Creeeereeet ness revere the mine fire were found early today. A A MINE RESCUE work- yictims of er, his face blackened by coal dust and soot, tried to - comfort a relative of seven trapped miners in the Mars No. 2 mine near Sardis, W. Virginia, Sunday, Two Find Last Of Four Bodies In W. Virginia Coal Mine SARDIS, W.Va. Sl arcu becorie g toward the fire, were cue workers have found the|forced to go deeper into the bodies of the last four men|mine which runs six or seven trapped inside the smoldering/miles back into a mountain. o, _ grad eo central' The last victims to be found est Virginia town. They were é found together deep in the| Were a ae 53, Robert mine, where a fire already had/Savase, 57; Isaac Moats, 39, claimed three lives. and Andry Kurusez, 44. Shortly before the bodies Bodies of two victims, who were found, rescue workers dis- died from smoke inhalation and covered a message scrawled in|jack of oxygen, were found chalk on a mine regulator. It earlier today. They were Carl said "'couldn't get across" and Banish, 45, and Kenneth Kerr, was signed with the names 0f)53. the four men trapped since Sat- The first victim, Charles urday night. Lantz, 26, was brought uncon- E. E. Spottee, vice-president|scious from the mine late $un- ef the Clinchfield, Coal Co.,/day night. He died in route to said the men apparently had/hospital. Some Dairies Set To Boost Price Of Milk By One-Cent third was brought uncon- scious from the mine late Sunday and was. died on arrival at a hospital in Clarksburg, six miles away. TORONTO (CP)--The price,He added the increase is justi- é : ahaa - = ef a quart of milk from somelfied because of rising costs. bd ervey pred not instante ; Toronto dairies is expected to! {.ra¢| A , |industrial or natural deaths, 0: || Remember this number.., srael Cott, president of Alli-/ known suicides or slayi rT] be inereased one cent from 26) ! yings. | ance Dairy Ltd., said he had) The Ontario dead: - cents today and most other! not heard of the proposed in-| : dairies in the area are expected "but 1 | SUNDAY jerease ut I'd hoped it would to fellow their lead by the end/panpen," Frank Lopez, 21, Toronto, in 0 ay n n wes a of the week. te GAgAA the Japteuta walle hospital following a_ five-car = ti) ; sistant ; gait -Cartier . * G sacle Malton. tlea ne cetin tn aie the ree of Sayan MasHonaiCPHT) TORONTO (CP) -- Forcasel§t. Thomasiovves 3 2 chant' af. Loblaw Groceterias|secondary milk products and ering. |peuee vr the weather office at Lancer cob 50 72 Co, Ltd., said Sunday night that|predicted the one-cent increase! begin Hie San Ay ; 4 | ACHEDEE 94 50 72 barring | something 7 intoressen| would start a province-wide SATURDAY __ | Synopsis; Warm and mainly|Mount Forest. 45. the price will go up 'ade trend Joan oe 7, -- ba sunny weather is expected to| Wingham cov 48 7 4 Nealon) 5 \cox, near Newmarket, when continue for at least the next) Hamilton cesses 50 72 sane aid = hire Didi Badd Homage Ave she ran in front of a car. day or two in southern Ontario.|St. Catharines.... 50 70 most dairies will be charging/Commission, said he had heard Dr. Robert + Henri Marchil- Warm and partly cloudy|Toronto ,,.., trees 50 70 the entra cent by is eed al natin ar the i a vm \don, 39, Penetanguishene, when weather is predicted for central|Peterborough .... 48 70 the waek. : Hai act Hi ed ies ro bed ear swerved on Highway 1l|and Northern Ontario with a/Kingston ...sseee. 48 70 He said Donlands will not in- have to give the commission] syer Rallerryy one eeuied few tg he Se Meet Trenton ,+ +» 50 70 erease its price today but 'will prior notice of any price in-) Ajpert Williams, 74. Toront Rae al "rag ie On: Killaloe 48 70 wait until later in the week." \crease nie ams, 74, Toronto, |Lake Huron, Niagara, Leke On" Muskoka 48°70 ; Wee ee et when struck by a car tario, Windsor, London, Tor- Nomh 'Bay. t Merlin Weir, 45, Clayton Con-\onto, Hamilton: Mostiy sunny SOC ?8Y-+ 48 68 ® ' |way, 33, Elmore Love, 38, allland warmer today and Tues- Sudbury -sesseses 48 6B +» YOU Il E and THERE jof Sault Ste, Marie, in a two-|day. Winds light. Earlton +. 48 68 , Se ataal car collision 20 miles north of Georgian Bay, Haliburton, Al- Sault Ste. Marie,, 48 68 remember this wine: ; 'Sault Ste. Marie zoma, 'Killaloe, Sault Ste. Ma-|Kapuskasing ..... . 48 65 Ald, John Brady and Fire Park rf. s. and Tresane st. | Stanley Slazyk, 65, Sudbury,jrie, Timagami, North Bay, Sud-/W 'River. 48 65 : Chief Rae Hobbs left today She was taken to Oshawa jin a two-car collision near Sud-\bury: Clear with a few cloudy|Moosonee . 