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Oshawa Times (1958-), 10 Oct 1963, p. 3

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OSHAWA CIVIC AUDITORIUM PLANS ARE STUDIED tive at the Oshawa Golf Club. Members of the group seated, from left, are E. C. John- Plans and designs for the Oshawa Civic Auditorium were subjected to the exam- ination of experts here Wed- mesday when a _ group of arena managers from On- tario centres gathered with members of the local execu- ston, president, Ontario Arenas Association, manager of the Scarboro Arena; Harry Gay, chairman of the Civic Auditorium Building Commit- tee; Ron Simcoe, manager of the Oshawa Children's Arena and Clare Dahmer, manager of the Stamford Arena, Ni- agara Falls. Standing, from left, are T. V. Kelly, finance chairman of the Oshawa Civic Auditorium Commit- tee; Ray Trew, a member of the building committee; E. B. Bishop, manager of the Trea- sure Island Arena, London; Frank Westoby manager of the Dundas Arena and Wil- liam Kurelo, a member of the Oshawa Civic Auditorium Building Committee. --Oshawa Times Photo Today's Stock TORONTO 1) A.M. STOCKS By The Canadian Press Toronto Stock Exchange--Oct. 10 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. FOREIGN TRADING 100 625 625 6 620 Bethim Dicknsn Langis Siscoe Steep Rock Tek Corp Wiltsey Moore 75 475 475 +5 16¥a 164 1642-32 950 $52% 5244 52\4-- Ve INDUSTRIALS 11:00 Net Sales High Low a.m. Ch'ge Abitibi 1025 $492 4 Mat % Alta Gas pr Alta Gas w Alg Cen Algoma Alumini rg spr 2 60 $27% 27% 27%---- Ve $22% 22% 22% $24% 24% 24% 2 $55 55 SS 25 $107¥2 10712 1072 Sse Sw 5% too $9 40 8 225 $21¥2 220 $89Ve 1590 $622 390 $10% 250 $10%e 220 $52 1735 200 445 445 445 + 700 $8% 8% 8% 300 64 64 64 +4 zi 400 400 400 190 $16%. 16% 16% 428 $64 "Sve 64 OO 9% We M+ 215 $164 16% 6% 90S $33% 150 $28 250 $18% 100 450 210 $10154 10134 101% 860 $i ™% Thm" 100 $8% Bie 8% fa 22 2Ba-- Ve Ye 3a n 1% + Ve 1% 14 +% 53% Sza--% 210 $17% 17% 17% 100 $11% 11% 11% + Ve 25 $642 642 6412 100 $15¥2 15¥2 15+ Ve 225 $15% 15% 15% 200 $17% 17% 17% 525 $2014 20% 20% 225 $10% 10% 10% 7 $50% 50 S0l2-- % 105 $19% 19% 19% -- 875 $23% 23% 23% 250 $232 23%2 '23¥a 25 Pail 462 4% "0 180 1a ia 44 $13 13 13 +% $6014 60% 604+ % $27 26% 27 $6 6 6 $96 95 = (1% pH ay 16%e 16% 205 205 Hard Carp Hawker S . peng ae Hay it! Horne"Pf --0 HBC hate 4% + % $68 68 $6% $i4% 2 --% Py +6 6144-- V2 65% -- Ve 492 49a + Ve tas" 185 bs 2 $8434 | 48% tes -- 900 350 oo es 140 $53 300 200 "% cn Sh att 330 «330 $10% 10% 10% 255 255 255 $16%2 16% 164--V $13% 13% 13% + Ve 345 340 340 +20 430 $214 21Ve 21-- Ye $124 125% 12% 2730 $7%% 7% 7% $% 8 e+ % $04 M4 at % $31% 31% 3134 $33%4 33% 33% $195 19% 1912-- ve $25%e 25 2 $4 4 My 386 $15%e 15% 15% 1103109, 109 109 + Ws 54 52e-- V2 16% 16% 284 2B + 14% 1 200 1300 Ws 50 50 650 200 000 ag a ve +25 $13%6 13% 13+ % 400 $19%% 19% 19% -- $e Th MM $10% 10% e+ vw 160 160 160 +10 164% $36 erin 3113 1000 415 415 415 5 235 92 Mh 4 1 $7 Me 7--% 100 --15 25 Reitmn Axd baghen od Nodwell 00 40 400 Rothman 38% 8% 8% 275 $75 75) «75 Ye} Stock Thom Pap 100 TFinA 275 Tr Can PL 1255 Trans Mt 420 Turnbull 125 Union Acc 230 Un Gas 385 U Corp B Walk GW W Pacific Weston A West A whe Woodwd A Zellers Zenith 2105 440 445 75 $6 $11" $3414 $154 6 nw 33% 15% n% % 20% Ya 27V2 $56%4 56% 56% 7 10% 4 18% 16% 825 $21% 21% OILS 2000 500 Teck Corp 2611 Trans Can 100 Union Oii 100 Unispher 1000 Un Olis W Decaita 525 Area Arion A Arcadia Aunor Bankeno Bethim Bibis Black Bay Bouzan Bralorne Brunswk Buff Ank Buff RL Camflo Camp Chib C Astoria Cdn NW $500 2000 14000 200 900 500 C Silica Candore Cariboo Cassiar Cent Pat Chib Kay Chimo Coch