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Oshawa Times (1958-), 6 Jul 1964, p. 3

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'Accidents Kill 53 During Weekend By THE CANADIAN PRESS At least 53 persons died ac- cidentally across Canada during the weekend--39 of them in traf- accidents, nine in drownings, oo Beige a a riday until i local times, led the provinces with . Fifteen were on the ve in drownings and were two or vagal Quebec had 18 fatalities persons dying in traffic ac- cidents, one in a drowning acci- dent and one struck by light- oe had two deaths in traffic and two drownings. persons died on British Be pate He eebreie and one highway death. Saskatchewan's sole acciden- tal death was in the crash of a single - engine airplane near Prince Albert, and in Nova Sco- tia one person died in a fall from a bridge. Newfoundland and Prince Ed- ward Island were without fatali- ties. The survey does not include known suicides, slayings or in- dustrial deaths. The Ontario dead: SUNDAY Diana Joan Nelson, 25, Tor- onto, when the car in which she was riding was struck by a train. . Leslie Hall, 22, Maynard, near Brockville, when his car left the road and overturned 18 miles east of Brockville. Koyo Fujimara, 28, Toronto, James F. Gibson, 56, and Wil-| liam Booth, 37, both of Sutton, in a two-car collision near Mark- ham, 18miles northeast of Tor-| onto. Evelyn Ducharme, 16, and An- gelo eal, 58, both of Sudbury, | in a two-car collision. David Lalonde, 35, Stoufville,| suffocated in a fire in a car at Sturgeon Falls. Maria Decicco, 5, Toronto, in! a Toronto hospital, after she was pulled from a swimming pool at Twin Falls, 30 miles west of Toronto, Brenda Margaret Sawchuk, 19 months, St. Catharines, drowned in a backyard artificial fish pond, Cheryl MacDonald, 3, St. Catharines, suffocated when a bicycle fell across her throat Benjamin Kenopic, 27, Glas- gow Station, Ont., drowned while swimming in Lake Kam- aniskeg, 35 miles southwest of Pembroke. W. Ralph (Wib) Turner, Tor- onto, when pulled into Kennisis Lake near Minden after his troll- ing line caught in the propeller] of his boat. SATURDAY Edmund Adamski, 50, Tor- onto, in a collision between two cars near Campbellford, 27 miles east of Peterborough. Leonard Webb, 58, Tillson- burg, when the truck he was driving collided with a car near Aylmer, 12 miles west of St. Thomas, Irene Asada, 26, Toronto, when her husband's car struck a street car. | Peter van der Ende, 8, Owen Sound, after he fell from a dock into the city harbor. John Lakeman, 30, Exeter, 20 miles north of London, in a two- car collision near Exeter. Robert Guy Rawlings, 6, Cam- |lachie, near Sarnia, when struck by a car near his home. Mrs. George Alton, 50, Cor- betton, when the car in which she was riding struck a tree [near Dundalk, 30.miles west of | Barrie. Cheryl Linday Ames, 15, At- | wood, when a car she was riding |in plunged into a gravel pit near | Wingham, 35 miles northwest of | Stratford. FRIDAY | Martin Erin Towns, 27, Ham- lilton, when the car in which he was riding went out of control jand left the road near Kirkland Lake. ~ Watch Reds Judy Tells Church Meet WINNIPEG (CP) -- Health Minister Judy LaMarsh told a national congress of an Catholics Sunday that commun- ism must be met with steady vigilance and alertness, but not over-aggressiveness. "I can assure you that at the government level we are not re- laxed but vigilant," Miss La- Marsh said. "That's one of the reasons why the East has failed in sabotaging the United Na- O08 jc6 She told the triennial con- gress