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Oshawa Times (1958-), 2 Sep 1964, p. 3

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- Riot In Philadelphia gs Based On Frustration _ By BRIAN STEWART " This is the second of a _ two-part series dealing with .-the American political "-seene. The first article dealt . with the Democratic Con- © vention in Atlantic City. In this article the reporter Yooks at the Negro riots in - Philadelphia and the Negro- . Revolution. Philadelphia, "City of Brother- ly Love", became a part of modern American tragedy this hind to mop-up. : The pictures also miss the) pressive and: frightening -claus- trophobia, and the smell of| overturned garbage pails used as road blocks against the po-) lice. It misses the hostility in watching eyes. At Jeast here there was the} welcome sight of lines of hel- meted police blocking the road and holding back the crowds wank glimpsed in the pg ue = AB, street we saw the jumble of Riots in the . negro shetto/ smashed police cars and wait- erupted the night affer theling fire engines, the thick Democratic Party in Atlantic|,roups of negroes waiting for City had resolved to end this\troube. A patrol car goes| tragedy of a divided, embittered 'through the police lines and| nation. heads up the street with its red I drove through the riot torn|light blinking. A sounl truck) section in northern Philadelohia|pjares orders to people on the) the morning after the first out-| roofs, to a few hoots of derision break mpl grant Euvinselphis| trom the crowd. in parts is a beautiful city. The) downtown area shows 290d /, The riot squadsin - msgs taste, with lots of small parks to} : rig Yon ae coneieiitiag take refuge in from the summer Street, pul on gi 'display of smiles and laughs as ome: Be yee Wind. north, how they grip their heavy night- ever, you enter the inter-racial tick Pe iaved What tao whites area of grim brownstone build. ye # fon cae to cour ings and small shops in what |? sok ih tha ange DT wee was once a fashionable area. /'Touvles te; ' A Then there.is the negro ghet:o, wiInpOWS BROKEN stretching for four square miles, ; 3 ; Sith sireek Slum aren which many whi C'Tou O"suth ihe same Philadelphians "claim they The 'long lines of shop windows haven't dared enter for years. in. ruins, the glass strewn We cut up through the negro/aiong the sidewalk, the insides section along 22nd street t0-\igoted. What shops remain in- wards the intersection with/tact are protected by heavy iron| Ridge avenue where the -- grills. first broke out. As. we wheeled|" a cae hat around. the narrow, coneesed A, Sav Geen ie lone cp streets of the fringe area, IlTMine world directed traffic Brey ere and more uneasy while hundreds of silent negroes Soon we were deep in the ghetto, «+ hed him from the sidewalk. the only whites within blocks. He too smiled a little too easily WALKS CROWDED to be convincing. Everyone was Our greatest fear was: that we|frightened, that. morning. : might-hit someone with the car. Running along Columbus ave- Children darted out from b2-|\nue, we took a turn off on to tween parked cars, and youths what looked like an innocent strolled unconcerned in front of side street -- and ran right oe 'hs, relaxing in the anarchy ojja street corner meeting of 3 the 'moment. Our greatest desire|negroes, The street Is too nar- was to remain as inconspicuous|row as possible. to inc' Sidewalks were crowded with crowd. people, dark shapes leaned out} "Oh, of the tenemnt windows, clus- moaned. trs of negroes gathered at) Standing on the roof of a car street. corners, and excited|g CORE (Congress of Racial youths peered out at passing/Fquality) member pleads for cars from doorways. peace and an ending to the riot- The further we went into the|ing, A few people on the fringe section, the more of a curiosity!o¢ the crowd turn to watch us we became. My blood froze/pass, 1 find myself sweating everytime we had to stop at 4/ heavily. red light. A Philadelphia report-- when we were out of this er said that none of his white|.treet we had had enough and friends would stop for red lights/headed out of the district. For a my God," the driver in: the 'negro section. They just/prief time we had experienced|ence, They are trying to turn} kept on going. When the Carisome of the fear which has stopped it seemed surrounded paynted generations of negroes) by hundreds of negroes crossing j, the American south. I had \zer division had remained be-|unemployment from northern whites. heat of the slums with its