Will C Beliek Cc Callinen Con Gillies ¢ Marcus ¢ Mogul C Mosher Cin Negus C Red Pop Cop Man Craigmt Croinor Deer Horn Denison e Donaida East Mal Geco Mine 264 Giant YK 500 G F Mining a Granduc Gunnar Har Min Headway High Bell Hollinger Hud Bay Iso Jacobus Joutel Keeley F Kenville Kerr Add Kirk Town 3000 Lab Min 100 L Dofauit Leitch LL Lac 1600 Macassa 500 Madsen 1200 Manoka MS 2125 Marchant 12! Marcon Maritime Martin Mattgm! Maybrun Merrill Min Corp Muiti M Murray M Nama Cr Nealon New Ath Newconex New Hosco 1600 Newnor New Rouyn 5000 N Senator Norlartic Norlex N Bordu North Can Northgate Norvalie Opemiska Parmagq Patino Pax int Ppeeriess Preston Purdex Quemont Radiore Rio Algom Rockwin 1000 Ryanor 500 Salem 1066 Satellite 5500 Sherritt 605 29200 250 15200 2000 500 1000 100 200 2000 2300 7000 300 1000 400 102 '39 5500 11000 42 Ms 3 63 850 $19% 19% 04 +) 1200 1: 4 100 6) 6 $10% 10% Ws 5 44 4% TES. 415 415 8 8 13 $19% 1% 2 19% 15Va $1i% 11% ll*+ % 284 -- Ve $2B% 28% uo 210 205 $292 29% $11%4 11% 16Va 16¥e 445 440 835 835 9 9 20 2 330 325 $27% 27% = 55¥2 Ww 142 20 6 650 aif 800 200 153 300 1 7 9 3% 8% Asia 4s 3 a 101 " 19 w m6 NS 21 W444 2% bf 100 360 360 360 202 155700 500 1000 7 2 150 150 360- Va 825 825 WA 680 675 680 1% 18% B2-- ve 20 20% 4 «(13% 11:00 Net Sales High Low a.m. Ch'ge 6 +% uW% 33% -- Va %!| 15M 1% -- 1% -- %| 20% + Ve! 27 7% 10% 18% 16% 825 21%-- 44 = ze Nipigon street, told police an-| oo 10% ns id % --2 45 nv Wa--t 19% 16 " 205 --S 29a VaVe% + 16¥a--1 445. +5 835 +5 2 325 --25 27% -- 55¥a 7 1 $344 bata 34a Ve 790 800 '--5 n + % > 16 +1 20 20¥2--~ Va --0 2 190 1 360 360 2 Vat 825 u +5 20a 550 945 945 945 --§ 000 9 9 9 400 $11%4 11% lle + 6 6 SHS 1900 $14% 14% 14% 3 3 2B 124 12% 124+ ve 2 0 @ , "4 400 279 279 2799 --1 "% $35%4 35% 354--% 300 500 500 500 +5 "a Royal Bank Salada 1035 $11% 11% 11% 100 310 310 310 --5 230 $17%4 17% Bg +" 25 $277 7 --% 250 as 625 Ff "phd 36% 362 200 400 465 tne 22 22% 1%) 100 $26 2% 1400 175 (175 214 352% 52% % +h NEED AN OIL FURNACE .. cau PERRY OAY OR NIGHT 723-3443 | --%! CITY AND DISTRICT Eight ¥ Tears TORONTO (CP) -- Edward Frances Patricks, 35, of Windsor, convicted last June of atmed rebbery and assault in connection with a bank holdup at St. Thomas had his Bs ea Wesabe OF years tario Court of Appeal. Judge J. F. McMillan had failed to consider properly Patricks' criminal , which con- tained 14 convictions -- includ- jing armed robbery, carrying an offensive weapon and escaping cust 'ody. Patricks ae be oA --_ of taking pai a two- 7 robbery Nov. 27, Gordon Roger' Archibald, 41, also of Windsor, who was arrested by an armed assistant cg sentenced to five. years. The armed, masked men herded the staff into the bank vault and stole $2,116. Terminate Inquest Into Woman's Death TORONTO (CP)--An inquest into the death of a 63-year-old Toronto woman who died of can- cer last August will not be re- sumed. An Ontario Supreme Court or- der halted proceedings last week when counsel for the dead woman's physician objected to its continuation. Reason for the halt was that the chief coroner for Metropoli- tan Toronto, Dr. Morton B. Shulman, did not receive writ- $700 DAMAGT A two-car collision Saturday,| at the corner of King street} east and Harmony road, result-) ed in damage totalling $425.) Drivers of the cars were James| |Hutton, 128 Codsell avenue, Downsview and Donald Good-| fellow, of RR 4, Oshawa. Dam-| age to Goodfellow's car was es-| timated at $275. | HIT-AND-RUN | A hit-and-run accident was} reported Wednesday evening at the corner of Adelaide avenue Roman Baluszeck, 18, of 388) other car hit his automobile and| then drove away. Damage was