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Oshawa Times (1958-), 4 Dec 1964, p. 22

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er 22 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, December 4, 1964 36--Legal - NOTICE 'TO CREDITORS AND OTHERS IN THE ESTATE OF MRS, EVELINE ELLEN «: ANDISON, deceased. a ® GEORGE A. LARIN, : Barrister and Solicitor, i 4180 Dundas St. West, : TORONTO 18, Ontario. ; Solicitor for the Executor pS---Coming Events MONSTER BINGO | Over $500 in Prizes "SAT, DEC. 5th AT 8 P.M. ST. GREGORY'S AUDITORIUM SIMCOE ST. NORTH ADMISSION 50 CENTS * Includes tickets on 20 Tur- > keys to be drawn Dec. 19th. All Prizes Doubled on Admission Ticket 'children Under 16 Not Admitted "HOLY CROSS BINGO FREE ADMISSION Friday, Dec. 4 20 REGULAR GAMES 18 Games ot $10 each 1 Game at $30.00 1 Game ot $50.00 SPECIAL JACKPOT $160 in 56 Nos. $20.00 Consolation PLUS $39.00. each horizontal ine. SHARE-the-WEALTH Regular Jackpot $200 in 55 Nos. -$20.00 Consolation GOOD PARKING 7:45 P.M. NO CHILDREN BINGO ORANGE TEMPLE SATURDAY, DEC. 5th 7:30 -P.M GIF SPOTTER | PRINS PAS AR OM Be" HERE'S WHERE TO FIND GIFTS FOR EVERYONE 1 Christmas By CY FOX MONTREAL (CP)--"'We need Tory leaders with Whig ideas," said the stocky financier, giv- ing his swivel-seat a 'no-non- sense whirl as he learnedly For the Children Holiday Food For Him or Her hold until for sale. Will PONIES 723-2593. Christmas. Perfect gifts. Trees and Trim oc etiede eeacnsen aieeeminaetnienateneeeaeenenan CHRISTMAS TREES! 97c up. Chinn's, corner of Park Road South at tog side. Pine spruce. One or 1,000, 723-71 Free delivery. CHRISTMAS TREES FOR SALE No, 1 Pruned Scotch Pines. Good color. Apply to: MRS, SADIE HAMILTON Orono, Ontario Phone No. | Ring 16 YULETIDE GIFT & TRIM SHOP YouR . . . "ONE STOP CHRISTMAS SHOP" Features: No. 1 top quolity trees, gift wrap, table centres, door knockers, fancy candles, garlands, indoor-outdoor lights, out- door figures, Santas, bulbs, bells, etc. Shop today! RUNDLE GARDEN CENTRE LTD. 1015 KING E. 725-6551 Shop. in Warmth! @ complete selection For Dhgeyes * CHRISTMAS TREES (will spray) * LIGHTS Indoor and Outdoor * DECORATIONS *® FLOWERING HOUSE PLANTS Mums, Poinsettos, Cyclamens 2 Locations to... J. A. Janssen & Sons LTD. 843 King W. 728-9429 Al Preston's Sunoco Simcoe St. North HOT. COFFEE: TO EACH CUSTOMER 5000 TREES ON LOT WHITE ROCK capons, 6 Ibs. and up, fresh killed, oven Ugg Y delivered, 725-8304. $2.50 each. Telephone '| FOR THE MOTORIST LIKE ARMCHAIR SHOPPING ? Phone 668-3311 For details on Gift Packs of SELECT APPLES RED WING ORCHARDS Give a gift wrapped Ontario Motor League Membership For information Call 728-8334 For Anyone 117 Bloor St. E. For "Holiday F Fun ORDER YOUR CHRISTMAS FOWL Litz Processing Plant Special rates for Banquets, Bowling Alleys. 723-4722 CHRISTMAS FOWL Capons and Turkeys dressed ond delivered. FRANK HOAG Rossland Road West Dial 725-6837 GIVE * * * your Party Clothes "THE FESTIVE LOOK" Vadiant Cleaners | Oshawa Shopping Centre 725-1023 _ Pick- -up & Delivery Hien 'SMITH BEVERAGES LIMITED Authorized Bottlers for PEPSI-COLA CANADA LTD. and Crush International Limited 750 Farewell St., Oshowa TELEPHONE 723-1011 The Safe Way To Celebrate THE HOLIDAY SEASON Ride with MERCURY TAXI 725-4771 14 ALBERT ST. Oshawa's Most Modern Taxi For the Family Nursery Grown Pruned Scotch Pines 6 ft. - 7 ft. - 8 ft. SPECIAL... 97 - 1.50 - 2.00 Sprayed any color For Nominal Charge. 20 Games -- $8 Share the Wealth 4 -- $40 Jackpots to go | 1 -- $150 Jackpot to go: | Children Under 16 Not Admitted SUNNYSIDE PARK MONSTER BINGO TO-NIGHT CLUB CAMELOT King St. E.