op- gether where they could, and \have formed clots in the great and _hostility| | For they have crowded to-| | industrial cities of the north andl west. While interest was focused, on the civil rights struggle in the) south, the north was becoming) worse every year. Philadelphia} has become a city whose popu-| lation is 26 per cent negro Most of them live in the worn down slum areas of the north side.' crowded together in this maze) of tenements and dilapidated boarding houses. . The riots were an act of frus- tration as much -as they were a part. of criminal outburst. The) 7 violence seen in Philadelphia was a part of a long tradition of violence in American life. It was bruta!, irrational, ill-timed and it became associated with crim- nal elements. It was, however, the result of ghetto Ife, and it was inevitable. VIOLENCE A TRADITION But if violence is a tradition American life it is also a losing tradition. Most immigrant groups arriving in America have felt the same need to take to the street. In Pennsylvania in the last-century, the Irish form- ed the Mo'ley Maguires to fight vicious managers and strike- breakers among the coal fields, but this did not win them their rightful place in American life. It was won when they utilized the means of American political power. The rioters in Philadelphia will) & lose out, as will the "sitters" on the boardwalk in Atlantic City who didn't understand how to compromise. They will have to learn how to use the strange machines at the base of Ameri- can politics. This is already being done by a part of the negro movement. Their leadership during the Revolution has been superb. to turn around in so we had/From the days of the Monf-| h the car along beside the/gomery, Alabama, Bus Boycott} in the early fifties to the pas- sage of the Civil Rights Bill this summer, strong negro organiza- tions have been using these ma- chines. They have insisted upon having a say in their fate, and have, used their powerful voting block to get that say. The peaceful and the violent aspects of the revolution have not met head on. The Martin Luther Kings' and the Roy Wil- kins' of the movement are try- ing desperately to stop the viol- the frustrations of decades into purposeful action. the street. Were these, | won-,eard that negroes in Mississippi NOT ALL DARK dered, the same people who beat/jearned at an early age to walk' The picture is not all dark. passing whites with clubs the! with permanently downcast eyes|In Atlantic City and Philadelphia night before? when in white sections. Here I/you can see sparkling new resi- "Going to get a good l0ok.\r5.nq myself staring straight|dential areas housing negroes, white bgy?" someone called),nead, trying not to meet the with their wide lawns and shady from a.tenement window. Then, glances of the people, knowingjtrees. Negro executive drive by just-in time the light changed)),. easily angry men ar ejin expensive cars. School enroll- and I could breathe again. -- ,|offended. ment of negroes is soaring. The pp gg a 'Then we began to see the first' The problem is time, and if area 'is that you don spy whites on the sidewalk looking the problem is not hopeless it is when or how trouble might) jicertain and puzzled by it all./at jeast a race with time. | | | break -out. Any: incident could) we were in the inter-racial sec- set_off the crowd, and with NO\ tion around the great industrial police. in sight, it would have plants. Soon we were on the been rather uncomfortable {0 freeway leading out of the city be and into the green hills of the You are at the mercy of a A : iPennsylvania coal fields. We hostile population. \could A PICTURES DECEIVING . When we finally reached Ridge| SOCIAL CHAOS avenue, my first thought, rather} Riots in Philadelphia sprang foolishly, was that it didn't look from the Negro revolution and like any of the news photos I has its roots in the social chaos had seen of these riots in Ameri-|°f the post-war America. can cities. What the pictures, It is one of the gravest prob- miss is the slow stream of peo- lems ever to face the nation. ple walking along the sidewalk|For years now there has been uncertain of their place, their|a migration of negroes from the duty, their reaction. It misses|south to the north, and it has the wild tapestry of the slums become one of the great treks} with the debris piled in the/in the history of the country.