estimated at $75, COLUMBUS DAY MESSAGE Anthony Meringer, Grand Knight of Oshawa Council, No. 2671, Knights of Columbus, has a d that a Columbus Day Address by Supreme Knight Luke E. Hart, head of the million-member fraternal bene- fit society of Catholic men, will be broadcast at 10.15 a.m., Oct. 12, over CKLB. Mr. Hart, who has been a member of the Supreme Board of Directors of | | ADVERTISING CLASSIFIED ADS (Continued from Page 20) 36--Legal 1 will not be responsible for any debts contracted in my name, on or after this date, October 9, 1963, by anyone, without my written consent, -- Eric A. Gardner, "9 79 Lloyd -- Street, Oshawa, _Ontario, TENDER Sealed Tenders will be re- ceived by the undersigned up until 5 p.m., October 17 and Simcoe street north. Nick} the organization since 1918 and has held the: office of Supreme Knight since 1953, initiated many of the society's major projects. The theme of Mr. Hart's Columbus Day Address _ is "Christopher Columbus -- The Man, his Message and his Chal- lenge." It will be, heard over radio stations in all the coun- tries where the Knights have |Councils -- the United States, j\Canada, Mexico, Puerto Rico, land the. Philippines, CORRECTION The story appearing in Mon- day's edition concerning the den-warming at Camp Samac |Saturday incorrectly named the group as the 8th Oshawa Sea Scout Group, Ted Friend and Rover Crew instead of the 8th Oshawa Ted Friend Sea Rover Crew. ten instruction from the attor- ney-general to take over the in- vestigation started by Coroner Dr. Donald Bunt. The physician, Dr. Thomas J. Glover, was chief witness when the inquest opened Sept. 3. Dr. Bunt, who sought legal ad- vice, said Wednesday he had de- cided against reopening the case. "WE are forwarding the in- vestigation's findings to the ap- propriate authorities," said Dr. Bunt. Two Toronto Boards Feud Over Costs TORONTO (CP)--All-out war was apparently declared Wed- Adventists Name Change Passes Hurdle OTTAWA (CP) -- The Senate gave second reading--approval in. principle--Tuesday to a bill]: affecting the 15,000 Seventh-day les Adventists in Canada. The bill would change the name of the Protestant denomi- nation to Seventh-day Adventist Church in Canada from the Ca- nadian Union Conference Cor- poration of Seventh-day Adven- tists, The bill's: sponsor, Senator David Croll (L--Ontario), said the group's present name was being dropped because it was too cumbersome. nesday between the city's board of control and its board of edu- cation. The aroused controllers voted 4 to 1 to take their dispute with the trustees to Education Min- ister William Davis and, if pos- sible, into the courts and to the Ontario Municipal Board. The hostilities started after a long series of incidents in re- cent years involving finances between the two municipal bod- The last straw came with a recent report by the city audi- tor which accused school board Officials of overspending some accounts by $1,410,494 last year. | School Trustee Evaleen Bar- ker wrote to the controllers that the "purport" of the audi- tor's report was not clear and, contrary to a previous agree- ment, the school board 'will not be reporting to the board of cortrol" at present about the matter for the demolition of a house at 33 Bagot Street in Oshawa. Oshawa Public Utilities Commission, 100 Simcoe Street South, Oshawa. NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE ESTATE OF DAVID MITCHELL Creditors of the deceased, who died at Oshawa Ontario, July 18, 1963, are request- ed to send particulars of their claims to the under- signed on or before October 24th, 1963, after which dote the estate will be distributed. DATED