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Oshawa Times (1958-), 13 Apr 1964, p. 2

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2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, April 13, 1964 GO : -- By JACK GEARIN -- OD EVENING 'Ottawa Ponders Marathon Debate KIWANIS RADIO AUCTION WEDNESDAY NIGHT It happens every Spring about this time -- the Kiwanis Club of Oshawa holds its Radio Auction. . The date is next Wednesday, April 15th. : Don't forget it -- local Kiwanians deserve the sup- port of the community be- cause~of their various pro- jects. This is a chance for citizens to show their apprec- fation, The Kiwanians, like so OTTAWA (OP)--After 16 days of parliamentary slogging to pass $240,800,000 worth of ap- propriations for the last fiscal year, Commons sources are speculating on what really it was all about, The . year-end appropriations normally take two days of the House's time, though two years ago when an election was immi- nent and every item had the makings of a hot political issue, the time stretched to eight days. Why should it take 16° days this year? What does this mean for the future? night when Opposition Leader Diefenbaker made reference to charges that the Conservatives were practising obstruction. iHAVE A RIGHT | 'We have a right to informa- |tion, and we have not been able to get information,"' he said. "Complaint is made. . . that we have been obstructing the business of the House. We have been doing nothing of the kind." Then he noted that there were reports being spread around parliamentary corridors that the long time spent on the approp- INTERPRETING THE NEWS LONDON (AP)--The ghosts of Suez have risen again to haunt Britain's thin line across the! Middle East. Two weeks ago British planes shattered a mud-walled fort in the Arabian Desert, retaliating against Yemeni forays. As a re- sult Arabs arraigned Britain in the United Nations Security Council on charges of launch- ing 'ta barbaric attack' and killing civilians. They de- manded that Britain quit its Suez Skeletons Haunt UK Agai agreements are considered have been inspired by Nass Accordingly, the British ex pect Cairo will seek to mobili: pan-Arabian passions against continued British presence in the whole region. If he achieves this, London reckons it will en- able him to pose as a champion of Arab and African national- ism. Different Arab governments and people view these matters differently. New countries which have shed their colonial status re- gard foreign military bases as many in Oshawa's service club world, do their share to make this a better commun- Some insight into the situation|Tiations might prompt the Gov- was given in the Commons dur-|ernment to call a snap general ing a brief exchange Friday|¢lection, hoping to come out of it with a comfortable working Aden base. President Makarios last week- end acted to caticel the Cypriot- Turkish - Greek alliance. The ity in which to live, with em- phasis on projects for boys and girls. Their most publicized work, of course, is their an- nual Summer Camp at Ked- ron for children, operative for 30 years--vacations have thus been provided for more than 7,000 children. In addition, they have been instrumental in teaching more than 2,000 children the whys and wherefores of Water Safety (many of whom have been -successful in completing Red Cross courses). Oshawa Kiwanians are also the originators and sponsors of a weekly social event known as the Saturday Night 'Get', regarded as the most-successful teen-age dance locally. The club has sponsored hockey and softball teams in minor leagues. The club was founded in 1929, A. J. Parkhill \peing the first chartered president -- it has 125 members furrently. Reginald Lancaster is president. : REGINALD LANCASTER LITTLE NOTES FROM HERE AND THERE Did you know that net receipt for 1963 of the Oshawa Civic ambulance service (only such service in the city). total- fed $12,421 and that total operating costs, less wages, were $3,771. The service had a total of 1827 calls last year -- on occasion, both of the two ambulances were out at one time; on 14 occasions both the ambulances and the station wagon were on call at the same time. This is why