--one block east of city limits opposite "Bad Boys'"' $1200 in Prizes Early Bird games at 7:45 Jackpot Nos. 51 and 55 Admission 1.00 SALVATION ARMY WHITBY HOME LEAGUE will hold their CHRISTMAS TEA & SALE Sat. Dec. 5th---2:30-4:30 122 KENT ST. WHITBY __All are welcome _ ST. JOHN'S PARISH BINGO Corner Bloor E. & Simcoe Every Friday at 7:45 P.M. 20 Gomes $10 and $15 Jackpot 53 Nos. $130. Jackpots and Share the Wealth ST. HEDWIG'S LADIES' AUXILIARY BAZAAR SATURDAY, DEC. 5, AT 5 P.M. Supper served 75c. Bake sole and mony other atractions. RUMMAGE SALE RADIO PARK Grenfell: St. Sat., Dec. 5--- 2 p.m. Clothing, Toys, etc socia BINGO, Saturday, December 5, George's Hall, Albert and Jackson Streets, 7.30 p.m, Prizes, lunch served. Everyone welcome, CHRISTMAS TREE LAND Oshawa Garden Centre 1259 Simcoe St. N. 723-1161 OPEN EVENINGS min GIVE DAD BLACK & DECKER UTILITY DRILL At $12.95 MILLWORK AND BUILDING SUPPLY 1279 Simcoe N. 728-6291 POOL TABLES 11 models From $139.50 MAJOR POOL EQUIPMENT CORP. CANADA LTD. 690 Drake St., Oshawa 725-9151 Afer hours 725-3661 $ SAVINGS $ parts, and 24 hr. on auto repoirs, accessories, speed custom equipment, towing. Lat Sanus 1600 KING E. 728-7781 (10% off with this coupon) "THIS YEAR GIVE HIM FLYING TRAINING For private pilots. This is a Government approved school. Aircraft rentals also available J. V. AVIATION LIMITED Hanger 2, Oshawa Municipal Airport, Stevenson Rd. N. 728- 3191 "STAR "LINE" ELNA SEWING MACHINES ore here! up to $100 off on all '64 models. by your Eina dealer Oshawa Sewing Centre SKATES NEW and USED SOLD and EXCHANGED Also BICYCLES and TRICYCLES Apply DRAYTON CYCLE 204 Bond St. E. SOMETHING . . . THE WHOLE FAMILY WILL LOVE BABY BUDGIES Wonderful assortment of rare species and colors. MRS. T. BROAD 114 Elgin East 723-9767 SURE TO PLEASE! A Gift Certificate from LLOYD ELLIS SHOES 49 King St. W.,, Bowmanville 623-5941 Shoes, Slippers for the Family Use Our Convenient Layeway Plan ELMER'S "The Christmas Store with Gifts Galore'"' Got gift problems? Drop into Elmer's Bargain House and see the large selection of gift ideas for the whole family ELMER'S BARGAIN HOUSE STORE HOURS: 12 noon to 9 p.m. ed Sat. 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Closed all day Monday 253 BLOOR ST. E. 329 Simcoe S 728-2391 FROM... SANTA'S PACK FOR ALL THE FAMILY SLIPPERS * Busy. feet will appre- ciate these warm house slippers Christmas morn and every morn. * Complete range of sizes, styles and colors BIGGEST SELECTION TOWN! BURNS CO. LTD. 1 KING |W. 725-4611 "Use our lay away" -- IN GIFTS FOR THE HOBBYIST Model Automobile, Air- plane, Boat Kits, The Big- gest Selection in town, POLLARD Rodio & Television Service 153 Simcoe §. 723-9512 New and Used PORTABLE AND STANDARD TYPEWRITERS One year guarantee on all machines Jenkins Business Machines (Sales & Service) OPEN EVENINGS 728- 7783 GIVE aie That Lasting Gift "A Gift Certificate" For A PORTRAIT IN OIL Sittings Arranged at your Convenience. Coll CLARK STUDIO 325 BROCK NORTH WHITBY -- 668-4497 RELIGIOUS CHRISTMAS GIFTS ASSORTED ROSARIES ST. JOSEPH'S MISSALS $5 to $18 CERAMIC STATUES $2.25 to $13 Lovely assortment of Crucifix and Nativity Sets PARKVIEW VARIETY STORE 98 OLIVE AVE. Mrs. V, Bachand, owner Open daily 'til 10 p.m. 725-8232 For the Home BETTER CHRISTMAS PROGRAMMES T.V. Twers $50. up OSHAWA T.V. SUPPLY LTD. 361 GIBBONS 728-8180 BILL LEASK This. Year Give The Gift That Keeps On Giving... An OSHAWA TIMES SUBSCRIPTION If you have friends or rela- tives who are living out-of- town, send the Oshawa Times, a year-round gift thet is sure to be a daily reminder of your thought- fulness, * * CALL THE CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT KING ST, EAST 723-3474 Will be pleased to give you further details and act upon your..instructions ¢\conferred exclusively fithem here at the moment, paraphrased Disraeli. Marcel Faribault sat in the deserted office of the trust com- pany he