4860. || Phene Brights for free heme detrvory | for Miami, Florida and the General Hospital for observa- |» jintervals tonight and Tuesday.|Timmins ......... 48 65 | week-long, annual conven- tion and released. tion of North American Fire Chiefs. Ald. Brady, chair- man of city council's traf- fic and public safety com- mittee, says it is the first time he has attended a fire chiefs' convention outside the province. Both men will return to. Oshawa next Fri- A recent meeting of the Oshawa Epilephic Social Club was addressed by Ald. Mrs. Christine Thomas, Also at the meeting were Dr. T. Lowes and Mr, J. Nailor. The club's next meeting will be at 7.30 p.m., Oct. 21, at day, Christ Anglican Church. itis ciiatted tha whi Congratulations to Miss Patricia McCaffrey, of 39 dows of nine cars parked in front of a church hall here early Saturday morning. Po- lice report that no other dam- | Elgin st. e., who celebrated her 15th birthday yesterday. 5] Killed Accidents By THE CANADIAN PRESS At least 51 persons died ac- \cidentally across Canada dur- jing the weekend with Ontario 'and Quebec accounting for 30 |of the fatalities. A survey by The Canadian Press from 6 p.m. Friday to midnight Sunday, local times, showed at least 42 persons thraughout Canada died in traf- were killed in hunting accidents and two in fires. Three other persons died in unclassified mishaps. Ontario recorded 17 deaths, all on the highways, and Que- \bee had 13 fatalities--11 traf- fie, a hunting death and one person killed in an accident at home. Four persons died on the roads of Alberta, three'in each of New Brunswick and Mani- toba and two each in Nova Seo- tia and British Columbia. Two persons also were drowned in B.C., one died in a fire and another was killed by a train. One person was killed in a hunting accident in Nova Scotia and New Brunswick re- ported a fire death. There was an unclassified death in Prince Edward Island. ury. Donald Graham, 30, and his jwife Joyce, 28, Cobourg, when|Winds south to southwest 15 to their car collided with another 20. near Port Hope. Terrance Evan James Torreson, 20, ington, after the car in which he was riding struck a parked truck at Cottam, 20 miles south- west of Windsor. ltests say they are pleased with|to find some Communists in- lif they are sincere, are they be- quoted the Chinese Kwangming fie accidents, two drowned, two! 70,000 DEMONSTRATE COAST-TO-COAST NEW YORK (AP)--Promot-|things similar to what is being, ers of organized Viet Nam pro-|said by Peking, you are ilkelys the results of the weekend|volved in it," Katzenbach said, demonstrations, but leaders--|then added: in official and civic life--are| 'There are some Commu- questioning the motives of some nists inyolved in it." of the marchers. | The SDS claims a member- A survey shows the latter|ship of -300,000, Mostly college ask, in effect: Are some :::st|students. trying to get out the draft? And| Overseas, the Peking radio ing led on by Communists and Daily as saying that the protest Communist sympathizers? movement "'is a continuation of Frank Emspak, chairman of|the American people's pro- the National Co - ordinating|tracted struggle against the Committee to end the War in|United States policy of aggres- Viet Nam, said Sunday in Madi-|sion and war." ; son, Wis., that more than 70,-| The demonstrations, in yari- 000 persons took part in Satur- ous cities from New Haven, day's demonstrations in scores|Conn., to Hawaii, were noisy of cities. but for the most part orderly. U.S. Seeks Red Link Viet Nam Protests who publicly burned his draft} eard during a demonstration in New York. Destruction of draft cards was made a federal violation recently. : The VFW commander, Vin- cent J. DiMattina of Brooklyn, said if Miller was allowed to yy Bureau Chief . Dies At 50 OTTAWA (CP) -- Norman Phillips, 50, Ottawa bureau chief for the Toronto Star, died of a heart attack in Ottawa General Hospital Sunday night. Mr. Phillips, appointed to the Ottawa post in 1963, had been under heavy pressure in ihe current federal election cam- tawa only a few days ago after accompanying party leaders on the hustings. In April, 1960, he was jailed for three days in South Africa and then expelled from the go free 'we are allowing the seeds of dissension to be sown in the midst of Americans." Wisconsin Goyernor Warren P. Knowles, commenting Sun- day on the arrest Saturday of |11 demonstrators at the gates of the Truax Air Force Base,| Madison, as they attempted a citizen atrest of the base com- mander, said the demonstrators "have done a great disservice to themselves, the University of Emspak said he has siarted|Heckling by anti-demonstrators iplanning for another series of} Inationwide demonstrations Nev" the uproar. 