a third am- bulance will be purchased . . . Workmen will be busy this week erecting a high wire fence around a section of . the east side of the Oshawa Harbor as the marine season gets under way in full swing. MORE NOTES ON THE WARD SYSTEM One of the prime criticisms of the Ward system in Osh- awa, prior to its ejection by a small majority of the elec- torate in 1932 (by 765 votes), was that it tended to make elected representatives on Council too "parochial" in their outlaok.. Instead of taking the over-all look at the City's problems, said the critics, these alderman took the regional look, with the result that major municipal problems were in danger of being sidetracked. There was another prime concern of many taxpayers in the 1932 era -- Oshawa was faced with grave financial prob- lems brought about by depression. The feeling with these people was that Council's membership should at least be dom- inated by hard-headed businessmen capable of making intelli- gent decisions to get the City out. of its grave financial dilemma. The feeling against the Ward system locally was still strong in 1937, five years after it was abolished, so strong that it was again rejected by the electorate, this time more overwhelmingly 4,259 to 1,413. There is ample evidence of the Ward system's unpopular- ity at that time, especially in the editorial columns of The Oshawa Daily Times which harped away constantly, and effectively, against it. The city-wide vote system may have been more advan- tageous for Oshawa in the 1930's for a solution of municipal problems peculiar to that period; but there is no reason to believe that it is the better system today, when Oshawa has new problems produced by a rapidly expanding population and economy. It is all well and good for some to charge that the Ward system produces too much "'parochialism'" in our elected representatives, but isn't this one of the qualities that still predominated today on Council after 32 years of the city- wide vote system? It is folly to believe that the latter auto- matically eliminates "parochialism", but it did encourage a far more dangerous type of "parochialism". It is a "paro- chialism" that excludes great masses of the population, such as in Apple Hill, or Lake Vista to the southwest (growing communities sadly.in need of an influential voice at City Hall). What was good for Oshawa 32 years ago is not necessar- ily what is good for Oshawa today. Times do change. Apple Hill and Lake Vista, to name two areas, have long had inadequate representation, or no representation at all at City Hall, A close study of the A--H assessment structure, in comparison with that of more preferred above-King resi- dential areas, should convince any impartial observer of that. LITTLE NOTES FROM HERE AND THERE Mr, and Mrs. Ronald Magrath of 405 Fairview drive, Whitby, had a close brush with death last Tuesday in New York when a Jet airliner with 143 aboard bounced into a swamp and cracked "open like a boiled egg' while trying to land in a fog. There were no fatalities and the Magraths were not seriously injured. . . . Oshawa Naval Veterans As- sociation will open its new clubhouse on Viola street May 20. Five Perish In Winnipeg Flat Blaze |majority. | It was, in fact, reported that jon Wednesday when the Lib |erals met on the anniversary of the. 1963 general election for their regular weekly caucus, ithere was talk of a spring 1064 lelection. But the sources who jgave out this report made it |clear that the discussion merely |canvassed the subject and didn't ng. WINNIPEG (CP)--A woman come near a conclusion. and four children died in a Sun-| after they arrived. |lives of Mrs. Irene Nekwinda,|which had only a cursory ex- |30, her son Michael, 6, and two/amination by Parliament before |daughters, Susan, 4 and Louise,/the end of the last session in 3. the pre-Christmas rush. |ocnath-old deushter tt ince | WOULDN'T. CONSENT |Carol Quickfall. | The fire swept the second-|\Weekend when, because floor Quickfali bedroom.