| streets, the torn window dis-\up to 200,000 negroes a year plays hanging from looted shop|have been leaving the south to windows. It misses the incred-\escape oppression and to find a ible mess and this time the sec-|place in the affluent society. tion looked as if it had been| They have found a new op- hit by. a tornado and a2 ypan-|presion, overcrowding, slums, FORT ERIE ENTRIES THURSDAY, September 3 FIRST RACE -- Purse $1900 ($2500)A--L R Goodyear, R B Taylor, Gardiner Claiming. Maiden three- and four-year-, Farms and Golden West Farms Entry olds. 6 Furlongs. + |B---J J Gregory and Audiey Farms' Entry Miss Tulip, Potts A-112 | All Grand, No Boy 107 | FIFTH RACE -- Purse $2200 ($4500). |Claiming. Three-year-olds. 6 Furiongs. So Smart, Gordon 118 Bordeau Bar, Davidson A-113 Mad Charge, Parsons XX109 Small Eckie, No Boy B-116 Jet Impaia, Walsh C-111 Love Quest, No Boy' 115 Jestso, No Boy B-123 Limbo Lad, Bailey 116 Secret Storm, Harrison 107 Grey Donna, Cuthbertson 102 Aunt Mona, Archer XXX97 Take a Gander, Lanoway 110 Sapien ogi No Bcc 10 ome Back Bayy Rogers 115 _-- Mr. Flirt, Harrison C-111 Also © + Resolve, Fitzsimmons, Roman Scholar, Davidson A-113 A-115; Bronze Slipper, No Boy, 112) Wa" 4_stattord Farms Entry fess Park, Turcotte, X105; West Curry, gC Best and Cherudon Stable En'ry No Boy, 107; Selwyn, No Boy, 107; Ali c_y sikura entry ruilah, Turcotte, X102 A--C K Roberts and G Atkinson Entry. SIXTH RACE -- Purse $1700 Grimsby Beach" Allowances. Three-year- SECOND RACH ee ing Ege ime olds and up. One and one-sixteenth Miles. Claiming. Three-year-o! . Peters Sister, Dittfach 113 5. Latin Artist, Gordon A-123 Prince Budi, gh vas xxKIOS Lord Saybrook, No BoyA-116 Howdy cor No Boy AW? eon No Poe 120 Power be 'oval Piper, Potts 119 Majestic Hour, at m |Dancing Lark, Bailey 116 nt ig agg 1 A~--Gardiner Farms Entry pge Sunty, Parsons A-X111 _QUINELLA BETTING Du Barry Rose, Bailey 114 Briefsin, No Boy 108 A&~C F Chapman and L Maloney emry. 'The | | SEVENTH RACE -- Purse $2600 ($10,- 000) Claiming. Three-year-olds and up.| About one and one-sixteenth 'miles on turf THIRD RACE -- Purse $2200. Mallen course ies, jed in Canada\6Nona's Charger, No Boy A-116 Wwo-year-old fillies, fom Recitatif, Bailey 116 Rococo Rogue, Cuthbertson XXX 108 » Turcotte X11) Blue, No Boy 113 1C.C. Street, No Boy A-118 Civic Guard, Rogers 116 Bull Market, Dittfach 118 A--E B Seedhouse entry Furiongs. Fleet Wheat, No 7 Arctic Lake, No Countess Tana, Gomez 8-117 Merry Barque, Diftfach 17 Chopparis, Rogers 8-117 Moosonee, No Boy A-117 Sik 'n Saphires, Turcott , Gordon peiigh 3 veer, Raeiverd 7 EIGHTH RACE -- Purse $2000 ($2000) nd Windtields Farm Entry Claiming. Three-year-olds and up, foaled in Canada. One and one-sixteenth Mites | e X12 | "7 Miss Scooter, Peg bidet oranda HA Grant entry oH . Bonnie Flare, No Boy 119 -- Purse $2400. ($7500), Artista, Turcotte X108 eee" ae vawcian. 6 Furlongs. Glenspeed, Turcotte X117 First Fashion, No Boy 2 Enlyn Lad, No Boy 119 Journey Home, Rogers A117 Elforo The Great, Rogers 122 Swanwick Jim, Walsh 112 Buzzin, Leblanc 119 Free View, Fitzsimmons 107 Bomar, No Boyllé Vee Gee Cee, No Boy 116 X--5 Ibs. AAC XX--7 fbs. AAC XXX--10 Ibs. AAC POST TIME 2 P.M, ice Cold, No Boy 117 River Party, No Boy 8-172 Blacks Charge, Bailey B-117 Forever Pilot, Harrison 115 'Lord Beverley, Gordon A-112 | America must assimilafe the negro, and share the Affluent Society with him. And the negro movement must be controlled by the non-violent elements. Until it is solved Philadelphia, and all the other cities, will remain a part of this modern American tragedy. Truth Hurts Sometimes Cadi Says PORT HOPE--Lester Bowers of Oshawa, found guilty-- of assault of his housekeeper Miss Gwendolyn Vardy, was remand- ed to Sept, 28 for sentence, by Magistrate R. B. Baxter, Mon- day. Charged with striking the woman with a heavy board, Bowers said he had not hit her with the board but had used it only as protection against a pair of nail scissors, wielded by the woman. Const. Robert Carney of the Ontario Provincial Police, on routine traffic patro] Aug. 29 in Cavan Township, said he found the woman "frantically waving from the south shoulder of the road." "I saw she was hurt,"' said the constable, and went to a RR 1, Fraserville residence as directed, where he was advised Bowers had left. At 4.45 a.m. Aug. 30, he was advised Oshawa police had arrested the accused. In his decision, Magistrate Baxter suggested "'it is the ordi- nary tale of people living in this relationship. Living together they get drinking together, then telling the truth . . . and the truth 'hurts.' WANTED OIL BURNER SERVICEMAN All Replies Kept