of Ukrainian Catholic or- veal that in addition to armaments "we need answers and men to use them to stave off communism. She also said reason and fair play must prevail in interna- a relations conducted by the Miss LaMarsh said she saw communism revealed in a trip to Germany last. year. West of the Berlin wall, she said, she felt 'the strong pulse of a Christian nation. East of the wall I saw the slow death of a nation under communism." Delegates to the closing meet- ing adopted resolutions prvtest- ing against ommunist persecu- tion of religion and the church, and appealing to the Canadian government, national _ institu- tions and news gatherers to join in the protest. Another resolution urged the federal government to de e A newspaper reporter, Wiley Smith of Greeley, Colo., help- ed pull nine children and four adults from this car as it burst into flames Sunday near NEWSPAPER REPORTER SAVES 13 PEOPLE Adams City, Colorado. None of the 13 occupants, who had been headed for a Denver amusement park, was injured. Investigating officer said Smith, driving a car not far away, spotted the rear tires blow out seconds before the vehicle turned into an inferno. Soviet atheism in the United Nations. About 500 people from across Canada attended the congress which began Wednesday. Split Resolution For Creditistes MONTREAL (CP)--A resolu- tion recommending that Quebec become an associate state within Confederation will be submitted to the provincial con- vention of the Ralliement des ')Creditistes next month, it-was NEWS IN BRIEF ed today. The resolution was approved Sunday at a closed meeting at- tended by 48 Montreal area or- ganizers. FOUR SLAIN GEORGETOWN (AP)--Three East Indian women and an East Indian man were beaten to death Sunday in a racial clash at Annandale, a village 10 miles east of Georgetown, Brit- ish Guiana. Annandale adjoins Buxton, where two Negro men and a boy were found shot to death Friday. This brings the death toll in racial! clashes which started in this British col- -ony five months ago to 73. EXPORTS RISE LONDON (Reuters) -- Com- monwealth exports to the rest of the world increased by 31 per cent between 1959 and 1963, the British treasury said in a week- end report. During the same pe- riod intra - Commonwealth ex- ports increased by five per cent and British imports from the Commonwealth by eight per cent, the treasury added in its Bulletin for Industry for Juty. QUAKE RECORDED BERKELEY, Calif. (AP) -- An earthquake in the Gulf of California was recorded Sunday by the seismological centre at the University of California. The centre said the quake occurred about 1,180 miles southeast: of Berkeley. It registered 6.5 on the Richter scale which rated the violent San Francisco earth- quake of 1906 at 8.25. FLY TO BREAKFAST OTTAWA (CP) -- Some 400 pilots of privately-owned air- craft flew in from various parts of Eastern Canada and north- eastern United States for break- fast at Uplands Airport Sunday. The "fly-in," organized by four operators of aircraft'at the air- port, was planned to stimulate an interest in tourism among private pilots who live within easy flying distance of Ottawa. AVOID WORD QUEBEC (CP) -- Premier Lesage says he and his cabinet have been deliberately avoiding use of the word "province'"' when referring to Quebec in public speeches. The word prov- ince is only being used when it is necessary to distinguish be- tween areas of jurisdiction, he told the special meeting of the Quebec Libera! Federation Sun- day. NEPHEW CHARGED HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) -- Mel- TAIPEI