| formal decision hadn't been |Fumes, smoke and heat from|'aken earlier, the House found lthe blaze apparently caused the| itself called into session on Good death of the sleoping' Nekwinda| Friday beause Terry Nugent family in the top floor of the|(PC -- Edmonton Strathcona) three-storey frame building. |wouldn't. give unanimous con- Mrs. Quickfall was taken to|sent to an adjournment under hospital with minor burns, An-|the pressure of work. The gov- other daughter, Kimberley, 2,/ernmment counts that day, when was also injured. She was re-|in fact nothing was done, as a ported in good Condition in hos-/day devoted to the appropria- pital. \tions. Fire Chief Dave Dunnett said) During Easter Week when he believed faulty electrical|Parliament would normally wiring caused the blaze in the|have been in recess, the Conser- central Winnipeg building which | vatives showed signs of willing contained several living units. |ness to move along but an NDP Husband of the dead woman|triumvirate, led by Frank How- was reported to be in Thomp-jard (Skeena), began bearing son, Man., 400 miles north of down on the money votes. here. Subsequently the government The fire raised the fire death|found that nearly every item be- toll in Manitoba since Christ-|came the vehicle for debate on jmas to at least 27. 'controversial subjects. LB Praises Khrushchev's Try To Preserve Peace -- WASHINGTON (AP) -- Presi-,the absence of a vice-president, ident Johnson said Saturday So-|and a multitude of foreign pol-| jviet Premier Khrushchev iSlicy problems, he does not plan serv: ce in ' pogo db soem ct ca that,|t0 leave the continental United so long as Khrushchev '"talks|S!ates this year. in peaceful terms, he will al-| The only things that could |ways have our ear." take him abroad, he said, would be an unforeseen emergency or This was Johnson's response, |(.~ : at another unannounced Safur-| S0me feeling that great ad- day press conference, to a re.| Vaoces could be made. quest for comment on Khrush-| This did, however, leave the chev's recent kind words about : 1 the American president and 1964 summit meeting. State Secretary Dean Rusk Aides said that in his re- | "T am glad to see," said John-|sponse about Khrushchev, John- son, "that Mr. Khrushchey is|Son was not trying to get into playing the role of peace and the Sino-Soviet dispute on Mos- seeking to preserve peace in the|cow's side. The Kremlin ac- world. That certainly is the de-|cuses the Chinese of advocating sire of this country. When he|nuclear war instead of Khrush- talks in peaceful terms, he will/chev's 'peaceful co-existence." always have our ear." Myre ere eae at At the same time, the presi- JAILS SOCIALIST dent gave scant encouragement) LUCKNOW, India (AP)--The to any who would call for an Uttar Pradesh legislature sen- early summit meeting. tenced Keshav Singh of the op- . a, position socialists to seven days NO TRIPS PLANNED fn jail for contempt of its Johnson said that because of| speaker. The socialist protested the November, U.S. presidential|that only a court can give a election, his newness in office,|jail sentence | . | WEATHER FORECAST | Thundershowers, Turning Cooler Forecasts issued by the Tor-)Wingham onto weather office at 5:30 a.m./Hamilton . Synopsis: A shift to cooler|St. Catharines. northwesterly winds tonight will/Toronto give partly cloudy skies and/Peterborough . _ temperatures some 10 to 15 de- Trenton grees cooler on Tuesday. Killaloe | Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Muskoka . Lake Huron, Georgian Bay,|North Bay. |Windsor, London: Tuesday var- Sudbury .. The Conservatives started the) }day tenement fire brought under|close examination of the year- jcontrol by firemen 15 minutes|end appropriations three weeks) ; ago, noting that they applied| Priots 'paraded in stre | The pre-dawn blaze took the|to departments of government| Nicosia yesterday urging the Then came the tangled Easter| re | al ~ |rying arms to the Greek-Cyp- Thousands of Greek Cy- ets of | recall to Cyprus of former KYRENIA, Cyprus (CP)--} Troops of Canada's Royal 22nd} Regiment continued Sunday to| try to bring about a truce be-| tween Greek- and Turkish-Cyp-| riots firing at one another| throughout the weekend in the| Kyrenia mountain range, 30) miles north of Nicosia. There were no Canadian cas- ualties as 2nd Lieut. Pierre} Gadbois of Montreal led a pa-| trol up to the firing sites at| ish-Cypriots ceased fire whne| the Canadian patrol appeared but resumed shortly after. | Lt.