at Oshawa, this 23rd day of September, A.D, 1963, ANNIE STEVENS, ADMINISTRATRIX By her solicitors PARKHILL & YANCH 8 Simcoe Street South Oshawa, Ont. Silvmagq Siscoe Steep R Sullivan Tormont Trans Res 5000 Tribag = + % +% -1 530 --20 +1 50 15 1 5 4100 at 224 2255+ 2000 8 8 3000 West Mines 550 mn Wiliroy Windfall Wr Harg Yk Bear 6 390 148 4" 78 107 3990S 148 100 107 107 +2 Sales to 11 a.m.: 868,0°° "KINDNESS BEYOND PRICE, YET WITHIN REACH OF ALL" GERROW FUNERAL CHAPEL 390 King W. 728-6226 i 1 | | | | WOODBINE ENTRIES FRIDAY, O1 FIRST RACE -- Spearhead, maidens (foaled In Canada). Purse $2200 for 2- year-olds, 1 mile and 70 yards, Xalapa Curry, Simpson 118 Callaround, No Boy 118 Mr. Bellachop, Terry 118 Round Syn, Dittfach 115 Farison, Turcotte 118 Good Ovation, No Boy 118 Guest Speaker, Potts 118 SECOND RACE -- Runall, allowances. Purse $2600 for 2-year-olds. About 1 mile (turf course). Brilliant Needle, Armstrong (A)119 Queen's Law, Fitzsimmons 109 Fairmar, Potts 115 Stalwart, Turcotte (B)112 Rustic Gentleman, Turcotte (B)112 Forest Rover, No Boy 116 Snow Candy, Dittfach 115 Abitibi, Armstrong (A)112 Pink Jewel, Walsh XX105 A--F. A. Sherman entry B--Windfields Farm entry THIRD RACE--Falcade, $3500, Claim- ing. Purse $1900 for 3-year-olds, 5 fur- longs. Itulyarso, Dittfach 108 Molly Brown, Lanoway 112 June's Choice, Nash 112 Parkside Drive, Potts 117 Janhill, Harrison 109 Ms Dear, Armstrong 114 'ough Kennamon, Fitzsimmons 118 Filan Floyd, Walsh XX105 FOURTH RACE -- Race King, $2500. Claiming. Purse $1900 for 3 and 4-year- olds, 1 1-16 miles (foaled In Canada). Bive Shutter, Fitzsimmons 108 Wellington Whiz, No Boy 111 Leton, Turcotte 118 Phalamore, Potts 112 Stromaway, Hale 113 Hair Tearing, No Boy 118 Censorial, Cormack 111 Lichee Nut, Dittfach 118 The Avenue, Walsh X111 FIFTH RACE -- Thunderclap, $7500. Claiming. Purse $2400 for 3-year-olds and up, 1 1-16 mfiiles. Bradbury, Potts 119 Acouchi, Walsh X113 Ramsay 2nd, No Boy (A)16 SHORGAS HEATING & | APPLIANCES Industrial and Commercial The established, reliable Gas Dealer in your area. 31 CELINA ST. (Corner of Athol) 728-9441 ry CT. 1, 1963 Bala Roman, Fitzsimmons 118 Quintain, Rasmussen 113 impresionante, No {A)11 A--Gardiner Farms and Hillcrest Stables Ltd. entry QUINELLA BETTING SIXTH RACE -- Lord Nelson Allow- polka Purse $2800 for 3-year-olds, 6¥% fur- longs. E. Day, No Boy 1 singe Bubi, Ditviach 109 Easy Going, No Boy 116 Breezy Answer, Turcotte 106 Fifinella, Robinson 106 Swerve, Fitzsimmons 116 SEVENTH RACE -- Golden Prince, Allowance (foaled in Canada). Purse $2900 for 3-year-olds and up. About 1 1-16 miles (turf course). Hop Hop, oul n3 Galino, No Boy 121 Mystery. Guest, Rasmussen 114 Chippawa Hill, Walsh X107 Peter's Chop, Dittfach 115 Blue Light, No Boy 121 dammed Lucky, Robinson 121 Mornins' Mornin, No Boy 117 EIGHTH RACE -- Voiter, $6000 claim- Ing. Purse $2300 for 3-year-olds. About 1 mile (turf course). Tipont, Robinson 123 Dalarco, Harrison (A)107 Gay Jive, Hernandez Z114 Johnsal, Turcotte 117 Klondyke Lil, hdd log' me Free Trial, Mesto W4 Navarro, No Boy (A)110 Thule, Walsh X115 Z--3 Ibs. allowance, Awe, te Jensen and J, B. Azanza Post. TIME 2 P.M. CLEAR AND FAST minutes after the robbery, was| : A siren wails in the distance | and most people stop for a moment to wonder what cond be happening. This week, Fire Prevention Week, sirens wail- ed within a few feet of al- most every school in Oshawa, These kindergarten pupils at Gertrude Colpus Public School discovered, as did hundreds SIRENS EMPHASIZE FIRE PREVENTION MESSAGE of other school children, that the sirens added @ touch of realism {to routine fire drills. This