heads and spoke with bilingual gusto about Canada's future and the future of his na- tive Quebec. "His staff had long since left for the day but the 56-year-old Mr. Faribault talked on tire- lessly to a reporter in the man- ner that won him the attention of Progressive Conservatives at their recent Fredericton confer- ence on national goals. A Conservative himself, he has never sought political of- fice. He may still take the plunge, however, and the party would have in its Quebec camp a forceful sophisticate who wants a decentralized federal system for Canada and less re- liance on government in the tackling of economic problems. Of the young separatists in Quebec, he says: "Put them to work and they'd soon get to know hard, dollar realities." /|TOUGH FOR TORIES At Fredericton he presented a sample preamble for a draft constitution for Canada that would grant each province '"'all the powers, rights' and preroga- tives of a state'? except for "matters and powers hereby in the federal government." Marcel Faribault would claim for his draft that it derives its inspiration from the "hard, dol- [ae facts of life. For him, a la grasp of these realities is the |hallmark of a true Tory, while |the term Whig signifies a taste| | for new ideas and a will to im- plement them. But whether he enters active politics depends on: how it will laffect his wife and seven chil- \dren, he says. 'Their welfare comes first." And then there are the pros- |Quebec right now. "Things look rather bad tor] one must think in terms of tbe different." The Faribaults llawyers since 1754 when ifirst of them came to. Quebec | | from France. But Mr. Fari-! have been |pects for the Conservatives in| Tories With Whig Ideas Need Says Conservative bault's North American history. DIRECTOR OF BELL tury British prime minister, of affairs. director, real firm's president in 1955. General Trust, cent higher than in 1962. 10 other firms. pointed him to Council, and membership intellectual interests. He has notarial law and Montreal, also serving university's secretary - from 1950 to 1955. |SEEKS EFFICIENCY Mr. Faribault says it is busi- tolerance for what he calls un- becers headed" as about most other things, cluding separatism. are similarly He has emerged a strong sup- strictly Canadian on |the Queen as a source of execu- porter of. a constitution not' dependent jtive authority. ha says, | government to exercise. Other provinces want changes the|too, he declares, but whenever Quebec voices such a_ wish, 'prejudice'? leads to hostile re- great - great - uncle, Georges-Bartelemi, won a place of honor outside law for com- piling a pioneer list of works on This scholarly bent also ap- pears in the character of Mar- cel Faribault, trained though he was to be a practising notary. So talk of Disraeli, the 19th cen- comes easily to the voluble man It was in 1946 that he joined Trust General du Canada as a becoming the Mont- with a pre- ponderance of French-speaking personnel, listed total assets un- der its control at the end of 1963 as $367,748,000. Its net profit for the year was $487,828--15 per Mr. Faribault is also a direc- tor of Dupuis Freres depart- ment store in Montreal, Banque Canadienne Nationale, Bell Tel- ephone Company of Canada and In 1960, John Diefenbaker ap- the Canada in several Quebec Icarned socie- ties is further reflection of his written a book on taught the subject at his alma mater, the French-language University of as the general ness that has taught him an in- real and obsolete elements in the present constitution of Can- jada. And he believes most Que- "hard- about the constitution in- The place given the Queen in e current system is obsolete, while the letter of the but | constitution vests more power | jin the federal government than