BEATLES' COIFFEURES CUT TAIPEI, Formoa (AP) -- Police broke into a house in Taipei early Sunday and found four teen-agers with beatle hairdos entertaining a swarm of fans. "The four Chinese Beatles were even noisier than the British Beatles," said a po- liceman. The quartet was taken to a police station and their parents summoned. The "parents made one request and police cheerfully com- plied. They shaved the youths' heads. of the widow of slain H financier Jacques Mossler, was charged with first - degree mur- der Saturday in the death of the millionaire banker. Mossler, 69, was found stabbed to death in his fashionable apartment, near Miami, Fla., Tuesday. An au- topsy revealed he had been stabbed 39 times with a long- bladed knife. BREAK UP MARCH PANAMA CITY (AP) ---Pa- namanian students have threat- ened further anti-U.S. demon-} strations unless all 18 marchers arrested in a fracas Saturday are released. The attempted anti-American march Saturday on Shaler Plaza in the U.S.- controlled Canal Zone was broken up by Panamanian na- tional guardsmen firing shots in the air and tossing tear-gas gre- nades. Informed sources said six of the 18 arrested were re- leased after Education Minister} Manuel Solis intervened on their behalf. FIVE ACQUITTED JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP)-- Klux Klansmen charged with conspiracy in the dynamiting of a Negro's home ended in U.S. district court Sunday. No one was convicted by the all-whiteloy jury of 12 men. The charges grew out of the dynamiting Feb. 16 of the home of Donald God- frey, who integrated Lacka- wanna Elementary School under federal court order. The house was shattered but no one was hurt in the explosion. FAIR SHOW CLOSES NEW YORK (AP) -- Wonder World--the $3,500,000 show. at the world's fair--closed Sunday because of poor business. Also the co-producers of Ice-Trava- ganza said that unless business, picks up, the ice show will put on its last performance Satur- day. HANGS IN GRIEF DENVER, Colo. (AP) -- Last Christmas morning Mrs. Rose Urtado, 32, was shot to death} as she opened the front door of her home to stop a gang fight outside, The death left 12 moth- tado, 38, their grief - stricken father. Police found Urtado hanged Sunday. They said he apparently killed himself in his vin Lane Powers, 27, a nephew grief. Here's good health in capsule version Trust us to compound and dispense medicinal agents prescribed by your doctor and supply all your needs. DRUGS (osHawa) 9 SIMCOE ST. N --FREE CITY-WIDE -- | -- DELIVERY -- LIMITED TELEPHONE 723-3431 The trial of five admitted Kul miies erless children and Galvin Ur-|° WOODBINE ENTRIES TUESDAY, July 7 FIRST RACE -- Purse $2,00 ($3500) Claiming Maiden Three and Four-year- olds. One and one 16th miles. Vaicutta, Harison 105 Busy Fan, Livingstone X105 ead No Boy 105 Brown Roman, McComb 110 Knight O'glin, Walsh 110 Mary Elizabeth, Harris. X112 Snow Bright, Laps x120 adone | Sailor, No Boy 105 Gander, Shuk 110 Whiting Banner, Gordon 127° York's Blue Boy, Burton 110 King City, Dittfach 110 Also Eligible: Ponderose Jim, Dittfach 110, SECOND RACE -- Purse $1,990 ($2500) Claiming Four-yea*olds and up. 6 Furs. Dutch Larry, No Boy 115 European Flight, Walsh 115 Big Native, McComb 118 Little Welch, Potts 118 Maple Jan, Shuk 100 lalone, No Boy 113 Our Gigi, No Boy 110 Cooper Glow, Gordon 118 Belva, Leblanc 113 Flippin Floyd 115 Rye n' Ginger, No Boy 113 Also Eligible: Come of Age, Harris %113; Plucky Crest. Harris X110: Vogel's Victor, Parsons X113; The Avenue, Rob- Inson 110; Gentle Queen, No