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Oshawa Times (1958-), 5 Jul 1965, p. 19

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Norland, 85 miles east of Oril- lia. Francesco Bramante, 30, of Toronto drowned while swim- ming in Lake Ontario near Osh- awa. 18 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mondey, July 5, 1965 56 Killed In Accidents 36 Victims On Highways By THE CANADIAN PRESS SUNDAY on the Macdonald-Cartier Free- i , 21, when ighton, 25 miles At least 56 persons were killed) James David Teal 21, wheN|way near Brighton, accidentally in Canada during|the car in which he was ridiElwest of Belleville. the weekend, 36 on the high-/Wer 01 lee north of King-| Gordon Andrew Moir, ; ways. Ps soc te . 8 hen a pickup truck on which team Sunday and sold relief Rabiner Pp pitcher Jack Lamabe to the ton. Can Press survey|°'9! : : a Fo 6 pei to midnight John Harrison, 4,. of San- he was loading bricks lurched);jternational League team. Sunday local times also showed|dusky, N.Y., in Parry Sound,|\packwards and pinned him|Heffner, 26, a right -: hander our died of|Ont., hospital of injuries suf-/against a pile of cement blocks!optioned to Toronto May 27, had Seeeeoks caiees. fered © Saturday in a two-car|at Verona, near Kingston. a 2-2 record at Toronto, giving 'ties Ae Ad; tabaiiien, teehee: hn Ses tis mother ot. Arnal Hememac, of Oc ive St Neo eee sins wale death tight in traffic. A man Pointe Au Baril, 50 miles south/angeville, Ont., drowned butlinnings. He struck out 33. La- Lan d at Sault Ste. Marie of Sudbury. 'three others were rescued when|mabe, picked up from Pitts- vas halla : i} Alfred Harry Robinet, 23, of|their boat was swept over a wa-|burgh in 1963, had a 9-16 ree- a ' A gt gg ae indsor, Ont., when his car hit|terfall on the Guil River near'ord with Boston. man died in hospital of scalds\a tree and burst into flames i) suffered when' he fell into a|Point Pelee National Park, 40 FRIDAY NIGHT Michael Wadel, 11, when his bicycle collided with a truck at Dundas, near Hamilton. RECALL HEFFNER BOSTON (AP) -- Boston Red Sox recalled pitcher Bob Heff- 55,\ner from. their Toronto farm was crushed when his pickup truck lurched backward, pin- ning him to a pile of cement blocks near Kingston. of burns suffered Saturday when he fell into a bathtub of) hot water at his Toronto home. bathtub of hot water, and a man|miles southeast of Windsor. ' Nicholas White, 89, in seraayl SUPERMARKET Quebec reported 13 fatalities, | 10 in traffic and three drown-| ings. _ |yitle when he walked into a In the Atlantic provinces.) whirling airplane propeller at Newfoundland had five road/sauit Ste. Marie, Ont. deaths, Nova Scotia reported) Clarence Betz, 64, of Detroit two traffic fatalities and a man|when his car collided with a killed in a well cave-in, whileltruck at Batfield, 45 miles west New Brunswick had one drown-|of Kitchener. ing. Only Prince Edward Island) Carol Brindell, 16, when the reported no accidental deaths. (car she was riding in collided On the Prairies, Manitoba hadjwith a train at Ansonyille, 32 one drowning, Saskatchewan re-|miles northeast of Timmins. ported two road deaths and four) Mrs. Frances, Harrison, 37, of drownings and Alberta had two|Sandusky, 'N.Y., in a_ two-car traffic deaths. lerash at Pointe Au Baril, 50 British Columbia -- reported! miles south of Sudbury. four drownings and seven traf-| Brett O'Neill, 5, of Weston, fic deaths, including four men|Ont., drowned in Rice Lake in a