represents one part of the Fire Prevention Week gram being carried out by the = Oshawa Fire Department. . ae Dee SRE ee se ee eee eee eee eee --Oshawa Times: 70 Cuts Found On Murdered Taxi-Driver TORONTO (CP) -- The pre- iminary hearing of capital mur- der charges against a Toronto separate school teacher and his wife was told Wednesday that about 70 cuts covered the body of taxi-driver Michael Wurtz, 40, who died last month from fractured skull and two deep stab wounds in his chest and back. John Garbella, 29, and his wife, Mary, 27 parents of two small children, are accused of the Sept. 10 slaying. It is the first case in Toronto in which a husband and wife are charged with a single murder. Police found the wounded cab- bie at the foot of a flight of stairs leading to the Garbellas' flat. The taxi-driver was sep- arated from his wife who is ex- pecting her fourth child in Jan- uary. Const, James Paton told the CLAREMONT -- Righthander Bob Carlisle unleashed a power- ful home-run blast into right- centre field to give Pickering "Beavers" a 1-0 lead in games over Claremont in the Com- munity League finals Tuesday night at Claremont Park. Carlisle's drive came in the top of the eighth inning with one man on base and the score standing at 3-3. Claremont scored once in the bottom of the eighth and Pickering counted again in the ninth to end the game 6-4. Carlisle collected a single in addition to his home-run. Bob Moffat and Bill Moffatt each belted doubles. First-baseman Larry Vernon was Claremont's top batter with two singles and a double. frank Hendy. clouted two doubles. Gord McDowell hit a double and Ken McIntosh, Beavers Lead Series © Via Hurler's Homer Bruce, Al, and Ted Redshaw each coljected safeties. EARLY LEAD Pickering took a 2-0 lead in the first frame on two walks and an error. In the third inning they scored one on a walk and a hit, Claremont tied the game with two runs in the sixth and one in the seventh to set the stage for Carlisle's game-win-| w ning home run. Although he allowed only four hits righthander Frank Hendy was charged with the loss. He fanned eleven batters but gave up six walks. Bob Carlisle was the winner although he was replaced in the eighth by Earl Robinson. Car- lisle chalked up 12-strikeouts in seven and one-third frames and gave up nine hits while walking one. Robinson allowed one hit and fanne dthree in one andtwo- thirds inings. hearing that Wurtz's shirt was soaked in blood, a broken clothes iron was at his feet and a blade broken off a knife was found at the top of the stairs. Wurtz died in hospital soon after, The hearing was adjourned until Tuesday for further testi- mony. Outer Space Gave Sudbury Nickel Deposit OTTAWA (CP) -- A promin- ent United States geologist pro- posed here Wednesday that the millions of tons of nickel, cop- per, sulphur and iron which have been mined in the Sudbury area came from outer space. This proposition was placed before the annual meeting of the meteoritical society by Dr. R. S. Dietz of the United States coast and geodetic survey in Washington. The society is an international organization which is studying meteorites and ora- ters believed caused by meteor- ites on both the earth and the moon, Dr. Dietz said the huge de- posit of copper-rich nickeél-iron sulphide ore in the Sudbury dis- trict probably was contained in a massive meteorite which plunged to earth some 1,700,- 000,000 years ago, This new theory of the origin of the world's richest nickel de- posit is not supported by the CALEDON, Ont. (CP) -- The gently rolling: Conn Smythe fields, which tested Canada's best plowmen Wednesday, get a sterner test today as 