Boy 113. THIRD RACE -- Purse $2,000 ($3500) Claiming Maiden Three and Four-year- olds (Divn of First) One and one 16th Bright Coleen, Harris X105 Good Ovation, Dalton 110 Chop Susie, No Boy 105 Dek's Levy, Walsh 110 Escarpment, No Boy 118 Buley, No Boy 115 ir Champ, et ah 10 Wenlecn Gordon Cantina Royal, No ar 10 Prince Sied, Leblanc 110 Puff n' Smoke, Fitzsimmons 115 FOURTH RACE -- Purse $1,900 ($2500) Claiming Four-year-olds and up (Divn of 2nd) 6 Furs Jerry Parham, as ag "cho dad Superior Parent, No Boy 1 Fairmagoria, No Boy 115 Robdix, No Boy 118 Sauvagette, Harrison 110 Allarco, Leblanc 115 Pirate King, Dalton 115 Matinal, Harrison 118 Girl Graduate, Potts 113 Bull Pine, No Boy 115 Rulamyth, Livingstone X113 Eternal Lock, No Boy 11 Also Eligible: Queen's Day, No Boy 130; Buzzin, No Boy 110; Tehran's Dan, 'No Boy 115; Niagara Drift, No Boy 115; Black Raven, No Boy 110. TAKE TWO FOLLLWS FIFTH RACE -- Purse $2,200 "Oswego" Maidens Two-year-olds. 5 Furs La Lique, No Boy 117 Serene re aggirtl A-112 Baboona, No B Echo Boy, potty 2 Ice Cold, Fitzsimmon: |Queen's Birthday, Walsh aS Take Notice, Gomez 120 Rainbow River, Shuk 120 Sleep Native, Gordon 120 Princess Sadi, Walsh B-117 Also Eligible: Lady Alexina, McComb A-112; Blue Bess, Harrison 8-117. A-Steen entry B-Mrs. on and entry Mill River Stable SIXTH RACE -- Purse $2,200 "South Pacific Purse" ($5000) Claiming Two- year-olds about 5 Furs. (Turf Course) Half Light, Potts 119 Perzaca, No Boy 113 Bingham, Walsh 114 Smokey Blue, Shuk 114 Wee Annie Dory, Remillard 111 Bunty's Triomphe, Robinson 114 Spinnderette, McComb A-11é Doll Odell, No Boy A-116 A-Leiberman and J. J. Greory entry (QUINELLA BETTING) SEVENTH RACE -- Purs $2,600 "Play- ver' Allowances Three end Four-year- old Fillies 6¥2 Furs Plentitude, Dittfach 112 Netoffa, Harrison A-107 Green Goddess,. Fitzsimmons 112 Perfect Pitch, No Boy 105 Never Me, No Boy 110 Swirl of Glory, Shuk A-112 Rampart Street, No Boy 112 E! Brillow Way, Dittfach 107 Muskoka, Turcotte X102 A-Windfield Farm and Davis Jr. entry EIGHTH RACE -- Purse $2,300 ($4500) Claiming Four-year-olds and up. One and one 16th miles Batuan, Livingstone X117 Never Look Back,, X112 Tough Kennamon, No Boy 116 Ponder On, Dittach 117 Hannibal Miss, Fitzsimmons 117 Deal Me Aces, No Boy 107 Roman Thunder, Walsh 112 X-5 Ibs APP ALW Claimed XX-7 Ibs APP_ALW Claimed XXX-10 ibs APP ALW Claimed Post Time 2 p.m, Americans Rush North Of Border SARNIA (AP) -- American tourists entered Canada in rec- ord numbers along the Michi- gan-Ontario border during the July 4 holiday period, border of- ficials said Sunday. A. W. Smith, supervisor of the Blue Water Bridge here, said 8,000 permits were issued to incoming vehicles. This is be- lieved to be a record for any one day. At the Ambassador Bridge at Ky. Jester, Remillard 120 Benalou, Dalton 117 Windsor, about 13,000 cars crossed into Ontario. acooling is Ontario's light-tasting way down. O'KEEFE your summer with Holiday When the temperature's headed up, be crafty and lay ina supply of cooling Holiday Beer. Have the thirst-quenchers chilled and ready. Nice, Holiday beer. It': 8 all beer, all the Holiday BREWED FOR SUMMER THIRST Courtice COURTICE -- The annual field day was held at North Courtice Public School with a large gathering of parents. Re- sults follow. GIRLS' EVENTS Long distance, senior -- Suz- anne Carpenter; . Bernadette Dunham. Middle distance, Senior: Ber- nadette Dunham; Karen Buday; Intermediate: Glynis Healey; Debbie Marden. Jun- for: Carol Livingston; Wendy McGhee. 