two-car crash near Field,jat Harwood, 13 miles south of in east-central B.C. SATURDAY Robert McCann, 22, of Brock- |Peterborough, when he fell from The survey does not includeja dock. ] known suicides, slayings, indus-/ James W. Marshall, 47, of| trial or natural deaths. Toronto when his small car! Ontario Dead: missed a curve and overturned | } | | Top Students Honored At McEwen Senior PS S. J. Phil- FOR EARLY IN THE WEEK SHOPPERS ICE CREAM Bricks Reg. 37¢ SPECIAL 2 39" Hamburg 3 Ibs. $1.00 | Strawherries QUART 49° GLECOFF'S SUPERMARKET "Rick" McElhinney, a gradejArlene Adam, Dr. eight student at T. R. McEwen Senior public school, has won the Maud Squires art prize. Suzanne Lidster of Vincent Massey School was runner-up with honorable mention going to Danny L. Reid of E. A. Lovell school 'and Donald Allen of T. R. McEwen. In 1936, the late Miss Maud Squires, who for many years was a teacher in the Oshawa public school system, left a scholarship for art in her mem- lips; Wendy Bobier and Michael, Shaw, E. A. Lovell; Lesley Boakes, Harmony; Gail Sug- den, Hillsdale; Archer Guy, Richard Hamley, Andy Kroont- je and Karen Guienchyn, King St. Senior; Rhonda Waisglass, Queen Elizabeth. Deborah Stovin, Steven Racz, Sharon Barr, Martin Step, Carolyn Wilson, and Dianne; Czosnek, Ridgeway senior; Jef-| frey Christie, South Simcoe; | Elizabeth Carson and Margaret 174 RITSON:ROAD SOUTH é "pb Ll & 2%. ibs ry. McDuff, Sunset Heights; Mary} Each year, an outstanding|Calder, Leslie Lownie, Greg) artist from each grade eight/Campin, Deborah Boyes, Linda class in the city submits sev-|Sheridan and Lynette Brunt, eral pieces of art and com-/T. R. McEwen Senior; Jane poses a picture according to)/Forbes, Vincent Massey. an assigned theme. | Miss Hislop was 'a_ teacher) The works were judged byjand principal on the Oshawa Miss Agnes A. Miocich, head|staff for more than 45 years. | ofthe art department of Cen-| | tral Collegiate, and a panel of| judges. | The Fannie E. Hislop prize for a boy or girl in each grade, five with the highest average in academic work: | Olga Shirchenko, Cedardale; | Susan Langley, College Hill; Ute Schmied!l, Conant; Wendy Taylor, Coronation; Mary Gil- ber and Bonnie Claus, Dr. C. F. Cannon; Janet MacDonald and 0 PEOPLE HAVE DISCOVERED THE MATCHLESS FLAVOR OF OUTDOOR COOKERY! We've noticed the delicious aromas around town these days... . steak and all the trimmings served in the back yard, 'Weenie roasts" on a portable grille at the beach . . . m-m-marvellous ! We couldn't help getting enthused about barbecue cooking, so we brought in a batch of cookout helps, everything from feast-sized HADDON HALL barbecues to special long-handled chef's tools. Right now, and throughout EATON'S July Sale, you can turn your yard into a gourmet's heaven at remarkably low prices. Take a look, for instance, at these items . . . and come in.soon. A. HADDON HALL 'CUSTOM' BARBECUE 24" heavy gduge metal bowl is charcoal colour; high hood and bottom tray ore yellow. Grille adjusts with ratchet, motor-turned spit takes three positions - that means accurate cooking for you! 4 chromium-plated legs, 2 wheels for easy moving: Easy to assemble. 19 99 ., oe Cover to fit above. SALE, complete SALE,- each 2.39 cif gna B. HADDON HALL 'Custom' Folding Barbecue Tripod legs fold with ease, set up quickly too. 18" rolled edge fire bowl in tangerine, chromium-plated grille with attached 3 §9 handles. SALE, each nda C. LIGHT FOLDING PICNIC TABLE Limited Quantities . . . End-of-line Clearance ! Shop carly ! 