33 of the world's top plow handlers try for the world championship. Eighteen nations are repre- sented in the annual world event, a two-day affair. The contestants have been quietly practising the last three days on back plots of the 1,500- acre farm, which nestles among the Caledon Hills 35 miles north- west of Toronto. Today's competition involves a surface of sod. Friday's will be stubble. The competitor who turns the neatest furrows in the two days, using tractor and plow, will be named winner late Friday, A 47 ~ year - old grandfather from Prince Edward Island was declared Canadian plowing champion Wednesday, beating out 13 other contestants from seven provinces. Stanley Willis, who runs a 70- acre mixed farm near Corn- wall, P.E.1., won the silver plow trophy on his fourth try. He had competed in three previous Ca- nadian championships, and att to Ohio. in 1957 with the Canadian team for the world P.E.I. Plowman Canadian Champ championship when he placed third that year in Canada. Mr. Willis will head the Ca- nadian team in the 1964 world contest in Austria. His team- mate will be runner-up William Hostrawser, 33-year-old dairy farmer from Malton, Ont. Joseph Tolbert Trimble, 56, of Portage la Prairie, Man., a far- mer, undertaker and merchant, and Grant Elmer Wells, 33, of Stouffville, Ont., a dairy far- mer, will carry Canada's ban- ner 'in the world championship matches today. The Barr brothers of North- ern Ireland are also seen as strong contenders. Team mana- ger Hugh Barr, 37, of Curragh, youngest of the three, captured the world crown three times in ssel Shortstop Bruce Redshaw ' tured in a fine game defensive- ly for Claremont. Pickering shortstop Bob Douglas made a.. good play for the final out of the game. The ball bounced off '* third baseman Dave Britton's glove and Douglas recovered it. "" Pickering committed two CRED sy and the losers made one. Pickering eftfielder Weyee :" Wells was ejected from the game in the ninth inning by ~ plate umpire Glen Byer for throwing his bat after a third - strike call. Cliff Dunkeld was the base umpire. The secona of five set will Pickering. me me of the best be played at >a JAIL TWO SWISS EAST BERLIN (Reuters) -- *' An East Berlin court Tuesday = sentenced two Swiss to impris- onment on charges of attempt. "" ing to take an East German re- fugee to West Berlin, court sources here said. The sources said East German defence coun- " sel will appeal against the two ~ year sentence given Rouaig" Sonderegger, 25. Peter Bach- mann, about the same age, was ~ given the 15-month sentence ae an accessor, Thomson Kernaghan & Go, MEMBERS OF THE TORONTO STOCK EXCHANGE OPERATING peace LINE TORONTO-MONTREAL ontario 725-1104 Street Level Entrance RES. MGR. ERIC R. HENRY 725-4305 succession in 1954-55-56. It was his own suggestion to the World Plowmen's. Associa- tion rules committee that no contestant be allowed to win the championship more than three DID YOU KNOW? times. NEW HOME SPECIALISTS That Our Services Inc --- Carpet Soles os Sea Rugs gt ye Cleaning Fringing « Binding = Serging end Geological Survey of Canada, a branch of the federal mines and technical surveys department. Officials of the Survey believe that the Sudbury ore deposits came from the mantle of the earth below the earth's 20-mile FUEL OIL Ss" automatic delivery our metered trucks Phone DX OIL CO. 668-3341 deep crust, IMA Reel Estate Lid. . TRADES ACCEPTED 728-6286 323 King St. W. Ge EE tage ng co Re-Upholes FOR FURTHER INFORMATION 728-4681-2-8 NU-WAY RUG OSHAWA LTD. 174 MARY ST, -- OSHAWA LOW AIR FARES "° BRITAIN ano 4' EUROPE! 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