Confidential Apply: BOX D-1 OSHAWA TIMES ie 'JUNIOR GARDEN CLUB WINNERS DISPLAY W. Frost Trophy for the best junior garden competition; Jane Powell, with the West- mount Kiwanis Club for the best senior garden and Wim Trailer ting with the winners is Mrs. E. E. Sandford, chairman of the Junior Garden Club. Left to right are Mrs. Sandford, Sharon McGhee who won the The-annual flower and vege- table show of the Oshawa Junior Garden Club was held Saturday with over 200 ex- hibits on display. Shown chat- or 'Travel Visits Waltona Park Just 14 miles were travelled|places as the club experienced) for most members of the Osh-|its first "'all-wet'" weekend in awa Travel Trailer Club to the|four years; but the sullen skies te of their August rendezvous) did little to deter the trailerites -- a welcome respite for return- from enjoying the fellowship ing vacationers who had travel-|that is synonymous with the) led many thousand miles dur-/OTTC. The usual campfire was) ing July and early August. rained out but in its place mem- Despite the inclement weather, bers converged on the recrea- tion building where Ed. La- vallee, club historian, showed movies of the past. three. years' outings. That these films will prove to be invaluable in record- ng the history and growth of the club was quite apparent; and a source of pleasure to the parents was the obvious growth of the children. To conclude the film showing, Chuck Mesher acted as projectionist to show slides provided by Frank Ball of the June Rally in Kingston. POT LUCK SUPPER With a combination of good timing and good luck, the Satur- ay evening Pot Luck: supper was held in comparative com- fort between showers. The Blood Bank Needs Many New Donors At the last minute the Red Cross officials are working pate % feverishly to get enough donors PB orca nah Panay Bo 'been to the clinic tomorrow so that judged Gestroyed or Mr. Favreau 15/the Oshawa Blood Bank will be hack 4 gee s;ecday| Withholding this information in ; C est Southdown ram Tuesday what he believes to be the beat piping suplied for another at the Canadian National Exhi-|interest of our national secur- bition sheep show. Mr. Ayre's|ity. If these records have not), /#@ minimum amount o/ Burton J. H. was judged r-| been destroytd they, along with|blood that will take care of the serve best ram. Ayre Acres 100 all others pertaining to my|Shawa General Hospital needs T was judged best Southdown service, should be made public|'S 400 bottles. So far the com- ewe with the reserve best ewe on demand by. the opposition|Mittee does not have enough jaward going to John Knights of Parties." jappointments to collect this |Mull, Ont. MacDonald is making.a\7poust and unless volunteers cross - Canada tour, exposing|°°™® forward, who have not FOUR ALARMS |what he says are RCMP under-(™@de appointments, there will The Oshawa Fire Department! cover methods. He claims he be a shortage of blood in. the reports that in the 24-hour Joined the Communist party on|?!00d bank. peritd up io 9 ain. dbday. six behalf of the RCMP and is seek-. Bob Stroud, chairman of the ice ; * ing recognition for this, Oshawa Blood Donor Commit-| ambulance calls were answered.| [py his statement he said rec-tee, says that because there Of four fire calls received Tues-|ords of A squadron of the spe-|Will be extra staff it will not | day, one was a false alarm, an- cial division of the security and|be necessary to make an ap- other involved a person locked/investgatoni branch between|pointment. Anyone coming du out of a home, another was a 1951 and 1962 contain proof of|ing the afternoon will be able car fire at the corner of Thomas his service. to get out in about 20 minutes. a ad re pel pn = 5 The donating of blood is pain- niciad < and the he teaolved 70 PERSONS DROWNED _|!ess and no one need fear that a small fire in a box car at_, ®AWALPINDI, Pakistan Fd) beige or el eg Siavanson: road acuth. Seventy persons, including 15|cause a test is taken by the \children, drowned when a pas-| technician prior to donating. AWARDED CONTRACT -- |senger boat capsized in the| The clinic hours are from The Cobourg Town Council) River gg 200 miles tome to 4.30 in the afternoon . sit usta . here, the Pakistan Times re-|and from 6 to 9 in the evening. "nm ppbv eagle alla ports. Authorities blamed the) The place is St. Gregory's Audi- ; : ' , accident, which occurred Mon-|torium, Simcoe street north, the installation of storm sewers day, on overloading and ar-| Those who give will be help-| on University avenue. rested the two boatmen. 