-Col. Andrew Woodcock of} |Sarnia, commander of the} | Royal 22nd Regiment, described/10 families live, jthe encounter as "the most vio-|were fired at us jlent clash between Greek- and/said. Turkish-Cypriots since the arri-| |val of United Nations forces."'|Greek- or T Operating from a base estab-| lished at the foot of the Kyre-| nia mountains, the Royal 22nd) ipatrols went to the top of the mountains twice Saturday and lonce Sunday. ¢ "It's becoming a little more nerve-racking," Lieut. Gadbois \said after the third patrol. Ma- chine-guns fired towards the Ca-| nadian troops twice early Sun-| |day. USED HELICOPTER GREEK CYPRIOTS URGE LEADER'S RECALL Eoka underground leader George Grivas, President Ma- karios and Grivas conferred in Athens. Later, as announced in Greek Cypriot press, Makar move chilled London with the fear that Makarios eventually will scrap a treaty which lets British troops and H-bombers base in the island. | The kingdom of Libya will ask Britain April 20 formally to withdraw troop and air bases from the country. This would bar the Middle East for British ios proposed to bring back | Grivas to head the Greek | Cypriot National Guard. (AP | Wirephoto via cable from Nicosia) : n Doos Continue Cyprus Truce Bid Firing resumed in the same area Sunday morning. Lieut. Gadbois rode up a mountain road in a jeep. Maj. Patrick Tremblay of Chicoutimi, Que., commanding the Royal 22nd Company which provided the patrols, said the \helicopters are being used only} Lieut. |for "very serious incidents."' 'went to the Greek-Cypriot posi- FIRE WAS HEAVY "Our patrol didn't climb three different times during the|Tight to the summit: Sunday be-| weekend. The Greek- and Turk-|Cause the exchange of fire was| too heavy," said Lieut. Gad- bois. |~ At one stage during. Sunday's|a patrolling, he said, his detach- ment was near a house in which "Ten rounds there," Canadians going to any urkish-Cypriot en- campment carry a large United Nations flag, but officers ex- plain that the combatants hid- den behind rocks often don't no- tice the flag before opening fire. Cpl. Ernest Babcock of Sack- ville, N.B., said he saw bullets hitting the -ground near both Saturday and Sunday, "We didn't fire back,' corporal said, "because " At Peking Reds Again |saw hitting the ground had ric- ocheted from somewhere." | |"they don't start firing during the night." Until now all action |has been in daylight. ISAW GREEKS FIRST | After Saturday's patrolling, Gadbois said he first jtions in the morning. "In the afternoon we went to jthe Turkish - Cypriot encamp- ment where we were greeted by |a lieutenant, and firing ceased," he said. "The Turkish-Cypriot lieuten- nt nevertheless insisted that |we pacify the Greeks. "We hadn't taken 20 ste wards the Greek positi ps to- ons be- Maj. Tremblay said he hoped! military planes bound for Asia. The RAF might have to fly around most of Africa to reach its Persian Gulf and Southeast Asian outposts. MAY BE OUSTED The upshot, if all goes sour-- and London recognizes it might --would be Britain's virtual eli- mination from the Middle East as an effective military power. What lies behind the flash flood of discontent with a Brit- ain that has shed power in the Indian subcontinent, wound up most of her empire in Africa and begun hauling the flag down in Southeast Asia? As the British see recent de- velopments, the key man help- ing to mastermind or exploit each situation is Gamal Abdel Nasser. The president of the U.A.R. jhas neither forgotten nor for- given the British for their part lin the 1956 invasion of Egypt. In the Persian Gulf Nasser is deeply committed to support Yemen's revolutionary republi- can regime in efforts to take lover the whole of the British- |protected South Arabian Feder- ation and Aden colony. With an estimated 35,000 Egyptian 'troops in Yemen, Nasser is |thought to have blessed if not |to have instigated the series of raids that led the British to hit back. he/fore machine guns opened be-|ARMS GREEK-CYPRIOTS badges of inferiority. This es- sentially is why the Libyan Par- liament has voted to end the bases