years. Maybe later things will|circumstances now permit that a Chegoanpeapoes ya ond dis sian: cath ates cad seas ates i lie actions among some English- speaking Canadians, "Look here, governing a huge country like Canada is no job for pygmies. You can't rely on prejudices in ruling Canada. "What's more, to me, democ- racy is simply people locked to- gether in discussion." FAVORS ARISTOTLE If one side demands too much of another--a surrendering of provincial rights, the death of a language -- discussion becomes impossible and democracy col- lapses, he 'said, his voice echo- ing through the empty corridors of the 10-storey Trust General building He traced Quebec's current demands for constitutional changes back to the govern- ment of Maurice Duplessis, who died in 1959. But, his eyes fired up behind unrimmed glasses, the' versatile financier ranged much further afield in tracing the theoretical roots of what he called "true federalism." Quoting chapter and verse, he cited the political readings of a lifetime--Locke, Burke, de Tocqueville, Montesquieu and a variety of other idea-makers, British and French. Then there was Aristotle, an- cient prophet of the "realism"' Mr. Faribault says he prefers to the "idealism" of another Greek, Plato. Thoughts of Aristotle brought on a paean to private property and this in turn brought up the question of young. separatists. 'NEVER MENTION NAMES' "Aristotle says that under a system based on private prop- and people are kept busy enough not to be able to indulge in .excessive discussions and dreaming." | Education has a_ rightfully prominent place in Quebec's development, he said, but edu- cation by tlself is not enough and can sometimes drift away from life's realities. Then Mr. Faribault voiced other opinions, just as strong as his political views but a mite more abstract. There was the problem of translating works of literature, for example, and why such rendering of St. John of the Cross and Cervantes was easier 300 years ago than today. Talk of the French poet Paul Valery and the philosopher Jacques Maritain followed, with For LBJ with a plan for a permanent American-European cabinet to| shape nuclear policy - making | around the world. |day night Britain's Labor prime minister hopes such a group of allied countries, U.S. Security Council in Wash-| ington, would supplement his/ project for an Atlantic nuclear force. The cabinet, as the British Britain, Italy, Holland or some other small Atlantic Alliance nation and France, if President} Charles de Gaulle or his suc-) cessor cared to join. It would have rights to con- sult, and be consulted by, the U.S. president or his delegates in all emergencies inside and outside the NATO area. to hear the views of his allies up to the moment, if it ever Demonstration Is "Anarchy" Says President BERKELEY, Calif. (AP) -- President Clark Kerr of the University of California says the student free speech move- ment's sit-in demonstration on Campus Thursday amounted to "anarchy by a wilful minority of radical students." Police dragged students out of the littered' corridors of the ad- ministration building on the Berkeley campus, and took them to jails in buses. They ar- rested 801 persons. The rebels seized Sproul Hall Wednesday night and refused to| vacate despite a plea to dis-| perse peacefully by campus Chancellor Edward Strong. Mario Savio, 21, a philosophy major, led the demonstrators in their demands for unrestricted freedom to recruit members and collect funds anywhere on cam- pus for off-campus political ac- The American chief executive! thus would have every chance) 'Wilson Prepares Meeting |clear trigger. | Wilson is expected to submi peo and other far-reaching pro- Johnson Political aides reported Thurs- | Monday and Tuesday when the |two