'ing to save many lives, | ot the August 21 weekend, which saw most members arriving and setting up in a downpour, 22 |trailers were on hand to par- |take in the weekend activities) | at Waltona Park in Newcastle. The covered picnic shelters were very popular: meeting ls | "Underdog' Ca For Release Of 'Records' KENORA, Ont. (CP) -- Cal- vin MacDonald, self styled former RCMP undercover 2g- ent, Tuesday. asked oppos tion| | parties to demand production of} | records of alleged .RCMP inves-| tigation of M. J. Coldwell, for-' mer CCF party ltader. Justice Minister Favreau said in the Commons Monday the RCMP had never investigated Mr. Coldwell "or found any cause to do so." MacDonald, who: has said he erie was ; rs spied on Mr. Coldwell in 1960 AYRE ENTRY WINS on RCMP orders, said in a TORONTO (CP) -- The entry: statement: of Lloyd Ayre of Bowmanville, Ont., Vic Ham, SCIENCE DEAN Dr. James H. Brown whose appointment as dean of the Faculty of Applied Science, Queen's University, was an- nounced this week. Dr. Brown, a research engineer with the United States Steel Corporation. at. Monroeville, Pa., succeeds H. G. Conn who has been dean since 1955 and who was appointed vice- principal (administration) in June 1963. A Canadian, Dr. Brown iectured at Massa- chusetts Institute of Tech- nology from 1956 to 1959. CITY AND was { fs THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, September 2, 1964 3. j TROPHIES Verhoeven who won the Mac- Millen Trophy for the most points in the show. --Oshawa Times Photo | Clu covered picnic 'shelter with its) long lines of tables was used to good advantage. lowing the outdoor church serv- ice. A good many dozen cobs of fresh, sweet corn, provided by! Garnet and Vera Johnstone,| were served by Ron Thompson||.ynda Campbell of Toronto has| publications, and Walt. Mosier, To add var-|won iety, Harry and. Pearl Blakely| had arranged .for a luncheon} smorgasbord which proved very! popular. | A very impressive non-denom-| inational church service was) held on Sunday morning. A) gleaming white cloth over a picnic table, a cross and open} Bible formed the worship centre.| As members gathered in front] of the improvised altar, strains of well-loved hymns provided |the prelude music. The service was. conducted by Harry and |Pearl Blakely, Bill and Flo. Kent, with Ron Thompson oper- ating the record player for. the music. The attendance prize; donated | by Chuck Mesher and drawn for iby Jim McEwen, was present- | ed to Ray and Hilda Judge. This 'seemed opportune as the Judges are scheduled to leave shortly Met a vacation in British Colum- la. WELCOME NEW MEMBERS Ken and Ann Salisbury, who paid their initial visit in July at Elora, were formally welcomed into club membership following the unanimous approval of their. application at the pow-wow. It was a pleasure to welcome the McEwen family and to see that "Doc", our popular secretary, was his old self and none the worse for his recent accident. The wind and rain abated on Sunday and leisurely groups gathered together in the sun. For the more active, a game of "move-up" ball was enjoyed with our "'official" umpire, Bill Kent, forsaking his position in favor of catcher. Tht swimming pool was also the scene of much activity, pi Grounds and Location Chair- man, Bill Mitchener reported that plans had been completed to hold the September outing at Beavermead Park, Peterbor- ough, on the weekend of Sept. 18, 19 and 20. PUBLISH KENNEDY BOOK NEW YORK (AP)--A_ book titled A' Nation of Immigrants, on which President John F. Kennedy was working at the time of his death, will be pub- lished Oct. 7, it was announced Tuesday by Harper and Row, the New York publishing firm. YOUTH ALLOWANCES At the end of September the first payments will be made under the Youth Allowances Act recently passed by Parliament. If you have a child who is 16 or 17 years of age, is maintained by you, and is either in full-time attendance at school or university, or is un- able to attend by reason of physical or mental infirmity, you may be eligible for a monthly allowance of $10. THIS ALLOWANCE MUST BE APPLIED FOR --IT WILL NOT BE SENT AUTOMATICALLY | During -August application forms were sent to the parents of children already 16 or 17, or who would be 16 before September. If you have a child who: meets the above requirements, and for any reason an application has not reached you, you can obtain one by writing to the Regional Director of Family Allow- ances in your provincial capital. The applications