32" diam. table in bright, coppertone colour, baked-on finish with cross-braced tapered lock Jegs with self-leveling glides. 11 9g Folds to 4 4' depth. SALE, each ® EATON'S OUTDOOR SHOP, DEPT. 254 UA ER CLEARANCE SALE Starts Thurs., July 8 OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE STORE HOURS: 9:30 to 6:00 Thurs. and Feiday till 9 p.m. PRESENTS ee A Flavoured Wine "SERVE COLD ON THE ROCKS OR WITH YOUR FAVOURITE MIX" D. 4-PCE. HADDON HALL TOOL SET Cook the steaks, not your-fingers! Stainless steel utensils with cherrywood handles and a leather thong to 'hang by the borbecue. Set includes fork, tongs, turner and basting brush. 4 99 SALE, 4-pce. set 2 Above without basting brush, SALE, 3-pce. set............3.99 E. BARBECUE UMBRELLA Festive cotton stripes of red and white, green and yellow to Shade you ----. metal screw clamp and gooseneck base make it at- y] 99 tachable anywhere. SALE, each . F. PATIO TORCH Throws a soft, mellow light over your evenings -- 6-ft. pole, lamp with snuff-top all in blue baked enamel. y] 3 99 for Us Charcoal or Briquets. SALE, Torch Fluid gives a long-burning SALE, 2 20-Ib. bags. 2.99 PHONE 725-7373 fashions since: 1867 flame. SALE, 1-gal. can EATON'S RECORD-BREAKING SOLAR DAY SALE... SYSTEM | pon A Smashing One-Day Offering of Special Values Throughout the Store! standing student award. Lewis! i, _ 1.75 ' / Bruce won the boys' award, OY SUN-GELEE DON T MISS IT r JJ HIGH ee (y GOLF as for $].37 For sun lovers ---- it gives you the look of a tan while inducing one. ed the Fanny Hislop prize by| ' ; j Honey (light), Cafe (dark), TH U RS J U LY R. MacLeod, school principal. J , g Y e Each 2.00 9:30 9 p.m * : a.m. .fo p.m. City police Const. William) EATON'S MALL LEVEL, DEPT, 312 -- HOUSEWARES Imcair A Division of the S. $, Kronge Company Limited uf ELIZABETH ARDEN'S NEW POST is H. J. Lenglet who has re- cently taken: over as assist- - Jee off with this ARDENA ant manager at the Zellers @ (a department store at the Osh ,/) : ) S 4 Golfers' S ecial | ou" oe awa Shopping Centre. Mr. ah A a ' : ge Lenglet, who is from Van- PATON Y DOSAS ot' couver, takes over from Mr. Ta A ey AE Extra Durable Laurie Weston who has 2 moved to take over the posi- tion of manager to the Zel- lers store in Brantford. ag Dinner Held 4 239 AAC 3 : S ee For Grads Wherever life's journey takes us, let us accept the challenge! and prove our worth and face the future bravely, advised Wendy Taylor, valedictorian of: the Grade 8 Coronation School class. The graduates' dinner was held im Woodview Park Club- house, where Miss Taylor was| presented with the girls' out-| To keep you going this summer, Elizabeth Arden's sun preparations protect, while helping to give you a smooth even tan "SUN-PRUF"' For protection: against too much sun -- this invisible cream helps filter its harsh, burning roys. ne CU UOOUW > eS 12 for $3.75 SPECIAL TOUGH VULCANIZED 2) COVER FOR LONG LIFE. DOOONESS CO & QC () 2 OCS Cee Tane addressed the students, urging them to set an example of their lives, be it in citizen- ship or scholastic endeavors. Coronation Home and School association president Mrs. J. Chmara presented 32 inscribed) class photographs to the srade-| ating class. PHONE 725-7373 ON HIGHWAY No, 2 BETWEEN OSHAWA-AND WHITBY STORE HOURS: 9:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday to Saturday. Open Thursday and Friday Until 9

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