Edward Island and Sas- katchewan reported no deaths during normal weekend activi- ties. * The survey does not include industrial accidents, known sui- cides or slayings. Ontario ead: : Bigger Budget For Canadian Olympic Team MONTREAL (CP)--A budget of $100,000 to send a Canadian Olympic team to the winter games in Innsbruck, Austria, SUNDAY Elmer Alfred Evers, 53, Tor- onto, when his car crashed into a cement railway abutment in Toronto. Kenneth Hotte, 22, Guy Molet, 21, and Jacques R. Grenier, 25, all of Welland, when their car missed a curve and struck a tree just west of Niagara Falls, Ont. George MacLean, 49, Price- ville, of injuries received Satur- day night after his car collided with a truck about 35 miles southwest of Owen Sound. Edward G, Graham, 51, a Lambeth carnival worker, when Randolph Keeshig, 39, and Mrs. Patrick McLeod, 33, both of Cape Croker, when the sta- tion wagon in which they were riding struck a tree near Owen Sound. Wayne Harvison, 16, Coniston, when the car in which he was riding overturned in Coniston. Henry Leuke, of Louisville, Ky., in a head-on collision on Highway 400 near Toronto. a tractor trailer in which he was sleeping overturned into a ditch about three miles west of St. Catharines. SATURDAY William White, 16, of the Six Nations Indian reserve, after being imjured in an accident near Brantford Friday night. George Longmire, 34, Walker- ton, and his daughter Patricia, four months, when their car col- lided with a truck near Walker- ton. was approved Sunday night by the directors of the Canadian Amateur Ski Association. The budget is the highest ever approved for a competitive echedule. The budget announcement was made after a two-day meeting of the directors attended by about 20 representatives from Canad a, "The total budget has tripled in three years and we consider) it a fair reflection of the grow- ing importance and develop- ment of the sport," said Presi- dent Rae Grinell of Manotick, Ont. EYE EXAMINATIONS PHONE 723-4191 by appointment F. R, BLACK, O.D. 136 SIMCOE 'ST. NORTH ASKS CLEMENCY CAIRO (AP)--Yemeni Presi- dent Abdullah Sallal has sent an appeal to Syria's strongman, Amin Hafez, to spare the lives of men to be tried for attempt- 'ng to overthrow Ba'athist re- gime in Syria. Those facing trial in Damascus are a group of for a 275 total, three strokes off ithe pace. January picked up $3,600 and Player $2,500. Al Balding.of Toronto won $700 when he fmished Sunday with a 74 for a total of 284. George Knudson of Toronto picked up $395 for his 286. Attache Case The young executive's leather attache case has its counter- part on the campus where a student finds that it helps or- ganize his papers, books and personal possessions. Slim and light, the attache case has an have accordion files in one sec- tion and a roomy compartment in the other. Leather brief bags and zippered envelopes also Rid On Campus': amazing capacity. Some cases|,_¢ putting troubles, had a 35-35--70|070" 6 riongs. Little Jony Bill, Fitzsimmons 112 Bright Circle, Harrison 108 Lively Music, Walsh X111 Paulpolly, Robinson 120 Hy Elector, Gubbins 113 Dark Jet, Walsh X111 Eternal Lock, Gubbins 110 Big Brown Eyes, No Bov 198 'rince Porter, Simpson X106 Remister, Fitzsimmons i. Simpaticon, No Boy 116 Dykebar Lad, Hale 116 THIRD RACE -- Baydrop. tongs. Wee M, McComb (A)116 Nik Page, Bohenko 109 Sterling Street, No Boy 106 Laskay Lad, No Boy (B)109 Hair Tearing, No Boy 106 Fairmagoria, No Boy 109 Myles Lad, Tawes (A)X104 eaves 0' Gold, Wolski 106 Star Task, Simpson X116 Summer Lea, And Artista, Dittfach 106 Cort Cindi, Dittfach 116 Also Eligible: Cai Jane Street, Robinson, 106. AA. B. Donov: Blackwell entry . Groves entry FOURTH RACE 2. up. 6% Furlongs. Time Clock, Walsh X113 Maidens. Purse $1900 for 3 and 4year-olds. 7 Fur- » Lebianc, 116; Good Old Jo, Simpson X101; High- land Hope, Walsh X101; Mary Frederick, Walsh, X108; Wanless, No Boy, (B)109% 'an and Mr. end Mrs. -- Cherryole. $2500) |claiming. Purse $1800 for 3-year-olds and Sarges Nob, Simpson X11 Cool Fool, Turcotte 114 Bashi Bazouk, No Boy 110 A--Stafford Farms entry (9). Muskeg, Turcotte 108 Quintan, McComb 114 werve, No Boy (A)112 ~ast Hurrah, No Boy (A)116 Windkin, 'Fitzsimmons 114 Croaten, Harrison 111 Indian Crossing, No 123 Jammed Lucky, Dittf m1 A-L. loney