100-Yard dash -- Senior: Shar- on Lott; Bernadette Dunham. Intermediate: Debbie Morden; Bonnie McGhee. Junior: Wendy McGhee; Carol Livingston. High jump -- Senior: Karen Buday; Ruth Porter. Running borad jump--Senior: Bernadette Dunham; Barbara Gosick. Intermediate, Caroline Taylor; Nadine Potapchuk. Jun- ior: Wendy McGhee; Lou Ann Reynolds. Distant ball throw -- Senior: Karen Buday; Donna McQuald. Intermediate: Debbie Morden; Gail Bartlett. Junior: Chery} Beers; Laurel Sherry. Accuracy ball throw--Senior: Donna McQuaid; Darlene Gra- ham; Intermediate: Margaret Fraser; Marian Ellis. Slow bicycle -- Senior: Mar- lene Graham; Darlene Graham Intermediate: Wendy Brown; Marion Ellis. Junior: Jill Van De Walker; Patty Welsh. Three-legged race -- Senior: Karen Buday, Sharon Lott; Susan Todesky, Lynda Moase: Intermediate; Gail Bartlett. Debbie Morden: Bonnie Mc- Ghee, Marg Berlie. Junior: Carol Livingston, Wendy Mc- Ghee; Pam Vetzal, Susan Welsh. Slow walk -- Senior: Bar- bara Gosick; Linda Butt. Inter- mediate, Bonnie McGhee; Gail Bartlett. Junior: Lou Ann Rey- nolds; Laurel Sherry. Tug of war -- Senior: Carolyn Owen; Heather Patterson; Elda Kirtley; Jo Anne Stevenson. In- termediate: Laurie Iliffe; Lau- rel Sherry; Jane Goodman, Relay -- Senior: Bernadette Dunham; Sharon Lott; Susan Rodesky; Karen Buday. Inter- mediate: Debbie Morden; Caro- line Taylor; Gail Bartlett; Jo Anne Pullen. Junior: Carol Liv- ingston; Wendy McGhee; San- dra Bishop; Kathy Allen. BOYS' EVENTS Long distance -- Senior: Mich- ael Mitchel; Mike Tullock. High jump -- Senior: Geof- frey Healey; Mike Tullock. Holds Field Day 100-yard dash -- Senior: Nor- School man Lilley; Geoffrey Healey. Intermediate; Bob Walker; Paul McKnight. Junior: Randy Allen; Barry McMahon. Middle distance Senior: Mike Tullock; Geoffrey Healey. Intermediate: Bob Walker; Richard Ellis, Junior: Randy Allen; Brian Eyman. Running broad jump--Senior: Norman Lilley; Mike Tullock. Intermediate: Ross Keatley; Richard Ellis. Junior: Laurie Gay; Andre Wojnarowski. Distant ball throw -- Senior: Rene Lacroix; Leslie Novak. In- termediate: Richard Ellis; Tim Zavitsky. Junior: Barry Mc- Mahon; Fred Ryan. Accuracy ball throw--Senior: Angus Fraser; Doug Chumbly. Intermediate: Robert Muir; Richard Ellis. Slow bicycle -- Senior: Tom Cook; Ron Linton; Intermedi- ate: Bob Walker; Richard Lowe, Junior: Doug McKnight; Barry McMahon. . Boys' walk -- Senior: Trevor Galbraith; Don McMullen. In Toronto Driver Captures Race For 'Cycles' ORONO, Ont. (CP) -- Fred Gailey of Scarborough in sub- urban Toronto Satu! won the 100-mile international Cana- dian Grand Prix for motor- cycles at Mosport race track, about 15 miles northeast of Oshawa. His Manx Norton machine covered the 40 laps in one hour, 18 minutes and 49.1 seconds. Lucien Lamoureux of Iber-' ville, Que., finished second and Robert Smith of Galt was third. Both were driving Nortons. Early leaders Al Johnson of Toronto and Roger Beaumont of St. Hubert, Que., were elim- inated from the feature race after they were involved in minor accidents, Neither was lured. In the lightweight 20-lap final, Jody Nicholas of Nashville, Tenn., led from the start and finished first covering the 50 miles in 38:59.2. He was riding a Bultace, Charles Ingram of Scarbor- ough was second on a Honda -\and George Rocktt of Phila- delphia was third on a Ducati. French Cash Spawns Revolt: Bella Claims ALGIERS (AP) -- Algerian President Ahmed Ben Bella, who is fighting off opposition by some of his revolutionary com- rades, has accused French pet- roleum interests of financing a counter-revolution, Ben Bella