leaders discuss ways of im- | proving the West's global mil- alongside the) jitary, political and economic ar- postals to President jrangements. WILL VISIT OTTAWA On Wednesday the Britih jprime minister will go to Ot- sentatives of West Germany, /tawa for talks with Canadian| leaders. the added comment that artists and thinkers are as much grist to the businessman's mill as erty things get cared for better); soy a cam aoe re 122 WHITES EVACUATED Tales Of Attrocities Against Hostages Mount LEOPOLDVILLE (Reuters)-- Tales of atrocities against rebel- held hostages mounted today following the arrival of three planeloads of evacuees from the northeast town of Bunia, The planes arrived here Thursday bringing 122 whites and a number of Congolese. Twenty Congolese soldiers in the airlift, who had been cap- tured by the rebels four months ago, showed signs of torture. Some had had their ears cut off and their noses 'slit. The whites that three priests and a nun, al Belgians, were killed during the last two weeks. BEATEN AND VIOLATED Belgian Sister Elza Raphael Bourguignon said that about them with sticks. "Some of the nuns," added, was shot and bled to death." She identified the dead nun as Sister Teresa Simons, 36, of the Sisters of Catholic Instruction, The three priests killed were taken to Bunia from an outly ing region by rebels who pan- icked on hearing government forces were approaching. included many priests and nuns who. reported she "were violated and one| -- The insurgents abandoned the priests, who were later shot by other fleeing rebels. PULLED OUT TOE NAILS -- One of the Congolese said the rebels pulled out his toe nails, cut off his ears and slit his nose with a machete. "But the idea was not to talk, Once you toiken they billed i you," he said, The whites freed in Bunia re--- duced to about 500 the esti- mated number still in areas controlled by the rebels. The known number of white ||Civilian deaths since Belgian paratroopers dropped into The Congo 10 days ago totalled at least 98, Another 96 liberated hostages were reported recover- ing from wounds. Two Cana- aldians were killed and eight are month ago 70 nuns and 21 priests were placed in a hotel guarded by the rebels, who beat believed still in rebel territory. Missionaries who arrived in Leopoldville Thursday said about 60 more whites remained in Bunia. Search Coast | For Freighter HALIFAX (CP)--A_ concen- trated search was on today for a British freighter unheard from in 24 hours and a Nova Scotia trawler missing since Tuesday in storm-whipped Mar- itime coastal waters. hey are the 865-ton Bos- worth, bound for Sydney from Portugal with 13 persons aboard, and the Acadia Fisher- ies Limited trawler Sea Hawk, believed working off Cape Sable, S|N.S., with 15 or 16 men, MAYOR IN SENATE David Croll is a Liberal member of the Senate. He was mayor of Windsor, Ont., during 1930-34 and 1938-41 and was. first elected to the On- tario legislature in 1934. they are Search officials were uncer- tain of the last reported position of the Bosworth, but believe she is somewhere in the Cape Race, Nfid., area. The ocean-escort Cap de la Madeleine was searching for the Sea Hawk Thursday night. An RCAF Argus was to join that search today, The two vessels were reported in distress: following a two-day storm that struck the Maritimes with snow, rain and high winds, The Liberian freighter Fury was wrecked in the storm on rocks off eastern Nova Scotia. Two Stony Island, N.S., lobster fishermen were believed to have drowned in mountainous seas off Yarmouth, N.S. , speculation. "Quote Mill or Burke to a businessman and he'll probably | jtell you it's marvellous, com- |mon-sense stuff. Tell him who) LONDON (AP)--Harold Wil-|came, when he would have to) |said it and he'll accuse you of