and QUINELLA Bi 'as! 2nd, Robinson Em"s Pride, Remillard 106 1 rn! Jamaruliah, No Boy 111 Chippawa Hill, No Boy 107 Own Colleen, Turcotte 107 BIGHTH RACE -- Brown Jack. and one-sixteenth Miles, Niagara Drift, Smith 116 Doo, Simpson X102 Jeannie Border Chief, Cormack 11 help keep a -student's papers and books at his fingertips in lecture section or laboratory. Favorite masculine colors in leather luggage include suntan, ginger and black -- both pol- ished and matte finished. This year, olive and ivy-colored lea- ther bags are making a smart appearance in ivy-colored halls. TITO TO VISIT JFK ZAGREB, Yugoslavia (AP)-- President Tito said Saturday he expects to meet President Ken- BRADFORD, England (AP) (AP)--Janet Blair, 14, crouched, too terrified to move, inside a blazing bonfire Sunday and died. She and three other chil- 3 Snow, Simpson X111 June's Choice, Walsh X108 Fire Horse, Dittfach 116 Fiddle Diddle, Harrison 116 Third Eye, Turcotie 117 'Gum Swamp, Leblanc 110 Deal Me Aces, Fitzsimmons 113 Phalamore, No Boy 113 Post Time 2 p.m. Clear end Fas? SIXTH RACE -- Yorktown Allowances. en eee ae up. 6 Fur- 3. W.. D. Latimer entry Ne INTH RACE -- Jewish Home for irse A--H. Waggoner and Wollow Down Farms entry - $2500 claiming. Purse $1900 for 3-year-olds. One born Ralph H. Nicholson, per- sonnel director of the Ontario Hydro-Electric Power Commis- sion, has been given a 12-month eave of absence to serve as public administration adviser for the United Nations in: Trini- dad and Tobago. Mr. Nicholson, who joined Hydro's personnel branch in 1955, will leave for the Caribbear later this month. Paul VI celebrated mass Sun- DAY OR NIGHT 723-3443 BONELESS BRISKET 29 39 woe ten He will be an adviser to the minister of finance. FREIGHT SETS RECORD OTTAWA (CP)--Freight mov- ing through Canadian canals in June reached a record total of; 10,150,049 tons, the bureau of statistics reported. The heavy SHORGAS HEATING & APPLIANCES Industrial and Commercial The established, reliable Gee Decler in your erec. 41 CELINA ST. » (Corner of Athol 728-9441 dren had made themselves a den underneath a 15-foot pile of wood, When it caught fire, three children got out unhurt. Janet, jee ye by the flames, stayed behind calling "I can't, I can't." Police said the fire children. may have been started by other nedy in Washington about the middle of next month. After al- most 10 hours at the Zagreb In- ternational Fair, Tito talked his plans. "I expect to be in Washington to meet with Presi- sometime between Oct. 15 and 20, after completing my visit to Mexico," he replied. Unionists accused of master- minding the recent abortive coup against the ruling Ba'ath- ist party. ' "KINDNESS BEYOND PRICE, YBLWITHIN REACH OF ALL" GERROW FUNERAL CHAPEL 390 King W. 728-6226 with reporters, who. asked about} dent Kennedy and in New York), Your Original CARPET CENTRE | CALL OR SEE DIXON'S FOR . OIL FURNACES SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS 24-HOUR SERVICE. 313 ALBERT ST. 723-4663 Over 50 Rolls of Carpet on Display Select from the largest display east of Toronto, e N-I-R-C 7 UCENSED CARPET CLEANING 128-4681 NU-W SAVIN Ask any member of we THE B YOU CAN'T MISS G WITH PSP Find saving difficult? Then PSP can help you. our'staff about PSP, the life-insured personal savings plan. ee Satie BANK ANK OF NOVA SCOTIA Ben Beiley To All Our Friends and Customers Announce The Sale of Their Business To CANADIAN FOOD PRODUCT SALES LIMITED In Oshawa and District! It is with much regret that we must say goodbye to all those wonderful people who have given us their patronage throughout the years. At this time we wish to express our sincere thanks for your splendid co-operation and loyalty since we first established our business known os "The Food Shop" in Oshawa 23 years ago. Only through your patronage could the business have grown with branch stores AS in Whitby, Ajax and the Oshawa Shopping Centre. The Canadian Food Products Sales Ltd. (The New Owners) are a large Can- edian Company and well-known throughout the province of Ontario, and you can be assured that they will carry on with the same high quality products that Bailey Foods have produced for so many years. In saying goodbye, it is our hope that the new owners will continue to merit your support. MR. & MRS. BEN BAILEY