agreements, And that is why Makarios and his Greek-Cypriots are almost sure, when the troubles in their island settle down, to demand a British withdrawal. The po- litical wisdom or otherwise of such an attitude is transcended by factors of national pride and prestige. Soviets Fire New Steerable Space Station MOSCOW (AP)--The Soviet Union launched another ma- noeuvrable space station into orbit Sunday--the third anni- versary of the world's first manned space station. "The purpose of the launching is to further improve space ve- hicles capable of estensively in all directions and to work out questions concern- ing the problem of space ren- dezvous," the announcement of the orbiting said. Moscow radio, which reported the launching of Polyot2 as & sort of curtain - raiser for a U.S.S.R.-wide radio-TV speech' by Premier Khrushchev, said it had made a number of changes: in direction during its initial! flight. A later Tass news agency report said it had been "turned around repeatedly." | (Kenneth Gatland,, vice-presi- dent of the British Interplane tary Society, said in London. Sunday's launchig is hind us and fired over our) In Cyprus, Greek-speaking ir-|bly @ prelude to attempts at or-, heads."" | Lieut. Gadbois said the Turk-| jish-Cypriots were trying to get jthe Greek-Cypriots to open fire on the Canadians "to create a |bad incident, but one favorable }to the Turkish-Cypriots."' jregulars have been receiving arms from the U.A.R. even |while the peacemaking process jhas been going on. | Finally, the demands of Lib- | of American and British base i } Khrushchev Lieut.: Gadbois and four men didn't know from which direc- scene of the action Saturday. | "We climbed down from the |helicopters by cable,"' he said, "right in between the opposed |camps, | |. "I told my men to lie on the| ground, The firing ceased and| we were able then to procecd| to the Greek-Cypriot camp." A captain met the Canadians in the Greek camp. "I spoke to! him in Franch," Lieut. Gadbois added. _The Turkish-Cypriots opened fire on the Greeks Saturday afternoon when they said they saw mules approaching towards |the position on the summit of the Kyrenia mountains, The| Turks said the mules were car- riots. Raids Ne Montreal Bank Keys MONTREAL (CP) -- Detec-| tives disclosed Sunday they found key sets for 10 Montreal banks in raids here that led to the arrest of three men for a major bank robbery in Niagara Fails, Ont. |was taken to Frobisher Bay, 100 jscene where his condition. was The crash area is about 100 cle, door slightly ajar fora possible| were' taken by helicopter to the|tion the shots came. It might| MOSCOW (AP) -- Premier; 'We have banished forever , even be that the 'bullets we Khrushchev Sunday denounced Missing Flier Found After Arctic Crash HALIFAX (CP) -- Brock H. Parsons of Churchill, Man., a civilian pilot whose single-en- gine Norseman crashed Wed- nesday on Baffin Island, was rescued Sunday, search and res- cue officials reported: here, _Parsons was spotted and picked up by an RCMP Otter aircraft, one of seven taking part in the search. He miles southeast of the crash described as good after three days and four nights .on the ts- land. It was not immediately known if Parsons suffered any injuries in Wednesday's crash, or if he had suffered from exposure, 100 miles below the arctic cir- Parsons, on a flight from Fro- bisher Bay to Cape Dorset on the western side of Baffin Is- land, crashed during a snow- the Chinese Communists as "splitters" of the world Com- munist movement and re- nounced previous Kremlin claims to be the infalliable |teacher of the Red bloc. He claimed it was Stalin who had imposed Moscow's rule on world communism and charged it was now the Chinese who de- |manded a "'special role." In a speech televised directly to viewers in. both East and West Europe, Khrushchev de- clared it was necessary to give the Chinese a "resolute rebuff." Khrushchev, reporting on his just concluded trip to Hungary, was stem but used mild lan- guage in his condemnation, of Peking. He apparently considered that his words could be heard as spoken by millions of Commu- nists abroad who have not yet taken up a firm pro- or anti- Chinese position. Moreover, sweet