6 or Nov. 13. ¥ wsy,;more than 10,000 anti-war ad-| | ut Biereey Generel ter. herents marched down Fifth) jolas Katzenbach, in CsicSs0\ avenue Saturday, there were | ° f prea a Mle ge yg Aba Justite | several fist-fights and the hurl- vestigation into the movement |;he rig vg i nau ot and has _ uncovered "some | pe ok "44 4 nes trom © Communists and some perscns| 178 out of hand. very closely associated with THREATENS ARREST \Communists" working for the| In Rochester, N.Y., the state \students for a Democratic So-\commander of the Veterans of iety. |Foreign Wars threatened to "Whenever you have a situa-|make a citizer arrest of David tion in which people are wying'Miller, 22, of Syracuse, N.Y., 20 More Cuban Refugees 'Reach Fiorida Via Cruiser KEY WEST, Fla. (AP)--Two|Cuba that Premier Fidel Cas-| sweethearts who said the yjtro wanted dollars and medi- wanted to get married in a re-jcine from the United States in ligious ceremony -- "something|exchange for political prisoners we couldn't do in Cuba'--and| Fernandez and other refugees a barefoot TV actress were|said Cubans were lining up for jarrived here today. Havana mechanic, said he andjsion to leave. The refugee his bride-to-be, 55-year-old Ro-|movement began two weeks from the sidelines contributed | Wisconsin and the state." Authorities, said Knowles, "cannot tolerate civil disobedi- In New York City, WheTelence no matter what the pro- lfessed cause may be." | In Philadelphia, some 40 |members of the Lansdowne- Yeardon Junior Chamber of Commerce held a one - hour \prayer march' around city hall in defence of U.S. policy in Viet Nam Sunday. PICKET PLANE PLANT The march followed two days lof anti-U.S. policy demonstra- jtions and counter-picketing | at icity hall, the University /Pennsylvania, and a_ Boeing \Co. plant in Morton, Pa., where {some of the helicopters used in Viet Nam are manufactured. 'World's Fair Closes Doors NEW YORK (AP)--The New York World's Fair closed through the gates. The single of its lamong 20 Cuban refugees who|several blocks in front of the|two-year season Sunday night jinterior ministry offices in Ha-jwith a flourish, as more per- Juan Crucet, a 61-year-old|vana in an effort to get permis-jsons than eyer before swarmed - day attendance country for filing what the South African government icalled '"'yiblently prejudiced"' jand untrue dispatches on racial \strife there. J | Later that year Mr. Phillips wrote a book, The Tragedy of |Apartheid, about racial segre- lgation. It was banned by the [South African government. NOT FOR COMMUTERS | LONDON (AP)--Rolls-Royce lis coming out soon with the \Phantom V State Landaulette, |perhaps the world's most ex- 'pensive automobile. It will be sold only to royalty and heads paign and had returned to Ot-/lif 30 Years In By STEPHEN SCOTT VANCOUVER (CP)--A crowd of 1,900 turned out Saturday night to congratulate T. C. Douglas, national leader of the New Democraiic Pariy, on iis completion of 30 years in public e Mr. Douglas, first elected to the House of Commons in 1935, received litical) friends and foes at the banquet which was billed as non-political. He spoke beneath a sign that said 'The Little Man who stands so Tall." Around the hall were lesser signs which com- memorated "'firsts" achieved by Saskatchewan's Co-operative Commonwealth Federation gov- ernment when Mr. Douglas was provincial premier. These in- 'eluded medical care insurance and government hospital insu- rance. Although been billed as non-political, it which included tables for "do- nations" at the doorway. Speak- ers were mostly socialist. of state. Plans for the celebration the meeting had} y had a definite NDP complexion) f, Public Life 'Tommy' Douglas Honored were started before the Nov. 8 federal election was announced, RECEIVES TRIBUTES Mr. Douglas received tribuies from--Howard Green, former. Progressive Conservative ex- ternal affairs minister, who re- ferred to "my old friend Tommy Douglas." tributes from both po-| Mr. Green and the present external affairs minister, Paul Martin, were elected for the first time in 1935, as was Mr. Douglas. Mr. Martin, who had at one time been expected to attend the celebration, telegraphed his "warmest congratulations." FALSE TEETH Chewing Efficienc Increased up to 35% you now Clinical tests e che