should be returned as soon as possible, in order to ensure prompt receipt of the first payment. IMPORTANT NOTICE FOR PAGERS» ? nt tee working on Canada's role in the International Hydrologic Decade, a 10-year study of world water resources sched- uled to begin in 1965, reported Tuesday that its biggest prob- lem will be to get staff for the shortage of hydrologists -- wa- ter scientists paign is to be launched at uni- versities to interest more young Canadians in this. field. committee wound up a two-day conference Tuesday. : Southam Business Publications Limited of Toronto has pur- chased the British Columbia Journal of Commerce Limited and British Columbia Commer- -feial Printers Limited, announced Tuesday. The Jour- nal was established in 1911 and publishes two weekly editions, one for B.C. and the other for the Prairie region, companies were sold by Mrs. E. C,. Sheppard, publisher and} daughter of the founder, G. H.| Nelson. closed. Francks, Toronto television and|Patton tank o night cl chosen to play \Kelly, a $500,000 musical sched-| juled to open on Broadway Feb. '16. Francks was signed to a | . : The annual Corn Roast sched Oa ea ero gl Abie uled for Friday evening WA&Siang Joseph E. Levine, the tele- held Sunday at noon hour fol- | vision-movie producers who are |putting on Kelly. \to elect a new president to suc- Drought Check Lacks Scientists OTTAWA (CP) -- A commit-jformer president of the West German Socialist party.. The council also will hear reports by key socialist leaders on world problems. PRIEST CHARGED MIAMI, Fla. (AP) -- A Hait- ian-bom Roman Catholic priest was charged by customs agehts Tuesday with conspiring to ex- port munitions for '"revolution- ary purposes." Rev. Jean Bap. tiste Georges, 44, of New York City, was released in $1,000 bond. He was charged in a complaint on grounds that he allegedly possessed a key to a trailer in which the munitions were found, PASS BILL BERLIN (AP) -- The parlia- ment of East Germany umani- mously approved Tuesday a bill removing all. time limitations from the prosecution of Nazis and war crimes. So far, both the East and West German sta- tute of limitations made it im- possible to prosecute any war or Nazi criminal 20 years after the end of the Second World dis-| War. i TANK CRUSHES CAR FRANCKS CHOSEN PORDENONE, Italy (AP)--A NEW YORK (CP) -- Don Motorist tried to pass an M-47 n.a nearby high- ub entertainer, has been|way Tuesday but didn't make the lead injit. The left tread of the tank |squashed 'half of the car. The driver escaped uninjured. CORRESPONDENT DIES BUENOS AIRES (AP)--Her- \pert. M. Clark, 57, dean of. U.S. news correspondents in Argen- tina died Tuesday night after \being ill for several weeks after lsuffering a stroke, He was cor. GLASGOW (Reuters) --|respondent for McGraw - Hill the Journal of the highland fling and|Commerce and several Euro- sword dance competition at the|pean newspapers. world highland dancing cham-| pionships. Donna Fraser of Vancouver finished in third just A Minute... . s+ if it's proper, fast and effi- cient travel service you wont. . » place in the adult world cham-| pionship and Kirk Brush of! Mas WALTER BRANCH, As representative. of DONALD RAVEL she will do everything Ontario won the Scottish cham-|¢ell pionship for dancers aged 9-11./5, SOCIALISTS MEET possible to help you. The number BRUSSELS (Reuters) -- So-|725-1328. cialist leaders from all over the NEED A NEW... world meet here today to be- OIL FURNACE? gin five days of celebrations Call marking the centenary of the PERRY socialist international. A three- Dey or night 723-3443 job, Canada faces a_ serious -- and a cam- The BUY JOURNAL VANCOUVER (CP) -- it was The two Price was not | | | TAKE PRIZES day session of the internation-| al's general council will gather '. ceed the late Erich Oll to bring your personal list of phone numbers up to date! Your new telephone directory has many, new and ? changed numbers. The Front Sections of your Direc- tory contain information about Jocal calling, numbers you can dial without Long Distance charges, and complete information on Direct Distance Dialing! You will find the Area Codes for hundreds of places in Canada and the United States, sample rates, and what to do when you want to reach the Information Operator in a distant city! If you are like most people, you keep a personal list of numbers you call most frequently--to save yourself time and errors. Give it a check-up now! UKE A NEW BLUE BOOK? 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