spoke to a mass meeting Sunday marking the second anniversary of Algeria's independence. His government Saturday placed Fehrat Abbas, one-time head of the Algerian rebel regime in exile, under house arrest. "The counter - revolution is being supported financially by French petroleum companies," Ben Bella said, '"'Chabani and Ait Ahmed are being aided by billions (of francs) from oil companies in Paris and in other countries." Ben Bella was referring to former Col. Mohamed Chabani, who has fled to the Aures Moun- tains with 2,000 guerrilla follow- ers in defiance of the Algiers regime, and to Ait Ahmed, leader of anti-government guer- rillas in the Kabylie Mountains east of Algiers. Ben Bella's central commit- tee Saturday removed Chabani and five others from its ranks and demanded that 11 members of parliament should be. ousted. termediate: Bob Walker; Wal- ter Sikora. Junior: Fred Ryan; John Fraser. Tug of war -- Senior: Robert McMullen; Norman Lilley; Don- ald McMullen; Bill Johnson, In- termediate: Tim Zavitsky; Law- rence Courtice; Mark Steven- son; Richard Ellis. Junior: Gor- don Graham; Laurie Gay; Ran- dy Allen; Barry McMahon. Relay -- Senior: Mike Tul- lock; Leslie Novak; Geoffrey Healey; Michael Mitchel. -Inter- mediate: Bob Walker; Ross Keatley; Rickey Lowe; Pau] McKnight, Junior: Gordon Gra- ham; Randy Allen; Doug Mc- Knight; Barry McMahon. Three-legged race -- Senior: Leslie Novak, Mike Tullock; Trevor Galbraith, Don McMul- len. Intermediate: Richard ENGLISH USED. IN MASS SYDNEY, Australia (Reuters) English was used in the Roman Catholic mass in most dioceses of Australia for the first time Sunday. Last year's ecumenical council in Rome approved the use of local languages in the mass. THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, duly 6, 1964 North Courtice School Graduates Tour Toronto COURTICE -- The graduation class of North Cou School} Mi spent 6ne day gen the Par- lliament Buildings, The Museum, The Hall of Fame and Fort York in Toronto the di- rection of the principal Bruce Lush and Larry Jameson. The trip was sponsored by the Home and School. Mr, Lush presented the win- Ba ners of the field day events with sports plaques. Ha the highest score were Senior, Mike: Tullock; Inte: ker; Juniors, McGhee and Carol Livingston, A supper was held at Cour- tice United Church for the class fe, coe of Oshawa and te, Bob Wal-|chuk. ied were Bonnie} yy and the teaching staff of the/A pot highway and North Courtice Schools. Miss Mary Rose Pal-| Prize mer of the highway is leaving for West Courtice School. Mrs. Harold Teirs is retiring. Larry Jameson is leaving for exten-|Si; sive studies at university. All teachers wil] be greatly missed next term. The Explorers and CGIT of Courtice United Church spent Saturday at the Riverdale Zoo and The Casa Loma in Toronto. The trip was sponsored by the UCW under the direction of leaders Mrs. Cecil Simmons, Miss Marian Anderson, assisted by Mrs. Norman Adair, Mrs. Doo Thompson, Mrs. Chas. Ar- cher and Mrs. Garnet Beer- thuizen. SCOUTS, CUBS The 18th Oshawa Cub Pack of Courtice held a going up ser- vice for Lance Livingston, Brad lliffe, Gordon Graham, Paul McKnight, Randy Allen, Andre' Wojnarowski, at the church. The i8th Oshawa Scout mo- thers, along with friends and neighbors, spent an evening at the Retarded School in Oshawa for a supper and toured the school, A miscellaneous community shower was held at -Courtice United Church for Mr. and Mrs. James Archer, with a variety of gifts for the young couple. Lunch was served by members of the Fidelis group. PRESENTATION