reasonable- ness as opposed to Chinese in- tnansigence is the line he has been taking in the dispute and he seemed determined to pro- ject that image. Most non-Communist Euro- pean networks taped the speech and used excerpts as part of their regular newscasts which, nevertheless, enabled him to storm. Before going down he ra- dioed a distress call. Thursday, he used a portable get across his main points. DROPS MEETING IDEA | Khrushchev dropped any men-| ya's King Idris for annulment Lashes Out all. elements of inequality, of imposing the experience and policy of one country on other fraternal countries. bital' rendezvous by space craft." He predicted the |Russians might try an actual jrendezvous in space with un- |manned vehicles later this year jas a test for manned craft.) Sunday was the third anniver- sary of the first manned space, flight by Yuri Gagarin and the, day was celebrated as Cosmo-. nauts Day in the Soviet Union. .. TO GET CHECKUP CINCINNATI (AP) -- Man- ager Fred Hutchinson of Cin- cinnati Reds said Sunday he will fly to Seattle today for a routine checkup on his cancer condition. Hutchinson said he would leave. after the Reds" opening game with Houston. 'In the great unity of |socialist nations, there should be no great nations and small, no infallible teachers and sub- missive pupils." Until the. world Communist meeting of 1960. all Communist documents proclaimed the in- fallibility of Moscow, At that conference, under Chinese pres- sure, this was dropped. The Russians, however, insisted on keeping a clause in the final declaration reiterating their claim to leadership as the most experienced and successful Communist party, DESCRIBES CHINESE He said the Soviet and Hun- garian parties have agreed that the Red Chinese are following a "special course which is a blend of petty bourgeois adventurism and great-power chauvinism." He added: "On @ number of issues the Chinese splitters in effect are slipping into Twrotskyite posi- tions. "The CPSU (Coimmuniet Party of the Soviet Union) and the Hungarian socialist workers party believe that it is impera- tive in the obtaining situation to give a resolute rebuff to the ti-Leninist concepts and sub- versive Hutchi underwent treat- ment in Seattle last winter and said it was known earlier that' he would have to have an April checkup. : ee BEBE ROY YEO idential Real Estate is the field Res in which Roy specializes. Hig twe | years' active participation in resi- dential real estate have provided him with en accumulation of busi- [ ness facts thet will prove of bene- bf te you whether buying or sell- "Bolahood Brothers Limited, Realtors . 101 Simcoe North 728-5123 emergency transmitter to send) 2 out further distress calls. \tion of a world meeting of Com- The Norseman, reported|munists to take up the Chinese badly damaged in the crash, is\issue--a proposal which has yet) owned by Arctic Airways of|to meet with strong support in| Churchill. 'either Eastern or Western Eu-| = V V 1g g . y | "Not only did we find keys t | diness ooler,, Marlton .++.+e++ 5. ys to I M k D lt vite peat ban to nee Sault Ste. Marie... jain entrance to the banks but leaders.' WHAT'S : : lones for safety deposit boxes as est 20 to 30 tonight. |Kapuskasing .. lwell."" sai i : Ne ve Lak 0 tario, Hali-| White River. ,{well,"" said one officer. iagara, Lake Ontario, Ha | Moosonee cs | The three were to be taken to / N (AP)--South Vietna-jair strike was called in, and air)Windy and mild with showers) Psy oy sationes about 150/force fighter bombers smashed and _ scattered thundershowers| casualties and apparently in-|the position and the gun to/continuing tonight. Tuesday var-Tow overnight, high Sunday the same|pieces, apparently killing many jiable 1 flicted approximately } number 4 Viet Cong guerrillas|of the Viet Cong. in two fierce fights Sunday in the Mekong River delta. Both fights continued all day, and U.S. authorities said fight- ing went on into the night under| the light of flares dropped byjend of the day in the Kien Long|few snowflurri ' |fight listed 44 persons killed on/ing. Cooler including planes. S The heaviest engagement was|the government side, Some 600 government troops west 20 to 30. tonight. |were rushed into the fighting,| Algoma, Timagami, southern Regina jincluding 450 paratroopers| White River, North Bay, Sud-|Winnipeg .....