son flies to Washington Sunday|decide whether to press the nu- jidealism, The thing is never to |mention names. Mr. Faribault himself turns high-sounding in the most un- likely places. In his 1963 report to the shareholders of Trust General, he remarked: "Created in the image of God, man wishes himself to be some way a creator and will ever seek the means to become 50. "A moderate capitalism re- mains one such means, espe- cially through the very modern iform of capitalism which i t Among Wilson's chief aims in) Visine a company or a corpora- Washington: | --He wants Johnson to aban-| lateral nuclear force in with Polaris rockets, by mixed NATO crews nuclear force of perhaps eight or 10 ships and including all Polaris-firing nuclear subma- rines the British are building. --Wilson would like the allies to follow up any move creating a force with an approach to the Russians for an agreement | on arms control. | --Wilson is hoping Johnson will recognize that much of) Britain's billion-dollar yearly, bill for overseas garrisons don the scheme for a multi-| its present form which would con- | sist of 25 surface ships armed} manned | and | owned jointly by the six or! seven countries interested in it.| --He wants Johnson to accept} his own scheme for an Atlantic Britain's H-bombers and three} food for -- in| Re-Elect "LEO" GLOVER --for-- BOARD OF EDUCATION Leo Glover VOTE ALEX SHESTOWSKY For. Alderman @ 8 Years Planning and Estimating with Engineering Firm in Batawa, @ 4 Years as Deve Engineering Firm in India. @ 14 Years in Dry Oshawa. and ELECT Ont. lopment Officer with Cleaning Business in serves the over-all allied inter- Member of: © Oshawa Harbour Commissioners @ Oshawa Rotary Club @ Oshawa Chamber of Commerce @ Dry Cleaners and Launderers ALEX SHESTOWSKY + Cobeth Recast 'Si onan For Transportation or Information Phone 725-9196 or 725-9059 est. At a time of financial cri- sis for Britain, he would be glad if the Americans could find ways of contributing to- ward the upkeep of some ad | those postions. -- DEATHS By THE CANADIAN PRESS | Kingston, Ont. -- Dr. G. B. Frost, 73, professor emeritus of | chemistry at Queen's Univer- | sity and brother of former On- | tario premier Leslie Frost. Montreal -- Alexander Stein, 73, president of the textile. firm of A. Stein and Son Incorpo- tivities. | Gov. Edmund G. Brown or-} dered the arrests. Of those jailed, only a handful were re-) leased on bond. "This protest has never been over free speech," Kerr said. "There has been and is free- dom of speech at the Univer- sity of California. The protest has been over organizing polit- ical action on the campus. . . This has been granted within the limits of the law." Many demonstrators, carried to buses by their armpits or their shirts and jacket collars, were bounced on stairs as they were dragged. The students face one or all of several charges--unlawful as- sembly, trespassing and resist- ing arrest. Bail for most of them was set at about $300. rated and a noted talmudic jscholar. Montreal -- Mrs. Clothilde Giasson, 85, niece of Luc Letel- lier, a former lieutenant-gover- nor, and E. J. Flynn, a former premier of Quebec. AWARDED TROPHY LONDON (Reuters) -- Lynn Davies, who won the Olympic broad jump gold medal in Tokyo, was awarded the sports. man-of-the-year trophy at. the British Sports Writers' Associ- ation's dinner Thursday. The sportswoman - of-the-year award went to Mrs. Mary Big- nal Rand, who in Tokyo won a} broad jump gold medal, per-.| tathion silver medal, and 400- metre relay bronze medal. Glecoff's Friday and Sahuiday Specials! PORK CHOPS c Rib 6%: SPECIAL 10: Centre 7%: 50° GLECOFF'S FREE PARKING @ FREE DELIVERY WITH ORDERS OVER 10.00 CREST Toothpaste reg. 1.09 value

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