A, community presentation was held at Courtice United Church by the Friendship Group for Gary Dalby and Miss Gail avoie, The wedding is to take place at Courtice with the re- ception to be at the Kinsmen Hall in Oshawa. The young couple were presented with a bridge table and chair set, and a swivel occasional chair. The presentation was made by Orm Robertson, superintendent of the Sunday School. A mock wedding was performed by Mr. and Mrs. Jim MacGregor, William Mc- Knight, Mrs. John Osborne, Mrs. Norman Adair, Mrs. Percy Dalby and Mrs. Chas. Carpen- ter, Mrs. William Wade played the piano and showed colored films of events taken at the church, Mrs. Bob Johnson held a mis- cellaneous shower for Allan Mc- serve the girls this summer at camp. Recei scholarship awards at North Courtice School were Miss Linda' Butt a $25 award; Miss Bernadette Dunham a $15 award for the highest average for the school. s S.A. Police Stage Raids Against Reds' PRETORIA (AP) -- Justice Minister Balthazar Vorster said Sunday that security police raids carried out since Friday would "possibly lead to the de- pir huoe pa Pd Bo Communist-in- spired subversive campaign" in South Africa. vr Vorster said that during searchs of more than 100 homes, about 20 people were arrested and police found an undisclosed number of time bomb mechan- isms and other bomb parts. Po- lice earlier reported finding a powerful secret radio transmit- ter in the Johannesburg area. In a prepared statement Vor- ster claimed South Africa's re- cent sabotage trial, in which Af- rican nationalist leader Nelson Mandela and others were sen- tenced to life imprisonment, had dealt Communists and fellow travellers a severe blow. He said an unspecified num- ber of persons would be charged as a result of information po- lice obtained during the week- end raids. For security reasons neither he nor the police would give further details. : Bg No | --. Than 4% i: Yoo Pro foal eam Broker ', Sales Mar. Day or Night-- Quaid, son of Mr. and Mrs. Al- Extended local calling FOR OSHAWA Ellis, Tim Zavitsky; Brian Bur- gess, Lawrence Courtice. Jun-} for; Eddie Bowman, Terry Baker; Doug McKnight, Ron Goodwin. CITY AND | | | DISTRICT CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SUBJECT Modern man's need for a new and greater understanding of Deity was explored at Christian' Science churches, Sunday, in a Bible Lesson-Sermon entitled "God". The Golden Text was from Habakkuk: "The earth shall be filled with the know-| ledge of the glory of the Lord,| as the waters cover the sea. | LEAN, TENDER LEAN MINCED BEEF RINDLESS SKINLESS TROUD | 54 SIMCOE NORTH | SIMCOE NORTH a and Wed. Specials { Cive Sreaxs »49- BACON er bo | »39 WEINERS »29 now in effect... LOCAL CALLING --. NO LONG DISTANCE CHARGES -- NOW IN EFFECT BETWEEN Oshawa and Ajax-Pickering (as well as with Bawmanville, Brooklin, Hampton and Whitby) A reminder to Oshawa users: When calling Ajax-Pickering, dial the full seven figures of the number you want to reach. Like Bowmanville, Brooklin, telephone Hampton and Whitby, now form part of your local calling area, and Long Distance charges no longer apply.' these communities BUT REMEMBER: DIAL THE COMPLETE SEVEN-FIGURE NUMBER! Now is also a good time to bring our Personal List of telephone num- oie up to date! Jot down the full seven-figure numbers of friends and associates for "Long e call frequently, and istance friends" the Area Code when it is different from your own (416). include iN. BELL Built, managed and ao by Canadiens

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