+0+. |dropped over the battle area. |bury: Changing to occasional|Lakehead ... The final official tally at the|snow tonight and tapering to a)White River burton, Hamilton, Toronto: |. mins eae Observed Temperatures cloudiness and cooler.|/nawson ... Winds becoming west to north-|yvictoria . Edmonton . 39 seeee es Tuesday mor-/Sault Ste. Marie... Tuesday. Winds) Kapuskasing shifting to northwesterly 20 to! Kariton Niagara Fails today to be charged with a robbery the weekend of March 22 at a jbranch of the Canadian Impe-| |rial Bank of Commerce there.| Loot from the job has been| \variously estimated between| $400,000 and $1,000,000, | | Picked up were Henri-Joseph | Lizotte, 46, of St. Laurent, Que., ja Montreal suburb, Robert |(Bobby) Simpson, 43, of Toronto jand Joseph Kinisky, 39, of Ham- jilton TITLE FOR EMERSON. ST. PETERSBURG, Fila.| (AP)--Roy Emerson of Austra-) lia captured his sixth Florida- Caribbean tour tennis title Sun- day, defeating Frank Froehling of Coral Gables, Fla., 6-3, 6-4, 6-2 in the St. Petersburg Mas- ters. Emerson has lost only one tournament since being sus- pended by the Australian Lawn Tennis Association for not re- rope--but plugged for a. series| of bilateral meetings such as he| has just had with the Hunga-) rians. Khrushchev also threw an- other sop to non-Soviet Commu- nist parties--he abandoned the} Soviet party's claim to infallible, dominance of the world move-| ment, He blamed this claim on} Stalin and said: ? Lack confidence ....... Outdated steps ......... Can't lead Can't follow Need practice see eer eeeee see eeenees We ore offering a special intro- WITH YOUR | DANCING? | HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL 313 ALBERT ST. 24-HOUR SERVICE 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS | Det.-Insp, William Fitzpatrick |said $9,000 cash, $56,000 in trav- jellers' cheques and an undeter-|""' mined amount of stocks and| bonds were recovered in the} ductory dance course for only $15.00. Because we want you to see. for yourself how quickly and easily you can learn to dance at the Arthur Murray Studio. Even if you've never danced before, you can go dancing after a lesson or two, and at gay student parties, You'll meet new friends... . gain poise and populority. There are POs See 3 no strangers at Arthur Murray's. Everybody dances and has fun. ARTHUR MURRAY This $15.00 dance course is good W. MARKS LICENCEE for a limited time only. Open daily 11%. SIMCOE ST. SOUTH in Chuong Thien province, 140/10 civilians, 30 wounded and 20/25 tonight. North Bay. miles southwest of here, where|missing. Thirty Viet Cong bod-| Northern. White River, Coch-|Sudbury .... Communists mounted a heavy jies were counted, and many|rane: Changing to occasional|Muskoka . attack on the district capital of/more were believed to have! snow tonight and tapering off to) Windsor .. Kien Long. been carried off. a few sowflurries Tuesday.|London .. nds Ww In pre-dawn hours Sunday,| Sixty miles north of the\Cooler Tuesday. Winds becom-|Toronto ... raids: Friday. guerrillas smashed their way|Chuong Thien battle, a secondjing northerly 20 to 25 tonight.|Trenton . |---_____--_-- ue | through the town defences,|fight began in Kien Phong prov- Ottawa NEED... eg m a5 s Forecast. Temperatures Montrez , overrunning many positions andjince when a large Saigon force Montreal . moving in-on a 105-millimetre engaged a large Viet Cong unit.|Low tonight, high Tuesday Quebec FUEL OIL ? Call howitzer position. In a running firefight that fol-| Windsor 40 Halifax ... turning to play in home compe- tition. 728-9474 PAUL RISTOW REALTOR Local defenders went on fight-\lowed, at least 17 government St. Thomas.. 4) Chicago ;. ing, but had to withdraw from|troops were wounded and "nu- London 42 New York... the artillery piece, leaving in Viet Cong hands. A heavy|American authorities said. 4 4 it|merous"' Viet Cong were killed,/Kitchener ... 40 Miami 'Los Angeles.. Mount Forest... Day or Night 723-3443 1 187 KING ST, E. 1:00. to 10:00 p.m. 728-168)

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