make a r that so they feel more comfortabl fag Back pasty ym fo) ie. No A taste, Doesn't eur, Oh é breath. Get PAS to- day at drug counters everywhere, Now PES on Guaranteed salia Suarez, wanted to be mar-|ago. mark was broken with a crowd ried by the Roman Cathol ic| The shuttle from Camarioca,|of 446,542 up to the official clos- priest who married his sister}\Cuba, to Key West has in-ling of the turnstiles at mid- three years ago in Union City, 4d. Caridad Olivera, a 24-year-old gage and shoes were lost in a Cubn customs. office. The latest batch of refugees arrived aboard the 24-foot ca- bin cruiser Nimo. It was oper- ated by four Cuban exiles who live in Key West. One' refugee, taxidriver Anto- nio Fernandez, 58, of Havana, said rumors were circulating in television actress, said she ar-jlayed. rived barefoot because her bag-| Two boats made it Sunday,| WEATHER FORECAST creased the U.§. Cuban colony night. 'by about 470 but an expected jstream of boats appeared de- exhibition a total attendance of |51,607,037. ingi >| Dismantling of most of the pidecge Po pane 'oe 150 fair. buildings starts today. There was some feeling that. The fair lost $17,500,000 its delay in stepped up crossings, first season; and has been able for which the coast guard pre-|to pay back to bondholders only pared itself during the weekend,|$7,400,000 of the $20,800,000 it jeould mean that an agreement | borrowed to get started. with Cuba over a systematic' All indications point to the exodus plan sought by the fair winding up in hock--as did |United States might be near, |many of its exhibitors and con- 7 pines sence cessionaires. At least 14 of them \fied papers in bankruptcy court by the first season's end. |Warmer White River, Cochrane: Sutherland, |Mostly cloudy with a few widely | 2, Mount Brydges, in hospital|scattered showers or thunder- about three hours after being|showers today, Tuesday sunny struck by a car in Strathroy.|with a few Leam- cloudy Warmer. Winds southwest westerly 10 to '20. FORECAST Temperatures Low tonight, high Tuesday: Windsor ....+++++ 55 tb) today and Tuesday.| | intervals. to; The figure gave the two-year| Investment Certificates? Look into National Effective immediately, National Trust has significantly increased interest payments on all Guaranteed Investment Certificates. For terms 1, 2, and 3 years--increased to 54% For term of 4 years--increased to 544% For term of 5 years--increased to 5%% Minimum Certificate $500. : Maximum $25,000. Interest is paid, by cheque, half-yearly, January 1st and July 1st.Save with safety... and make your money work harder for you. Look into National. National Trust _. SINCE 1898 es 2 ; ae CN's Red | about red al wanted, Pic age was done to the cars, in front of St. Mary's" Ukrain- Individuals or Groups tor ian Greek Orthodox Church Hall at Ritson rd. s. and St. John Bloor st. No charges have A been laid mbulance Junior and Senior First aid and Home Nursing Courses Phone 668-4666 Sixty-three-year-old Mrs. Annie Knox of 429 Park rd. s., suffered a scraped knee and a bruised hip last even- | ing when she was struck by make your comfortable CN's Red, White & Blue 'Calendar of Savings' is just of May. It's the time to roll--to take that big trip you've fort, plenty of convenient schedules and fast trains to oshawa to: halifax $20.00 montreal $7.10 windsor -$5.90 winnipeg $21.00 "Bargain" travel days are here! | over with rock bottom fares until the end k a date and go. CN's got plenty of com- trip a 'Traveliving' pleasure, Relax in a coach, 'Dormette' car or standard berth 54 SIMCOE NORTH Tues. and Wed. Specials ! Evenings 725-4197 a car at the intersection of THE ULTIMATE IN LUXURY LIVING! * PRESTIGE A tEW. 1 AND 2 ED DISTINCTION gneontony BEYOND AVAILABL COMPARE as * * Only By Appointment UNDERGROUND mm 723-1712 PARKING or 728-2911 * G@ORGIQAN Mansions 124 PARK ROAD NORTH: OSHAWA SKINLESS WIENERS LEAN. MINCED LEAN MEATY BLADE STEAKS 99: RINDLESS -- SLICED BACON o lb | 65 accommodation--or enjoy the private world of a roomette, bedroom, compartment or drawing room. And complimentary meals are included when you travel in sleeping or parlor cars! Additional savings for children under twelve. Go CN. It's the thrifty way to travel. And the most enjoyable way to save, Charge-a-Trip, Go Now--Pay Later or use your CN Credit Card. Phone for your 'Tickets by Mail' today. Get away now on a roll-away Red Bargain. Look over these one way coach travel fares. roll-away red bargains edmonton $33.00 vancouver $42.00 4 i 3 ee i 5 'd y LZ